I read the first 3 Dune books after seeing the movie and hearing about the challenges of getting that story on the screen. Love the first 2, the ending of the 3rd was ok.

I’m 3/4ths through the 4th and final Hyperion books. Absolutely incredible, I’m disappointed knowing I’ll be done with it soon. I highly recommend it if you’re at all curious. The author does an excellent job sneaking deep references into the colorful narrative; Keats and Ancient Greek mythology among them. The characters are vivid, varied, and somehow all relatable.

When I was younger I liked Vonnegut, specifically Galapagos, cats cradle, and slaughter house 5. I recently read Philip K Dicks “do androids… electric sheep” and wasn’t a fan. I loved the film blade runner, but the book kind of trudged on for me with, what I felt was, a let down of an ending. Asimov’s foundation was ok, but it lacked action and the characters seemed thin; I do like the concept a lot, it was just missing something for me.

So what’s next? I read a few classics in school and wasn’t terribly moved by most of them. I’ve considered giving Philip K Dick another chance, and possibly exploring the Dune books not authored by Herbert. I’m not a big fan of fantasy- at least in the horse riding, sword wielding, magic and sorcery vein.

Thanks for any suggestions

  • Evil_Shrubbery
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    7 days ago

    Absolutely incredible, I’m disappointed knowing I’ll be done with it soon.

    Hyperion was def one of those series that I was sad to finish, like, it impacted me that “how tf can there be no more of it” way more than the norm.

    Simmons in general has a very wide variety of topics in genres & Hyperion alternates them nicely (while never really leaving sci-fi).

    any suggestions

    Maybe as a short palette cleanser ‘The Terror’ by the same author? It’s completely different, but nicely done. I’ve read a few more books by Simmons after Hyperion & this one stood out a bit more (it’s not as polished as Hyperions, but much more than the rest I’ve read - overall easy to read, I like it when the setting/spaces are always explained, and most importantly it’s one of those stories that I gladly let live in my mind).
    [Edit: I completely forgot about Ilium & Olympos. Those are sort of more of the sci-fi with the expected classical twist.]
    Warning: it has one instance of horse riding! But it’s in horny a flashback :). It’s a historical fantasy with good semifictional characters, really tasteful blend of actual Inuit stories, historical nautical facts, & authors own derived reality of both, also one of the top tier “monsters” ever … and the Hyperion-style technical description that make sense of the basically literal alien world (the same story could have been set in planet exploration).

    The real suggestion (and I can’t/am unable to explain why the association in my mind) is the Rama series by Arthur C. Clarke. It’s prob one of the top easiest writer/books for me to read (the way things are explained & which things are explained, how characters act, etc). It’s nicely logical & absurdity fantastical without it ever being fantastical for the sake of being fantastical (ie the big amazing things always make sense & don’t seem forced or unlikely).

    • @[email protected]OP
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      27 days ago

      Somewhere I heard about Rama, I think I’ll check out more of Simmons’ books at some point. Thanks for the great recommendations

        • Evil_Shrubbery
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          16 days ago

          … I see them as nice continuations, but are def different bcs of how the story is set up (then again, so is Hyperion to the rest of the cantos).