What's the Name of That Book??? discussion
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Looking for suggestions for a space opera to read.
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Leviathan Wakes - 1st in a series, this one is kind of a noir mystery mixed with some almost horror/action. A bit of romance.
Old Man's War - also starts a series, fun and action, a bit of romance
Dune of course, but not much in space, also has a bit of romance
The Snow Queen - not much in space, like Dune, but a bit more romance

Valor's Choice by Tanya Huff -it's military, basically marines in space- but good and the series just keeps getting better, the love interest shows up a few books in.

A caveat on Kimber's Pern series. Make sure that you get the books by ANNE McCaffrey and not Todd. Todd is her son, and I don't care if he did grow up at/on Pern (Anne's estate) he just doesn't have his mother's talent.
And, while we are talking Anne, check out here Crystaline series and Acorna series, as well as the Tower and the Hive series.
Crystal Singer for the first series
Acorna: The Unicorn Girl for the second
The Rowan for the third
Another author to check out is Andre Norton. She wrote sci-fi, historical romances, gothics, fantasy, non-fiction, YA, adult, and chapter books for middle schoolers.
Larry Niven does some interesting sci fi books
The Tar-Aiym Krang is the first book in an interesting series by Alan Dean Foster
And, while we are talking Anne, check out here Crystaline series and Acorna series, as well as the Tower and the Hive series.
Crystal Singer for the first series
Acorna: The Unicorn Girl for the second
The Rowan for the third
Another author to check out is Andre Norton. She wrote sci-fi, historical romances, gothics, fantasy, non-fiction, YA, adult, and chapter books for middle schoolers.
Larry Niven does some interesting sci fi books
The Tar-Aiym Krang is the first book in an interesting series by Alan Dean Foster


Try also these:
Sylvia Engdahl, Enchantress from the Stars, The Far Side of Evil, or This Star Shall Abide
Andre Norton, Breed to Come or Dread Companion
Sheri Tepper, Grass, Raising the Stones or The Family Tree
Ursula Le Guin, The Left Hand of Darkness or The Lathe of Heaven
Ted Chiang Stories of Your Life and Others (not all are space-related but they're all sci-fi)
Mary Doria Russell, The Sparrow
Sharon Shinn's Samaria series starting with Archangel
Piers Anthony's Kirlian Quest series, starting with Cluster
Anything by Isaac Asimov (Foundation, The Caves of Steel, Nightfall and Other Stories), Arthur C. Clarke (Childhood's End, Rendezvous with Rama, The Nine Billion Names of God) or James Tiptree (Star Songs of an Old Primate, Ten Thousand Light-Years From Home).


Bujold has a whole lot of books, but for romance purposes you might start with Cordelia's Honor, which is a collection of Shards of Honor and Barrayar and tells the story of Cordelia Naismith, a soldier and scientist from an advanced world who becomes involved with Aral Vorkosigan, a soldier from a world that is just this side of barbaric from Cordelia's point of view. They have a son, Miles, who goes on to star in the majority of Bujold's books. His own real romance starts in Komarr, which can be read with no knowledge of the earlier books in the series. There's another more recent mostly-standalone novel, Captain Vorpatril's Alliance, that stars one of my favorite minor characters from the series as he finds some romance of his own.
A good mostly-hard SF book that contains but doesn't dwell on romance isBoundary by Eric Flint and Ryk Spoor. A paleontologist finds an anomalous fossil from the time the dinosaurs were killed, and the mystery ends up being solved on Mars and further out in the solar system. There are two sequels and a spin-offish adventure book, all worth reading.
Ryk Spoor also wrote Grand Central Arena, which is one of my favorite space opera books of all time. It takes place in a scale model of the entire universe that serves as a central meeting hub for all races that achieve faster than light travel. It's got adventure, intrigue, all sorts of fun stuff.
I liked Peter F. Hamilton's Commonwealth saga. His Void trilogy looks interesting too, but I haven't gotten to it yet.
I also liked Alastair Reynolds's Revelation Space series.
I also liked Alastair Reynolds's Revelation Space series.

I would also like to recommend the Liaden Series, by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller. They follow a complicated family and clan on a world that has Regency-ish echoes, high technology and dangerous underpinnings. Also, in some of the books, there are sentient turtles who are about eight feet tall.
A lot of people started with Agent of Change. I started with Conflict of Honors and was none the worse for it. Their most recent book is about six inches away from me as I type this. Great stuff.

Not sure if it's space opera per se (and it's on the hard sf side), but I really enjoyed Gregory Benford's Galatic Center saga (https://www.goodreads.com/series/4986...).
I feel like I'm always recommending The Wreck of The River of Stars, and I'll happily do it here too.
Stephen R. Donaldson's Gap series qualifies, but it's darker than dark (that said, I loved it).
https://www.goodreads.com/series/4056...
And one of the classics - E. E. "Doc" Smith and his Chronicles of the Lensmen - https://www.goodreads.com/series/4922...

Margaret Weis's The Lost King
Alan Dean Foster's A Call to Arms
Frederik Pohl'sGateway
Gregory Benford's Great Sky River

Hyperion by Dan Simmons features a massively steaming sub-plot.
If you are more after pop-corn entertainment, try Rachel Bach's Paradox series. Nothing too deep but a very good mix of action and romance.
Neal Asher writer great space opera but his focus is on action and world building, not really on romance. Though there is romance in it.
If you don't mind 70s/80s liberated female views along the lines of 'if women run the world and there were no jealousy everything would be be better' than you should check out Marian Zimmer Bradley's darkover series (SciFi / FF) or maybe Anne McCaffrey.
If you like a bit of a reading challenge (from a literary perspective certainly better than the average SciFi but the way of non linear storytelling requires a bit more involved reading) then try
- Hannu Rajanieme's Quantum Thief
- John M Harrison's Light
Oh, and I totally forgot:
Gary Gibson's Stealing Light is amazing space opera with an interesting heroine
Books mentioned in this topic
Trading in Danger (other topics)Remnant Population (other topics)
The Lost King (other topics)
Gateway (other topics)
A Call to Arms (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Elizabeth Moon (other topics)E.E. "Doc" Smith (other topics)
Gregory Benford (other topics)
Stephen R. Donaldson (other topics)
Sharon Lee (other topics)
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I do like a romance in my story, both the more subtle kind and the kind where the romance sort of overshadows the whole story.
Space exploration is great, or colonization. Really anything you've read and liked. I've got a hankering for space and I'm not sure what to try next.
Thanks.