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The Complete Venus Equilateral
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Mark
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Oct 05, 2011 04:06PM

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Then there's always Hal Clement's oldy but goldey Mission of Gravity.
Struggling now but you could have a look at some of the stuff by A.E. van Vogt. Very old school.

Nevil Shute. He's not really sci-fi, in fact his books are mostly pretty old school. War era problems that feature engineers heavily. Lots of technical dialogue, but still approachable to the average reader.
The first one I ever read was Trustee from the Toolroom it's basically just an adventure story. Very relaxing read, there is adventure and there are worries, but it's very British - not so dramatic but quite descriptive. That one isn't in War Era as many of his others are, but features an engineer just trying to do the right thing for his niece.
No Highway is another good one. Mainly about an eccentric engineer trying to get a certain model of planes grounded before disaster strikes, as he's convinced that they will crash once they travel within a certain window of miles due to his new theory on metal fatigue. Of course, as his tests haven't been completed, no one will believe him.
Books mentioned in this topic
Trustee from the Toolroom (other topics)No Highway (other topics)
A Fall of Moondust (other topics)
Mission of Gravity (other topics)
Tales from the White Hart (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Arthur C. Clarke (other topics)Hal Clement (other topics)
A.E. van Vogt (other topics)