z31maniac wrote:
ddavidv wrote:
Zen And The Art Of Motorcycle Maintenance...good golly, that guy can vomit more words than Ayn Rand and not say anything.
I'm glad I'm not the only one who felt this way. I actually have a Philosophy minor, and I finally put the book down and didn't finish it. I maybe got 3/5 or 2/3 of the way through it.
Count yourself as lucky/smart, because the ending is the very worst part. After enough existential moaning to drive Phaedrus (and the reader) to the point of suicide, he basically just decides to cheer up in the last 3 pages.
Starship Troopers is good, and raises interesting points, but I prefer Stranger In A Strange Land , but especially The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress . I would read Robert Heinlein's grocery list and love it.
Anything written by Ray Bradbury before about 1995 is worth reading, too. Some is science-fictiony, but some is just classic American literature.
Larry Niven - I loved his stuff from the early '70s through the '90s, but his later stuff seems to be... missing something. I don't know what, but his spark went out in his later years. But Ringworld , Tales From Known Space , all that stuff is cool from a scientific and 'future history' perspective. Also, his calamity books with Jerry Pournelle - Lucifer's Hammer and Footfall - are great tales, set in a (somewhat) contemporary and believable world.
The original Ender's Game is good, but I liked each subsequent book in the series less and less. At this point I hate all the characters, including what Ender has allowed himself to become. Which is funny, because Orson Scott Card has said numerous times that he only wrote the first couple books as a way to get to the ones he really wanted to write.
She's Canadian, but I like most of Margaret Atwood's books. Not all of them; but many.
Unfortunately, I can't really recommend many of the "classics" of American literature, because I don't really like most of them. I'm not a big fan of Steinbeck or Hemingway or Faulkner. The writing is technically good, but most of the stories just aren't that compelling, and I find myself never really liking any of the characters enough to care how it comes out.