Showing posts with label abe_top50_scifi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label abe_top50_scifi. Show all posts

Monday, 21 January 2013

Old Man's War by John Scalzi

"Finally, forget everything except to follow orders, kill anything that's not human and stay alive"


Forget retiring quietly into your twilight years. At the age of 75, John Perry signs up to go fight in an intergalactic war, with a revamped body and a whole new lease on life. After the death of his wife, the thought of facing off against untold alien enemies in far off galaxies holds a certain appeal for the ageing writer.

Green skin, cats eyes and a revamped libido are just some of the features of John's new body, along with a helpful voice in his head called "Asshole".
Basic training, nifty weaponry and boom its time for non stop action!

This is sci-fi with a great mix of science, guns and aliens, along with a novel and exciting way of avoiding heading to a nursing home. 5 out of 5 - get a copy in a galaxy near you.

Sunday, 13 January 2013

Ursula Le Guin's The Left Hand of Darkness


A mystical looking cover for a magical book



  "For us to meet sexually would be for us to meet once more as aliens. We had touched, in the only way we could touch. We left it at that. I do not know if we were right.”

 
I have really enjoyed all the Ursula Le Guin novels that I have had the priviledge to read to date. This critically acclaimed novel exploring the political machinations of a far away planet peopled with ambisexual beings makes for a compelling read. The people of Gethen are completely uninterested or motivated by sex except for certain times of the month where, coupled up, their bodies take on traditional male or female roles in order to procreate. The fact that anyone could potentially become pregnant encourages a society of equality and these social aspects make for an interesting speculation.

That having been said, it is the story of Genry, the envoy from outerspace, that is at the core of the story. The fish out of water must come to terms with a society that is so different to the one from which he hails, with the central tension of whether he will survive his efforts to convince the Gethenians to join the Ekumen ( a conglomerate of 83 worlds).
 
I am certainly not alone in my praise for this book, since its publication in 1969, it has garnered significant accolades including winning the 1970 Hugo Award and the 1969 Nebula award. I was drawn to it by its inclusion on countless must read lists including the 1001 books to read before you die, The Guardian's 1000 novels you must read, Bloom's western canon and pringle's 100 top science fiction novels.