Amazon's top 20 SciFi/Fantasy
Posted by xthinker88 9 years, 10 months ago to Culture
What? No Heinlein?
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Now for a pet peeve. I didn't even look at the books on this web site.
I HATE websites that are designed to waste my time. Forcing the user to go through 20 pages of horsepucky to see a couple sentences and a photo of a book cover on each page is insulting.
When I see a website with this arrangement solely for the calculated benefit of the publisher and purposely wasteful of the endusers' time and the limited bandwidth of the internet, I walk away, never to return.
This entire article is contrived to help sell books for Amazon. What a BRILLIANT way to chase away potential customers.
Or are all these sites designed in coordination with cell phone companies to display for a 4" cellphone screen and waste as much bandwidth as possible?
Inquiring minds want to know!
I prefer sci-fi and police procedurals, not current comedy.
Its not an easy business though, with all the other entertainments that appear to be more engaging. Reading requires a different use of faculties, not as "glamorous."
http://www.frontierssaga.com/ryks-log/
Unless I am mis-reading the April 2, 2015 entry, he stopped selling through Apple and Google but still sells on Amazon. The loss of revenue seems to have gone to the Apple/Google connection, perhaps another layer of fees in addition to the Amazon fees?
Thanks for sharing the info. Do you recommend Ryk's series?
His series got mostly good reviews on Audible and Downpour. Most people complained about the short length (they are 8-10 hour audio books, 100-110K word books) and the second one was deemed as unnecessary. I found you did need to listen to all of them to get all the stuff going on, but I interpreted it as sort of a "Star Trek with different names" type storyline. You have a young brash captain, thrown into command, a logical and analytical XO (complete with emotional detachment), a Russian (not Scot) engineer who can fix anything, and it moves planet to planet with the usual misadventures. I would rate it at a 7-8 on a 1-10 scale, and it seems to get better as you go along. The premise is pretty good, if not standard fare, but RB seems to be growing into the writing role with each book. It is projected to be a series of 75 books, in 3 story arcs, covering a 100 year span. He is at book 14 I think in the first 25 book arc. I would recommend it as a Sci Fi series, but you may also want to look into H.Paul Honsingers "Man of War" series. He does a better job with characters and suspenseful interest, and his bad guys are giant rats who just happen to match human DNA to 98% due to some long ago alien intervention, who are really pissed about it and want to wipe out humanity for it. Much more fun and great, well thought out science to it.
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The other religions in there, especially the Fosterites, were definitely scams.
Stanislaw Lem, Phillip K. Dick, Arthur C Clark, made it, but a lot of my favorites are missing.
I really don't like lists that mix fantasy with Sci Fi, I would prefer to see them kept separate, But that's just me, I suppose.
That was precisely my thought.
Fantasy and science fiction are two distinct genres. Horror is a separate other also.
But I like them all.
Guess that's why I give the Syfy Channel a pass.
It's silly "Syfy" name kinda Sharknado helps.
But actual books in libraries, bookstores and book sales sites?
I say hell no to that icky mix.
Some older SciFi, like H.G. Wells and Jules Verne have shifted to fantasy. I think we can safely rule out discovering an Island or Plataea with dinosaurs and other prehistoric beasts living on it, but those are still enjoyable stories.
One other thing, I kind of make a distinction between Science Fiction that allows Humans to have *psychic" or mystical powers and those that try to imagine a future where the human mind is what we see today.
Examples of the former might be Star Trek or Babylon 5, examples of the latter might be Alien or "The Diamond Age". I love Trek and the like, but I think I prefer a non-supernatural approach to Sci Fi.
So for me, moving stuff around with your mind, uh, not my cup of tea. Doing stuff with a giant Krell machine (Forbidden Planet) scanning your mind, yes that might be possible . Another quibble I suppose...
For instance, people-on-Mars stories were plausible until we sent probes that showed there aren't any.
Any list that puts Starship Troopers or Stranger not in the top 20 is bogus in my book.
I also agree that I don't like lists that mix fantasy and SciFi. Different genres generally although there are a few books that kind of cross over.
http://www.amazon.com/s?rh=i%3Aenglis...
I counted down rows of three to find Starship Troopers at 21
I also have several books by Neal Stephenson in my top 20, including The Diamond Age, Snow Crash, and especially Cryptonomicon.
http://studentsforliberty.org/blog/20...
In Urban Fantasy: Jim Butcher's Dresden novels are excellent as well.
It is sad that Amazon and CNN are illiterate when it comes to reading good scifi and fantasy books.
by S. Fowler Wright (1928)
would be on my list.
And if they are basing things on popularity (see Harry Potter), they should also probably include the Twilight series and
For more serious consideration, I don't see Margaret Weis & Tracy Hickman (Dragonlance world). No David Eddings or Terry Brooks. No Anne McCaffrey. And no Edgar Allen Poe.
A list sorely lacking, IMHO.