We have a guest today, writer Aniya
Wells, who stops by with some recomendations for scifi reading:
5 Sci-Fi Classics Worth
Rediscovering
Though
my reading has been concentrated in other genres lately, science fiction was
truly my first love, and I retain the same affection for it today that I had
when I was a teenager. I made my way through most of the attested classics of
the medium, hungrily poring through lists of the most critically adored novels,
and this process set me on a journey of mind expansion that taught me how to
think, how to question, and how to wonder. Here are my five personal favorites
within the speculative canon:
1. Ubik by Philip K. Dick
Naturally,
I could as easily have chosen any number of other Dick masterworks. A
Scanner Darkly and Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said are not far
behind. And The Man in the High Castle may be an even better book, but I
feel its alternate-history framework doesn’t fit as comfortably into the
quintessential ‘sci-fi’ rubric. Ubik, on the other hand, best embodies
all the queasy, paranoid, wildly imaginative glory of Dick while setting out
from a recognizable sci-fi starting point. A mind-boggling and unsettling
dissection of the unreality of reality, like all the master’s best, soaked with
the particular kind of existential fear and sadness that made him more than a
cerebral trickster.
2. The Demolished Man by Alfred Bester
Again,
I like this one about equally with The Stars My Destination, but The
Demolished Man wins the tiebreaker with its virtuoso mystery ending. This
tale of telepathy, conspiracy, and murder in an apparently crime-free society
must have been dog-eared by Dick back in the 50s; it contains many of the seeds
of the work discussed above.
3. Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson
The
hype is all true. This one is simply the most fun book I’ve ever read.
Stephenson employs a postmodern kitchen-sink approach, throwing in enough good,
funny, crazy ideas for 10 sci-fi novels and somehow making it all work. Hiro
Protagonist, hacker and pizza boy for the Mafia in a Balkanized America of
corporate city-states, meets...oh, you’re just going to have to read it (or
re-read it) yourself.
4. A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
One
of the most formally perfect novels ever written (minus the controversial and,
in my opinion, regrettable final chapter). Many are scared off from reading
this by the narrator’s use of an invented slang called Nadsat, but it’s all
part of the total aesthetic package of the book and is music to my ears, as
much as Alex’s beloved Ludwig Van is to his.
5. To Your Scattered Bodies Go by Philip Jose Farmer
Unlike
many sci-fi fans, I don’t go in much for series: I want a different thing every
time and am always suspicious of the motivations behind stretching out a
“franchise.” The point being, I haven’t read the rest of the Riverworld series
but I hear they’re good. This first one certainly was. It portrays a strange
kind of afterlife on another planet where people from different times on Earth
wake up and try to figure out what is going on. Peculiar and
intriguing...perhaps I ought to read the rest after all.
Aniya
Wells is a freelance writer and blogger. In an age in which consumers have access to unprecedented amounts of
information, Aniya hopes to help her readers decode this information to make
better decisions about personal finance, parenting, health, and more. She can
be reached at aniyawells@gmail.com.
Yes to everything on this list! I loved Dick's Valis trilogy a little more than UBIK, but your mileage may vary. Really great list. I might have to pull down my copy of To Your Scattered Bodies Go and re-read it.
ReplyDeleteI'm re-reading Martian Chronicles right now, and planning a Twitter discussion of it / general blogginess about it in the next couple of weeks, if you're interested.