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SciFi > Great Unsung Science Fiction Authors That Everybody Should Read

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message 1: by Nyssa (last edited Mar 27, 2014 06:50AM) (new)

Nyssa | 2023 comments An interesting article from i09: Great Unsung Science Fiction Authors That Everybody Should Read

Included in the article are:

John Brunner
Doris Piserchia
Adam-Troy Castro
Kathleen Ann Goonan
Robert Sheckley
C.L. Moore
William Barton
Kage Baker
Paul Di Filippo
Carol Emshwiller
Clifford D. Simak
Amy Thomson

The names are all new to me, and I've added a few of the suggestions to my wishlist.

Thoughts?

Who would you add to (or subtract from) the list?


message 2: by Chris , cookie guilt (new)

Chris  Haught (haughtc) | 2450 comments Page blocked. I'll look when I get home. I'm curious.


message 3: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Bad Girls Deadlift (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 5312 comments Chris, this isn't the details but I pulled the names for you. I'll try to link them to their GR profiles shortly. Gotta go do some work...

John Brunner
Doris Piserchia
Adam-Troy Castro
Kathleen Ann Goonan
Robert Sheckley
C.L. Moore
William Barton
Kage Baker
Paul Di Filippo
Carol Emshwiller
Clifford D. Simak
Amy Thomson


message 4: by Becky (new)

Becky (beckyofthe19and9) I've only read one of those (Sheckley), and only heard of one other (Simak).

I wouldn't say that I was all that impressed with Sheckley though, to be honest.


message 5: by Nyssa (last edited Mar 27, 2014 06:49AM) (new)

Nyssa | 2023 comments MrsJoseph wrote: "Chris, this isn't the details but I pulled the names for you. I'll try to link them to their GR profiles shortly. Gotta go do some work...

John Brunner
Doris Piserchia
Adam-Troy Castro
Kathleen ..."


Thank you Mrs.J! I've added the list (with author links) to the first post. :)


message 6: by Chris , cookie guilt (new)

Chris  Haught (haughtc) | 2450 comments Thanks, MrsJ....

I haven't read a single word from any of those authors. LOL. Though I've heard of several.

I've heard of Simak because of Stephen King (Ted Brautigan liked him) and I've been curious about Kage Baker's stuff.


message 7: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Bad Girls Deadlift (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 5312 comments Welcome!


message 8: by Lee (new)

Lee | 939 comments I like old school science fiction more than the heavy science stuff off today. Two authors I really enjoy that I don't see too much of are,

Henry Kuttner and Poul Anderson.
I also like Leigh Bracket - she wrote in the style of Burroughs - more fantasy-science than straight science fiction.

I wouldn't necessarily call these authors unsung but they are forgotten.

I'll have to look at the list later...


message 9: by Mary (new)

Mary Catelli | 125 comments Poul Anderson did a lot of good stuff.


message 10: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Bad Girls Deadlift (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 5312 comments Andre Norton

I remember enjoying her Moon Magic series: https://www.goodreads.com/series/4919...

Though the books I remember most are books 3-4.


message 11: by Michelle (last edited Mar 29, 2014 10:09PM) (new)

Michelle (fireweaver) | 33 comments the few i've read off that list make me intrigued as to the rest of the list:

Castro's Emissaries from the Dead is every bit as weird/trippy as they say (A+++ worldbuilding, B- main character, though)

C.L. Moore consistently turned out AMAZING short stories, and indeed, picking up a copy of her "best of" anthology is a super idea.

the first book of Baker's company series, In the Garden of Iden, is both fantastic and hilarious (though it is not a comedy by any stretch).

and Emshwiller's The Mount. just. wow.


message 13: by Mary (new)

Mary Catelli | 125 comments MrsJoseph wrote: "Andre Norton

I remember enjoying her Moon Magic series: https://www.goodreads.com/series/4919...

Though the books I remember most are books 3-4."


My own favorites among her SF are Catseye, Dread Companion, and Ice Crown


message 14: by DavidO (new)

DavidO (drgnangl) The Stars My Destination and The Demolished Man as thecryptile mentioned.


message 15: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Bad Girls Deadlift (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 5312 comments Mary wrote: "My own favorites among her SF are Catseye, Dread Companion, and Ice Crown "

I have Ice Crown but I haven't read it. I'm not sure about the other two. I really need to buy more books...


message 16: by Lee (last edited Apr 15, 2014 05:47AM) (new)

Lee | 939 comments The only Andre Norton I've read was The Time Traders and I didn't care for it. I will admit I'm not really into the type of story it was either. I am a fan of classic science fiction / fantasy though. Maybe I should give her another try?

I did get Lore of the Witch World (I think...) when it was free on Amazon.


message 17: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Bad Girls Deadlift (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 5312 comments MrsJoseph wrote: "Mary wrote: "My own favorites among her SF are Catseye, Dread Companion, and Ice Crown "

I have Ice Crown but I haven't read it. I'm not sure about the other two. I really need to buy more books..."



Ha! I have the omnibus of the Catseye series.


message 18: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Bad Girls Deadlift (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 5312 comments Nienna wrote: "The only Andre Norton I've read was The Time Traders and I didn't care for it. I will admit I'm not really into the type of story it was either. I am a fan of classic science fiction ..."

That's one of her really early ones. I don't think I've read that one. I can say that her writing is different than a lot today - some people feel she reads dated - and that one is from 1958...

Lore of the Witch World contains some good shorts:
Spider Silk (1976)
Sand Sister (1979)
Falcon Blood (1979)
Legacy from Sorn Fen (1973)
Sword of Unbelief (1977)
The Toads of Grimmerdale (1973)
Changeling (1980)

I can't remember if she does any explaining in these stories (backstory, I mean). The Toads of Grimmerdale and Changeling are connected, IIRC.

If you have any questions, please let me know - I'm pretty good with my Witch World lore.


message 19: by Ian (new)

Ian Welke (mewelke) | 11 comments thecryptile wrote: "H Beam Piper
Alfred Bester
Eric Frank Russel
James Blish"


Good call with James Blish. I'll have to check out the others on your list based on association.


message 20: by Mary (new)

Mary Catelli | 125 comments MrsJoseph wrote: "I can't remember if she does any explaining in these stories (backstory, I mean). The Toads of Grimmerdale and Changeling are connected, IIRC."

Yes -- "Changeling"'s the sequel.

But Witch World is a series like Discworld is a series -- lots of stories set in the same world -- albeit with subseries that are more connected.


message 21: by MrsJoseph *grouchy*, Bad Girls Deadlift (new)

MrsJoseph *grouchy* (mrsjoseph) | 5312 comments Mary wrote: "But Witch World is a series like Discworld is a series -- lots of stories set in the same world -- albeit with subseries that are more connected. "

True. But Norton doesn't do a lot of explaining. I always try to make that clear to new readers. I didn't in the past and a few friends were...confused.

There is a rich background and history to the Witch World that is more absorbed than explained the way they do now.


message 22: by Michael (new)

Michael Casey | 3 comments I like Brunner's stuff, but I'm not a big fan of Piserchia. Her stuff feels like it gets weird for the sake of being weird sometimes. Feels forced. Never heard of the others. I'll give them a shot.


message 23: by Nate (new)

Nate Espinola | 10 comments Madeleine L'Engle's "A Wrinkle in Time", remember reading this from my local library like 30 years ago. Super enjoyed it and was just reminded by the word tesseract that I randomly found in another discussion.


message 24: by Adam (new)

Adam Meek (thecryptile) Ian wrote: "Good call with James Blish. I'll have to check out the others on your list based on association."

Piper's works are mostly in the public domain now, and are available for free on sites like gutenberg.org.


message 25: by Ian (new)

Ian Welke (mewelke) | 11 comments Piper's works are mostly in the public domain now, and are available for free on sites..."

And free or super cheap in the Kindle store, I see. Excellent!


message 26: by Richard (new)

Richard (fantasyfangr) | 5 comments Charles L. Fontenay is certianly nearly forgotten. Many of his works are available in a quite inexpensive Megapack and in Project Gutenberg. One of his best--a novelette called "The Silk and the Song" is rather difficult to get. It is in an inexpensive pb "THE BEST FROM FANTASY AND SCIENCE FICTION (6th) Sixth Series:" whfich one can buy from ABE or Amazon.

Another great writer from the Golden Age is James H Schmitz. Fortunately one can get his wonderful "Hub" series from Baen Books as well as the famous "Witches of Karres" {and the lovingly created sequels by Mercedes Lackey, Eric Flint and David Freer "The Wizard Of Karres" and the "Sorceress of Karres'.


message 27: by Kevin (new)

Kevin (khardman) | 4 comments Maybe I spend too much time wandering the scifi/fantasy aisles in bookstores, but a good number of the authors initially listed are known to me: Sheckley, Brunner, Moore...I've even got a copy of Simak's "Way Station" on my shelf.

As for other authors I might add, I'm a big fan of Jack Vance, who who won the Hugo, Nebula and World Fantasy Award. (He also won the Edgar Award for his mystery writing.) Someone already mentioned Alfred Bester, and the blurb alone for his "The Demolished Man" was worth the price of the book:

"In the future, the police are psychic. Crime is unknown. Escape impossible. Yet in this crime-proof society there resides a rebel - a man about to commit a murder so perfect, so startling, it will defy detection..."


message 28: by Nyssa (last edited Feb 10, 2019 06:58AM) (new)

Nyssa | 2023 comments This list is now almost five years old, so I'm assuming some of the authors have gained more exposure.

I, however, have still not read any of them because, well, life. What I need is a time turner to pause time, not even go back, just pause it, so that I could gain an extra 8 to 12 hours to each day specifically for reading!


message 29: by Richard (new)

Richard (fantasyfangr) | 5 comments Jack Vance is certainly one of the greats. His “Dying Earth” series is terrific.
A tribute anthology “


message 30: by Richard (new)

Richard (fantasyfangr) | 5 comments I love Jack Vance as well. His “Dying Earth” series is marvellous. A tribute anthology “Songs of the Dying Earth” is well worth reading.


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