essay:
Book Recommendations

Sorry about the posting confusion this week. I’ll be out on Monday here and on Critical Futures, but everything will be back to normal on Tuesday.

This is a post that I’ve been working on for a while, and I’m not sure that it’s done but I’m fresh out of ideas for more book recommendations. But then, this is a blog, and there’s a comment form for a reason, so if I’ve been remiss and forgotten something important, please do remind me. Enjoy!

I have perpetual fears about not being well read enough. I think this is mostly an existential problem, as I read a bunch, and I’ve read a lot of stuff in my day. But there’s always more, particularly as I think about shifting my academic/intellectual specialty. In any case, I found myself a few weeks ago recommending a science fiction novel that I had read,1 and I thought it might be good to post a list of recommendations. Not just “books I like,” but “books I’d tell you to read if you were looking for something specific.”

For people who like military SF and some people who like Heinlein, John Scalzi’s Old Man’s War is a great deal of fun.

For a great novella/tightly wound plot, Samuel R. Delany’s Empire Star and for lingustic sf, the other half of the book, Babel-17. I’m a huge fan. For anyone interested in urban systems and community, Times Square Red/Times Square Blue Amazon is a great read, and is incidentally the most cited source of my college career.

For a very smart, but also very comforting and enjoyable space opera trilogy, Melissa Scott’s Five-Twelfths of Heaven Trilogy can’t be beat. Her Trouble and her Friends is also a great example of what cyberpunk can be when it’s not trying too hard to be the next New Thing.

I don’t find myself in a position to recommend mainstream fiction very much, but I am a big fan of Anne Lamott’s All New People, and Barbara Kingsolver’s Prodigal Summer, which are both clever and fun, and are unabashedly delightful.

Books about writing? Five or more years ago, I would have had a list of books about writing, but as a genre I’m not particularly convinced of their worth/utility or frankly interesting-ness. Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird, is simply amazing, though not particularly for the specific writing related hints. I’ve always thought that Stephen King’s writing book is pompous and sort of unfocused, but admittedly I couldn’t even force myself to finish it.

That’s what come to mind, do you all have any good recommendations?



Notes:
  1. I’m not above recommending a book on reputation alone, though I try to disclose this. 

Comments: »

  1. Comment Here!

    Thank you for your personal great books list. I am very touched by Ane Lamott’s writing as well. Traveling Mercies and Plan B are a couple of nice essay books of hers. I re-read Traveling Mercies, essay by essay as a bedside read for a few months when I discovered Anne Lamott. I read Plan B while on an August Baltic cruise. Take care.

    Comment by alice — 28 August 2008 @ 3:00 pm


  2. I don’t know if you’re into romance, but I’d recommend books by Robin D. Owens (http://www.robindowens.com/). I love her Heart Book series. Basically, the premise is that people with esp talents have left Earth because they were being ostracized and settled on Celta, which just so happens to enhance their esp talents more and more with each generation. Everyone dreams of finding their Heart mate - where it is a perfect match. Here’s two examples which I took from the site:

    “Since the HeartBond is so deep, when one HeartMate dies, the other follows within the year.”

    “Celtan HeartMate Laws - The HeartMate must accept a HeartGift willingly and without knowing it was a HeartGift before the other can claim them as a HeartMate and HeartBond with them.”

    She has another sci-fi series but I haven’t read these books, so I don’t know how good these books are.

    Comment by Lola LB — 31 August 2008 @ 6:48 am


  3. Auuuggghhhh . . . I wrote up a really nice comment and somehow lost it when I pressed on Submit within NetNewsWire . . .

    In any case, I would recommend Robin D. Owens (http://www.robindowens.com) and her Heart Mate series, romance sci-fiction. Basically, the premise is that a group of people with esp talents have left Earth because they were being ostracized and feared. They settled on Celta, which so happens to enhance their esp talents with each generation. Life is harsh, though, and the population remains small. Large families are valued. Everyone dreams of finding their Heart Mate, which is a unique bond. Here’s how unique these bonds are (I took the info from the website):

    “Since the HeartBond is so deep, when one HeartMate dies, the other follows within the year.”

    “Celtan HeartMate Laws

    The HeartMate must accept a HeartGift willingly and without knowing it was a HeartGift before the other can claim them as a HeartMate and HeartBond with them.”

    She also has another sci-fi series, but I haven’t read these books, so I don’t know how good these are.

    Comment by Lola LB — 31 August 2008 @ 6:55 am


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