Suggestion: place a picture of the book cover off to the side...leave the book cover picture on screen as long as you are talking about the book.
@yeseniaarredondo40164 ай бұрын
It's a great suggestion. I'm in on it.
@haydenturner13353 ай бұрын
Bookpilled
@v2cantthinkofahandle17 күн бұрын
Love this suggestion!!!
@CainOnGames4 ай бұрын
That was a great video, and I applaud your ability to go back, examine your previous choices, and make changes based on new perspectives gained from discussions with others. Very few people examine their own thought processes as intensely as you do. A lot of people don’t examine them at all. So I appreciate it seeing it happen.
@bergen_4 ай бұрын
One of my favorite game authors interacting with my one of my favorite philosophy/lit channels? Amazing! KZbin is an incredible place :) P.S. Tim I still hold out hope that Arcanum 2 (or even an Arcanum remaster) will grace this world one day.
@bookdmb4 ай бұрын
It’s nice of you to boost him up, but everyone does self-reflect and evolve to some extent. It’s just internal and often imperceptible to those around them.
@DUFMAN1234 ай бұрын
I have to thank you Jared for these videos. I have in the last 12 months picked up both Le Guin novels and Canticle after hearing you speak so highly of them. I myself loved them very deeply also. I read mostly classics but am now really enjoying dipping back into sci-fi every so often as a nice change of pace.
@arjun23404 ай бұрын
Jared you went from doing a phd in philosophy to working in a tech company. Could you make a video on how you made this transistion. Like did you do any tech related stuff while doing your phd or was it like a completely new jump. Would like to know how you made a transition from philosophy to tech. Would also help people who are considering of leaving academia after phd.
@Eric-h9p4 ай бұрын
I second this
@gilbertc.16674 ай бұрын
Really liked ur take on Dune, I really like the first book on its own and also the dune messiah because of how ti kind of ties up Paul's strory a bit. thank you so much for making videos that make me want to read more instead of just doom scrolling on my phone all day :)
@ButOneThingIsNeedful2 ай бұрын
I've always felt that books read the reader. Listening to you and observing your all-time list gives me a feel, I believe, for your mind and worldview. Even though I don't feel there would be a lot of commonality with my own, hearing a video like this is still helpful in my selecting the books I will give the time to read.
@Jbirdsprings4 ай бұрын
Jared thanks for making this video . Your discussion points are excellent and I also agree with your reasoning as to why top ten lists can change over the years.
@olgadelmolino87114 ай бұрын
I do agree with your list, especially retrieving C.S Lewis and the Three Body Problem
@mikesbookreviews4 ай бұрын
1) Since you have Dune on here I will endorse this list (even with the downplay of its greatness) 2) Planning to read Canticle this year 3) Thanks for this, I have added a handful to my TBR list!
@Swampratatta28 күн бұрын
wild mike appears!
@iknownothing-493 күн бұрын
Love your reviews . Two of your top 3 are my favorite books. I only just read The Dispossessed this year and I’m still recovering. Maybe it’s a good idea to read it every year. As for Anathem, , I didn’t have a clue what was going on….all the way to the last pages. I can never be that innocent again.
@wmgould44 ай бұрын
Thank you for the updated list! I have read many of the books from your last lists, thanks to your recommendations, and loved many of them dearly. Blood Meridian changed my life.
@gamingsfinest33564 ай бұрын
Would love hear more of your thoughts on your souring view on Three Body Problem. I read it several years ago, and while it definitely stuck with me, I too have found myself looking more negatively upon it. There are several reasons for this, from the misogyny (that is supposedly worse in the native text) to poorly written one-dimensional characters, and perhaps most importantly issues that I have begun to have with the entire concept of the "Dark Forest Hypothesis". I personally feel that Blindsight by Peter Watts far more effectively harnesses ideas of terror that may be lurking within the unknowns and indifference of our universe, a presentation of cosmic terror that holds beyond the alien species of this particular first contact novel. Where the unknowns of our universe could easily break down the assumptions and axioms of the dark forest hypothesis, the very fact of the unknown props up the core of Watts' Blindsight regardless of how that unknown actually manifests. I much prefer the terror induced by the cold indifference of our universe over the (far lesser) terror induced by the limit of logic that the human psyche has reached insisting that any sufficiently advanced civilization must become unwaveringly xenocidal or die.
@Ashley-wi4ngАй бұрын
Three body problem is awesome because of the ideas. The writing is rather bleh, but it also unlike most of its competition originated in another language and required translation so unless you read it in it's native form I don't think it's fair to focus on such things. Either way this series will inspire other writers to elaborate on any of the 100 ideas brought forward in those books.
@kiwikakashi18 күн бұрын
I too have soured on 3BP. Its ideas were really engaging in the moment but when I've thought about reccomending it to people, I couldn't articulate what actually made it good. Agreed on the misogyny as well, so immature and tropey it becomes funny in a way.
@AdrianaElizabeth764 ай бұрын
The way you describe The City & the City reminded me of the series Fringe.
@kohhna4 ай бұрын
The BBC actually did a TV adaptation of The City and The City.
@Johanna_reads4 ай бұрын
Loved this! I agree with your thoughts about authors not trusting readers and valuing the human element in sci-fi. I'm now looking forward to reading The City & The City!
@tqkf8878Ай бұрын
i dont even really consider cloud atlas as scifi so much as general fiction with speculative elements so when i saw you list the book it came completely out of left field for me and i just yelled "YES! YES!!" because it's possibly my favourite book of all time
@arinako92084 ай бұрын
Jared, thank you! So many new titles for me. Les Robinsons du Cosmos (The Robinsons of the Cosmos) by François Bordes is my number one: 'A piece of French land is ripped off from the Earth during a galactic collision and planted on an alien planet.'
@Mahler19884 ай бұрын
I loved both Le Guin's books you mentioned, it is dry in a sense but indeed wants YOU to think and find the meaning.
@RozMazov3 ай бұрын
The Dispossessed was the book that got me back into reading. It took a long time to finish but I was always glad to get back into it, and the final half of the book kept me gripped and flying through so much I finally came out the other end a reader reborn. For something as dense and complex as Anathem, you should consider making a chapter by chapter bookclub-esque series analyzing it, or even just praising it and mentioning your favorite parts and giving a different perspective in a lowkey fashion. Idk the chapter layout so maybe that's too much and it should be grouped by a few chapters at a time, but just an idea. A book club podcast REALLY helped my understanding and appreciation of Dune which is why I suggest such a thing. You could make it a paywall exclusive of some kind.
@nahuakang4 ай бұрын
Great video as always, Jared. Our opinions and preferences aren't static and as we read more, we also evolve. Looking inward to find out what has changed and bringing in new book recommendations and new ideas is what makes us better readers and writers. Looking forward to this list in 2025.
@aust_inc4 ай бұрын
Definitely checking out The City and the City, Cloud Atlas, and the Dispossessed because of this video.
@murmeli29664 ай бұрын
Thank you for the reading inspiration. Great video as always.
@cebukitty2 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing this video! C.S. Lewis' Perelandra, H.G. Wells Time Machine and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Jules Verne were what hooked me into sci fi when I was young. In the 80's to early 2000s I loved Ursula K. Le Guinn, Roger Zelazny, C.J. Cherryh's early foreigner series, Larry Niven, Gordon R. Dickson and the Star Trek Novels TNG Novels :) I'm looking to ignite my passion in sci fi again so your video is a good place to start :)
@rpmfla4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the vid...and I'm glad you used "my favorite" instead of "greatest" or "best". That would be like stating that sky blue or alizarin crimson is the "best color".
@StanjeBrojila4 ай бұрын
What a great list! All winners, not a mediocre book in sight. Btw, if you liked "The City & The City," you might just love "The Other City" by Michal Ajvaz (original Checz title: Druhé město). Less crime, more mesmerising Eastern European parallel cities hallucinations.
@_jared4 ай бұрын
I'll check it out
@jamistardust51813 ай бұрын
Ursula has become my favorite also. I loved both "The left hand of darkness" and "The Dispossessed".
@MTheory3334 ай бұрын
Commenting to support great content
@marjoriedonnett5467Ай бұрын
I just loved The Left Hand of Darkness, but this year I read Cixin Liu's Three-Body Problem trilogy (Remembrance of Earth's Past) and was completely sent into another dimension!
@hellogoodbye37864 ай бұрын
I'd like to recommend His Masters Voice by Stainslaw Lem. It is supposedly sci fi but it reads more like a philosophical memoir. I don't think it'll reach your top 10, but it definitely worth reading.
@InadequacyinaBucketАй бұрын
Ah yes, add more to the TBR! Currently sitting at 1,457 books on there (paring it down is, in fact, on the to-do list). I have to say, I could not get into Three Body Problem. Albeit, half of it was due to feeling like too much of a dummy to understand it and the other half was due to the jilted quality of the translation I got. Canticle for Leibowitz has been on my list for a while - I might just bump it up on the reading order to see what all the fuss is about. I read Left Hand of Darkness as one option of many my class could choose from in my Diversity and Inclusion class. I didn't know what to make of it at first and I admit my confusion led to me putting it down and looking up the ending for my report. Maybe it's worth a second try.
@Conkee17113 ай бұрын
Would be interested in hearing about what has changed your opinion of 3 Body in detail.
@rebelsnappingturtle5097Ай бұрын
A live story and Science Fiction thriller. The Car Tribe Universe
@cloudslady34004 ай бұрын
As a scientist myself I was so excited to know your taste in science fiction and if it is as awesome as yours in philosophy….and yeaaahhh it is…thanks that list would be very helpful to everyone ✅
@sethkaye7897Ай бұрын
I consider Brian Aldiss's 'Helliconia' trilogy to be equal to your recommendations, and still enjoy Poul Anderson's 'Brainwave' - which i think is SF elegance
@dylcor4 ай бұрын
Happy to see some Miéville on here! The broken binding is doing a release of the bas lag trilogy with incredible covers, but aside from that you're completely correct about his covers lol.
@rdustinlane3 ай бұрын
So much respect, The Dispossessed is one of my most cherished books to read and re-read. I don't think it gets the praise it deserves.
@donaldshelton66324 ай бұрын
I'd love to hear your thoughts on Jeff VanderMeer and Murakami. I would put them in that Mitchell/Mieville category of quasi-scifi literary fiction.
@msabuncu76594 ай бұрын
An excellent video. Your channel is an invaluable gem on youtube and you are such an icon Jared. Thank you for this video. Keep up the good work!
@olgadelmolino87114 ай бұрын
I LOVE your lists, you can make as many as you wish, go ahead. 😊❤
@hanadiamin69144 ай бұрын
I read The Dispossessed thanks to you and sunbeamsjess and fell in love with it! I adamantly considered myself not a sci-fi reader prior to it, but I’m so excited to explore the genre now :) thank you!
@margaretinsydney38564 ай бұрын
Adding Cloud Atlas and the City and the City to my TBR. They both sound wonderful. I agree about the TBP trilogy. I had loved it, but when I reread it, I thought it didn't really hold up. It was more a series of interesting ideas strung together. And it draaaaged. I still love Lewis's trilogy, but only because I came to the books young. You're absolutely right about his pedantry, though, and it's been a long time since I could read his Christian apologetics.
@michaelcruz16443 ай бұрын
Thank you for these lists! About two months ago, one of your (older) videos showed up in my feed (I hadn’t seen your content before that), and you were describing Anathem on a similar list. Your description influenced me to order it, and I was not disappointed. After finishing Anathem, I realized I needed to come back and subscribe to your channel. My only issue is that now that I’ve read Anathem, I fear I won’t be able to enjoy Stephenson’s other novels as much. From the descriptions of the others, I think I’ve started with the best one, at least for my interests. Just ordered Cloud Atlas, again from your description. Looking forward to it. I’m curious if you’ve read any Susanna Clarke, and what you think of her? I just Piranesi, which I thoroughly enjoyed, and I’m debating whether Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell is worth the commitment.
@michaelcruz16443 ай бұрын
Ahh just saw another video where you mention Piranesi 👍
@jasmyneemmerick4 ай бұрын
I'm curious about _The City and the City_ and put it on my reading list . It reminds me of Philip K. Dick's experience that he described in _Valis_ where ancient Rome was imposed on modern day California. The added mystery component is intriguing. I like these reviews. Based on your last review of your 10 Favorite Science Fiction Books, I read _A Canticle for Liebowitz_ . I agree with your assessment in this video.
@BrianBell74 ай бұрын
Loved this list and, congrats, you've added to TBR Mountain :) I really must get LeGuin moved up the reading order.
@SuperPlastered4 ай бұрын
I figured Blindsight would be a shoe in for one of your favorites.
@Ijustdoubtit4 ай бұрын
Since you enjoy Le Guin so much I wanted to ask if you have read more of the new wave writers like PKD or JG Ballard.
@_jared4 ай бұрын
Yes. I've read a lot of PKD, though I liked him more in high school than I do now. I also quite like Samuel Delany, who is another New Wave writer.
@kohhna4 ай бұрын
Other fun fact. The structure of Use Of Weapons was suggested to Banks by his friend and fellow sci-fi author Ken MacLeod. That way the significance of the white chair would not have been a mid-novel shock reveal but a the opening blow of a devastating one-two punch right in the feels of the reader. He actually came up with the story and started writing it before the first two books, just couldn't compete it until he cracked that structure and how to fully exploit the twists and turns of the plot.
@lukebanks90073 ай бұрын
The Culture series is absolutely amazing. I find Consider Phlebas very underrated. I think it shows a different side of the culture series and a different style by Banks.
@nextpage35354 ай бұрын
Even your advertising is interesting to listen! Love and respect!
@nathanparrish43424 ай бұрын
The city and the city kinda sounds like “Caves of Steel” by Issac Asimov
@jenniferlee7664 ай бұрын
Some of my favorite sci fis are not on your list BUT,,,, I strongly agree with you on Le Guin's Deposessed.
@DavidYoungSpace2 ай бұрын
Thanks for doing these.
@slavicgarou64144 ай бұрын
The Book of the New Sus is an absolute masterpiece. Gene Wolfe!
@Cristian-so3 ай бұрын
Excellent video. I will check it out to start in sci fi thank you
@kohhna4 ай бұрын
Fun fact China wrote The City and The City in honour of his mum, who wasn't into the type of genre stuff he likes to write but did love Detective fiction. His non fictional work is excellent too.
@davidebossini7403 ай бұрын
thanks for the very informative and interesting video. Could you (or someone else reading here) mention the arguments that lead you to demote the three-body problem series from this list? Also, what do you think about the red rising series?
@NateGilbert-w1lАй бұрын
Nice I added quite a few from this video to my wishlist. I don't if it's necessarily top 10 worthy or not but curious if you've read: The Man Who Folded Himself by David Gerrold? I loved this book but I haven't read any of the books on your list to compare lol.
@tukkerintensity557524 күн бұрын
Oh man, someone with China Miéville on thier list! Love it - liked and subscribed :)
@toddchapman30324 ай бұрын
Nice to find someone who loves Anathem as much as I do!
@paulwilliams69134 ай бұрын
I keep telling myself I need to reread Cloud Atlas. At the time I first read it a decade ago I found myself agreeing with Le Guin’s review of Bone Clocks wherein she felt Mitchell’s writing is too self-conscious rather than freewheeling. I’m hoping that I can look past that and get immersed in his writing, because I’d really like to enjoy Mitchell the way other people do. I love The Dispossessed and like you I rank it above Left Hand of Darkness. And I love it for many of the same reasons, most especially its honesty about its own themes, which is to say that Le Guin, unapologetic though she is about her anarchism and her critique of capitalism, doesn’t suggest an egalitarian society just happens and self-perpetuates. It’s a powerful story because it brings us to a crucial insight about the labor a society requires. I need to get on a few of these, especially Canticle and Earthseed. Though I also need to reread New Sun so I can read Urth and then Long Sun. Well, now that the dissertation is ended perhaps I’ll have time…
@ngogol17484 ай бұрын
I totally agree with a TOP rank you gave to The Dispossessed, especially from a writers point of view, I think, this book is done very well and the harmony between form and content is adorable. I have one question I would really see your answer on: Why did you not include anything from Stanislaw Lem on your list? Although it may be hard to pick one book from him that stands out, his way of treating science fiction is philosophically interesting, full of subversive humor and very entertaining.
@RobertWF424 ай бұрын
I read a lot of Larry Niven as a kid and loved it. The Integral Trees was complete escape fiction, awesome setting in every sense of the word. Maybe not in my top ten, but it was fun.
@kacpercichosz4654 ай бұрын
Niven is terrible and extremely sexist in his books.
@RobertWF424 ай бұрын
@kacpercichosz465 Yes he's gone off the deep end (check out his highly offensive views about organ harvesting). I don't recall sexism in his novels and short stories but it's been 40 years since I last read them.
@kacpercichosz4654 ай бұрын
@@RobertWF42 Ringworld was very sexist. I never read his other books, because I heard they are not much different.
@RobertWF424 ай бұрын
@kacpercichosz465 Rereading the first few chapters of Ringworld - yea, the relationship between Teela and Louis Wu is sort of gross. She's 20 and he's 200 years old. :-( Her character is pretty naive, too (in part due to her supernatural luck I guess), which makes it even worse.
@kacpercichosz4654 ай бұрын
@@RobertWF42 There are two female characters. First Teela who is all the time being described as silly. Then later on you have Prill, who is literally sex worker and all what she does is TRYING to have sex with main character. So both female characters: silly, horny and only useful when they open their legs. Definition of sexism in my eyes.
@thatsci-firogue4 ай бұрын
I love the Culture so much I legitimately have a hard choosing a favourite, there's 5 or 6 at any given time I could is my favourite SF novel. Need to do a re-read.
@lukefshepherd4 ай бұрын
There's 3 in your 10 I haven't read (numbers 4, 3 and 2) , and the other 7 are some of my favourites too... guess i have my next 3 reads lined up - very happy I clicked on this :)
@tobiasyoder4 ай бұрын
I liked the comment “sometimes science fiction writers can get too caught up in ideas and lose the human element”, and to me that applies to Anathem. It felt as though Stevensen was constantly trying to show how widely learned he is in philosophy, science, etc. It was fun, but when I think back the characters just kind of felt one dimensional. They discussed a lot of philosophical concepts sure, but it’s just not a book that changed my perspective on much or has stuck with me. I feel like all the energy in Anathem went into making interesting in a “left-brain” intellectual way but didn’t have the soul some other novels do. It seemed like a book for people who want to analyze and think rather than feel. Some books just linger in my consciousness and throughout life get invoked through various situations I find myself in. Anathem just hasn’t done that for me. I find whenever people are singing the praises of Anathem it is always “look at how interesting this premise for a novel is!” “Look at how they discuss all these different intellectual concepts” but it’s rarely about the actual characters or about how it was truly formative. Just my perspective
@RobertWF424 ай бұрын
I agree - tried to get through Anathem but got stuck. If I want to read about philosophy or geometry I've got plenty of non-fiction options. I don't need to learn about big ideas secondhand through fictional characters having discussions.
@tobiasyoder4 ай бұрын
@@RobertWF42 yeah for me I did enjoy it and got through it very quickly, but just wasn’t a novel that had any lasting impact on me
@MoisesDelaRosa-fd2ri4 ай бұрын
Cloud Atlas is so good. I thank the international edition of The New York Times for putting that book in my radar. I love it so much, and I think it deserves a re-read, because I read that back in 2015 I believe. Also Bone Clocks from Mitchell, very good!
@patrickoleary99794 ай бұрын
Agree about Perelandra. A lovely book.
@BrandonOsborn40421 күн бұрын
Ursula K. LeGuin's epic, "Always Coming Home", is now available on Audible.
@gaffo7836Ай бұрын
I forgot to mention my fav author below!!!!!!!! (how could I?) Robert Sheckley!!!! Short story author of the 60's - he combines Philosophy with the Absurd, and adds a boatload if insanely funny humor in all his stories. You will laugh out loud serval times when reading him, and he aways has some sort of social commentary in all his stories. He is a forgotten name today, but had minor fame in this time. Douglas Adams used to read his stuff as a kid and admitted to pulling some of his ideas when he wrote Hickhicker's Guide to the Galaxy.
@gaffo7836Ай бұрын
im sure you've read the classics - The Machine Stops, Brave New World and 1984 - just to say they are on my 10. others - one is also in yours "15 years haha", "its still not him" - gotta love the immortal wandering jew Ben Eleazer in Canticle for Leibowitz (which were originally many short stories publcished in Amazing Stories - and compiled into a book a few years later. and you are right, the third part is the lesser part, mainly because Father Zercky is a man of action but not a deep thinker - he shows this when he cannot understand how Mrs Grayles "hates God" at the end. I always wondered what the character of Ben Eleazer represents - still not sure. I also would like to understand what the character Rachel represents (any insight into your views on this two characters I'd love to know about, I may gain wisdom from your insights into these characters). BTW the 1980 multipart RadioDrama is EXCELLENT!!!!! as good at the book (which is RARE i find with "remakes/adaptations of classic books). Highly recommend the old RadioDrama "X-Minus One" sci from the 1950's - its a great radioshow, also the radio-readings/plays 1970's-80's series "Mindwebs" is excellent too - both are over on Internet Archive. "Stranger in a Strange Land" - first 2/3 excellent, but last 1/3 terrible ;-/. (its like Hienland wrote most of it - then stopped - then wrote the last years later forgetting the first part! (not sure if that is what he did, but thats the feeling i got when i read it decades ago. 'Ender's Game" and "speaker for the dead" by Orson Card were excellent (met the guy once 20 yrs ago - kinda a rude dk - but those two works are excellent the man notwithstanding). BIG TIME SLEEPER that no one has heard of would be "Night of Light' by Phillip Farmer famous for his "Riverworld" series, "Night of Light" is excellent and one of his earliest works. and finally "Dying Inside" by Robert Silverburg is excellent - as is the late 90's BBC Radioplay of it. 2 cents.
@philosophyoftrucking3 ай бұрын
Cloud Atlas is now on my wishlist.
@davexhayter4 ай бұрын
The City & The City is incredible, glad to see it on here. I loved Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson, but could not deal with the faux-18th century writing of the Quicksilver books, which is done less absurdly than Pynchon in Mason & Dixon but still unconvincing and irritating. Will need to check out Anathem though, I've always been intrigued by some of his other works.
@stanleyhumphrey7404Ай бұрын
I agree with you on the dune sequals. They have two problems. One is that they are following up one of the greatest novels ever, and two is that they cover the same themes that the original book did only not as good. Part of the problem is that the original was so dense with theme and meaning that i think herbert had truley put everything he had into it and how do you follow that up, without repeating yourself, unless your worldview changes?
@alaashhab8924 ай бұрын
I hope you can answer my questions? Why should I read many books if I always forget maybe more than 80% of what I have read? Isn't reading articles is better? If so what are the best sites to read ? Why should I read a certain book? What is the best books of all time and they are a must read in your opinion? Why I can finish whag I have started??
@brianwilk75104 ай бұрын
I rarely dnf books and consider phlebas I dnf'd. I decided the culture series wasn't for me but now I might give it another shot.
@capturedbyannamarie4 ай бұрын
Do another classics video please!❤ Really enjoyed this.
@simonreilly70204 ай бұрын
Very good list. Have you read Hyperion?
@_jared4 ай бұрын
Yes. It’s very good. I think the second book is much worse, but I loved the first one.
@hr62804 ай бұрын
YESSSSS A CULTURE SHOUTOUT!!! Absolutely love the series
@JasonBlair4 ай бұрын
Ouch to CS Lewis, but you're not wrong. I've been rereading some of his Christian work, and though it was like visiting an old friend, it felt dated and wanting for some freshening up.
@tasosalexiadis77484 ай бұрын
Great list. My favorite book is Book of the New Sun.
@Ellis.044 ай бұрын
I am really really happy to hear that you got into Miéville. Very excited about what you think about his other novels :)
@joshsalwen4 ай бұрын
Dune for me is an odd one. I read other books and think they are “better,” but I think about Dune more often. So, Dune is in my top 3. BotNS is top of the list. Since so many of your top 10 overlap with mine, I’ll check out the others
@flotilha9354 ай бұрын
I really love all dune's books... Mainly God Emperor
@MIKE_THE_BRUMMIEАй бұрын
Thank you!! I think it can be too self reflective for those with a leftist revolutionary mindset or just being young and wanting to change the world. I love the philosophy within and feel it just fits exactly to a post human demi God. I prefer to explore more Machiavellian or nihilistic characters within fiction. I'm more inclined to believe technology and life extension with great cruel gods and stagnant culture
@gmcenroe4 ай бұрын
I recommend Hyperions Cantos actually a 4 book series by Dan Simmons. It is probably in my top 5 list.
@Today_I_Want_To4 ай бұрын
Found your channel. Many thanks! Already made a short list of what to read next. Well not read... I'm in to audio books, since 2022 (I have a 2:h30 commute every day, can´t read while driving.... so...welcome audio books) The short list will be heard after the Solaris. By he way... your thoughts about audio books?
@robertdullnig36253 ай бұрын
Culture is such a mixed bag for me that I don't know if I can really recommend it as a series. The run of Player of Games through Inversions is golden for the reasons that you said, but Consider Phlebas and the later books are the kind of rambling space operas I've never really liked, though occasionally there are some solid philosophical ideas thrown in. I've never gotten very far into any of his other novels either. I'd probably just recommend for people to read Player of Games and Use of Weapons tbh.
@shafeequllahsatari20944 ай бұрын
Thank you for the useful video. May I please request a video on 'Logical Paradoxes' when it is convenient?
@captainchaoscow4 ай бұрын
I recently read The Dispossessed. The idea of depicting anarchy is intriguing, and Ursula K. Le Guin's intentions are admirable. However, I have some issues with the book. --I don't think I am a fan of Shevek. The only thing going for him is that he is a brilliant physicist, and people either like him or not. Stuff just happens to him. He is super passive and gets dragged by circumstances or other people most of the time. --Some decisions he makes regarding his family are incomprehensible to me. Why does he have to move to the other side of the planet if he could work everything out from where he is? --There is a chapter where he steps over the line with a woman (in the present timeline). If someone grew up in a feminist, anarchist society, it is hard for me to believe that he would do this. Afterwards, he doesn't feel remorse, just shame that people saw him intoxicated. --In general, he has scientific "breakthroughs" after "encounters" with the opposite gender. --For an anarchist, he has a pretty condescending view of others. So yeah, Shevek wasn't my cup of tea. He is quite problematic, in my opinion. --The two timelines and the looping of them is a nice idea, but the form doesn't correspond with the content. They are not interwoven. I don't gain a deeper insight by reading them in order. I can decouple them, and it would actually be a more coherent story. So, this all ends up being a little bit gimmicky. --I really like the conversations-they are pretty strong. But there is no progression or character development for any of the characters. --America-centric: Shevek visits A-Io (a representation of the USA and UK (West)). It's the only place where aliens land. Shevek has to learn A-Io's language. Other languages are not worth learning. Saying this - I also can say that I like the idea of the book and of course Ursula K. Le Guin is very likeable. But it is still important despite sympathy to talk about the problematic parts. So My two cents.
@kohhna4 ай бұрын
Check out Salt by Adam Roberts. It's about a conflict between an Anarchist and a fascist society on a newly settled planet, with both being very well realised and some very interesting and problematic characters as your POV.
@captainchaoscow4 ай бұрын
@@kohhna Thank you for the recommendation.
@MIKE_THE_BRUMMIEАй бұрын
Have you read the "Gap Cycle" series. It can be a slog at times but it's such a unique, foreboding amd claustrophobic setting...the themes are challenging psychologically but it's an experience.
@zzntzz4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the update vid 🤗
@asajohannesson20124 ай бұрын
The City and the City is my favourite Mieville so far. There are serveral Mieville novels I haven't read yet.
@alexmakar978812 күн бұрын
Think I'll finally read The Dispossessed.
@d3mist0clesgee124 ай бұрын
Macroscope by Piers Anthony since u like Le Guin, one of my favorite characters
@adamcrawford64214 ай бұрын
Some great books on this list. I love China Mieville's books, including The City and the City. I would enjoy hearing you speak about the Bas Lag books once you finish them. The Scar is one of my favourite fantasy novels. If you haven't checked it out, I'd recommend reading Blindsight by Peter Watts. It has some great philosophical themes that were pretty eye-opening to me. With your background in philosophy, they may not be as revelatory to you, but I think you'd enjoy it nonetheless.
@Vladimirarchonaditusaperti4 ай бұрын
I really appreciate that Gene Wolfe's Book of the New Sun continues to hold a prominent place.
@mapasore112 ай бұрын
I would like to read the Hainish Cycle and the Culture series, but I am a bit hesitant about which books to start with in each series. Which reading order do you recommend?
@jortmaas58734 ай бұрын
You might enjoy 'Feersum Endjinn' by Banks. Not culture, but a reading challenge and great read nonetheless.
@STOVL93Ай бұрын
Thanks for reminding me to order matcha.
@rpmfla4 ай бұрын
I just finished Le Guin's Hannish Cycle and surprisingly my favorite (by a lot) was The Word for World is Forest. I had read Left Hand of Darkness decades ago and enjoyed it, but The Word for World is Forest grabbed me much more...it actually made me so angry!
@GromKuba3 ай бұрын
It's a pity that the novel "Inne pieśni" by Jacek Dukaj has not been translated into English, I think you would like it. This is unusual science fiction, assuming that Aristotle was right in describing how the universe works and that science has begun to implement practical applications of his philosophy.
@ratblack82073 ай бұрын
I know you like Sci fi and fantasy books, but I would be interested to see what do you think of Historical Fiction genre and if have read any interesting works. Im of a similar taste and I would be interested to hear of idea you may have on that.