SFBRP Listeners discussion
Books I would like to see reviewed
I watched World War Z a few weeks ago. I really enjoyed it! It was far better than I was expecting, certainly better than all who said "It's not as good as the book"... but maybe because I didn't make it a quarter of the way into the book.

Chris wrote: "I'd love to hear your opinion of Peter Watts' "Blindsight". It's an amazing exploration of the nature of consciousness, both biological and artificial, as well as being an incredible "first contact..."
Let's combine these recommendations Voltron style: Usurper of the Sun by Housuke Nojiri. Aliens arrive in the solar system and start transforming Mercury into a ringworld, which soon plunges the Earth into a new ice age. Somehow humanity has to contact the aliens and convince them that we're intelligent, conscious beings even though our mode of thought is so alien to them they can't even begin to comprehend us.

The book is outstanding. All other zombie books and movies just deal with individual problems (oh, everybody is a zombie now, how do I survive). WWZ is moving the whole thing on a higher level: how does the world deal with it? What will happen to the military, to the politic system, to the economy? What has to be done and how, not to keep 10 people alive but a whole country or the whole world?
The book changed my view on other books comply, its one of the few books that relay think big.

I read Blindsight last year, but was skeptical about Watt's whole premise that there's an evolutionary advantage to having intelligence without consciousness. As a software engineer who works on AI-related projects, I think it's actually rather difficult to develop a "Chinese Room" that can make truly intelligent decisions by consulting a vast lookup table or flowchart.
Over the past few decades, the field of AI has moved towards the school of thought that the way the human brain works holds the key to what intelligence is. In other words, an architecture that's full of highly interconnected circuits and feedback loops seems to be the easiest way to solve the problem of generalized pattern recognition and prediction. Well, maybe not the "easiest" for us to understand in logical terms, but the easiest for blind evolution to have hit upon. And, near as anyone in cognitive science can tell, this architecture is also what makes us conscious and self-aware. I imagine that science will understand it a lot better in a few decades.
I thought that was hilarious. Also, plenty of scientists at the end who didn't shoot themselves in the face.


To give you a sense of how much I liked it; Even after reading about Snow Crash on wikipedia and thinking it sounded uninteresting as well as listening to Luke's episode on it, I went ahead and read Snow Crash. It was set in the same universe as The diamond Age (50-100 years earlier), how bad could it be?! Suffice it to say, I agreed with Luke on that one.
The Diamond Age remained a favorite though. I would say it's almost as different to Snow Crash as Anathem is, which is another book by Stephenson I read & loved, but probably wouldn't have picked up if it hadn't been for Luke's review.


ITs about parallel Dimension and different Versions of the Earth. Its is not really ground breaking, but it is a real page turner and a joy to read.

One thing I really like about the series is that, since South Korea already has mandatory military service for all men, there's a much greater sense of realism than you get from American military SF. None of the characters are gung-ho about being soldiers, and some of them don't even take the situation seriously until they're given no choice.
Oh, and the story's complete at 50 chapters, so no worries about hitting a cliffhanger and having to wait for the next installment.


Dark Eden by Chris Beckett (sp?)
The Affirmation by Christopher Priest
The Dosadi Experiment by Frank Herbert
Last Dragon by J.M. McDermott
No Return by Zachary Jernigan
The Lagoon by Nnedi Okorafor
Afterparty by Daryl Gregory
Blood Song by Anthony Ryan
Some of these I’ve read or am reading (check my goodreads reviews), some I have yet to read, but I’d be curious to hear Luke’s thoughts.


IMO, it's still worth checking out from the library, to read the first part and skim the rest.

I love Gibson and Sterling, but was not crazy about 'The Difference Engine'. Did have some cool ideas, and may have been the first steam punk, but the plot kept getting in the way of the story.

Hey everyone, you have to do more than give a title and author to convince me to read and review a book! I get those kind of recommendations all the time, and unless the book is repeatedly mentioned by many different people, it doesn't even get added to my maybe-read-in-the-distant-future pile. Make it sound personal or at least interesting as a recommendation.

AVENGE ME, LUKE!
Stitch my soul back together, one Robert-J.-Sawyer-caliber rant at a time.


It's set in a post-apocalyptic future where the World Health Organization's relief efforts have turned it into a world government. In order to keep humanity from extinction, they've had to enforce stringent laws against unhealthy behaviors. Now, centuries after the apocalypse, they've rebuilt society into a utopian state where everyone lives long, happy lives -- except for a few misfits who want to smoke and drink. The story explores the question of whether a society where 99.99% of the people are happy is a utopia or dystopia, and whether the dissenters have any right to destroy the happiness of billions.
"The original novella won the Hugo Award and Nebula Award. The novel was also nominated for both the Hugo Award and the Nebula Award, but did not win."

Armor has been recommended many times before, and I have it on my to-read list. Maybe it's time? I'll check if its on audible.
Armor has been recommended many times before, and I have it on my to-read list. Maybe it's time? I'll check if its on audible.
It is. Downloading now.
It is. Downloading now.

I started it this morning. It feels very, very familiar. I think I might have read it before a long time ago.


Perry Rhodan?
Seriously though, The Neverending Story or something by Cornelia Funke would work.


Another time travel story I wish to be reviewed is "Gates of Anubis" by Time Powers. It is set in the 1800s too -and in the 1600s for a while. There is a teacher from the 20th century who wants to find a (fictional) poet and an egyptian wizard who wants to bring back the old egyptian gods to destroy the british empire ! A great fun to read.

It's actually called The Anubis Gates. I'd love to see that one reviewed as well! Tim Powers is fantastic, and I'm sure Luke would be relieved to discover that stories where people go back in time out of historical interest are not all like Doomsday Book :)
Declare is another Powers book that I'd love to see reviewed. Lots to like in that one. It's a Cold War spy story with H.P. Lovecraft's Elder Gods getting involved. There's some interesting secret history stuff involving why Kim Philby was so weird. The magic system is pretty interesting (magic sucks in Tim Powers' books). There's a chapter set in Berlin as well!


Are you implying that there's another kind of clown?

This is actually quite tricky. I'm always trying to find new stuff too, but this doesn't work so well. German science-fiction gets rarely translated into english (someone successful like Frank Schätzing is available). Also some german science-fiction takes the ideas of english science-fiction books and just puts it together in a slightly different way – mainly because not everything gets translated into german.

Perry Rhodan?
AAAAHHH! Please, not even a consideration ;-)

I highly recommend this title if you are looking for potential candidates. The sequel isn't bad either.
Also I liked your review of Armor a few weeks ago. I think it was a fair presentation of the book. I really liked the war bug war flashbacks but felt like there was too much of a disconnect between those portions of the book and the actual events going on on the scientific research planet being overtaken by the pirates. Anyway it wasa solid, short read.

I'm sorry! I didn't realize the one time Luke takes my suggestion would be this.

"The Carpet makers" by Andreas Eschbach
"Last day of creation" by Wolfgang Jeschke
"Rumo" by Walter Moers (which is a fantasy book)
Nothing good ever came from Perry Rhodan.


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Thanks for this. I usually try to read books before the movies come out hence last year I read both Warm Bodies and World War Z, and then decided not to see either film. Warm Bodies I was kind of "meh" about. World War Z was an AWESOME book and clearly the movie sucked in comparison and wasn;t worth my time. Zombie/horror are not really my preferred genre, but I try to branch out every now and again. WWZ was totally worth it.