5 books if you only read scifi & fantasy, and 5 other books you should read anyway

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  • Опубліковано 5 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,4 тис.

  • @HelloFutureMe
    @HelloFutureMe  3 роки тому +612

    did you know there are books outside fantasy and scifi? truly astounding stuff who woulda thunk it. What's the best book you've read in the last year?
    ~ Tim

    • @squibble311
      @squibble311 3 роки тому +13

      wow, incredible

    • @gavinsmith9871
      @gavinsmith9871 3 роки тому +6

      You should do a Collab with Quinn's ideas now.

    • @milesbarnes6777
      @milesbarnes6777 3 роки тому +16

      The two genres have been around for so long, and still there’s regularly new authors and new books out. Huh… It’s almost like they’re the best two genres out there 🤔

    • @fanboysandcommonsense2380
      @fanboysandcommonsense2380 3 роки тому +11

      Best book I've read this year is either Dante's Divine Comedy or The Ranger 's Apprentice.

    • @SquashGuy02134
      @SquashGuy02134 3 роки тому +9

      You should read the metro trilogy by dmitry glukhovsky, those books are underrated. Everyone just plays the games, which are good, but the books are definitely better. Some of the best dystopia I've ever read and each book is extremely distinct but you never feel like any of them don't fit. Rupert Degas also does a really good Russian accent in the audiobooks.

  • @DarkLordGanondorf190
    @DarkLordGanondorf190 3 роки тому +521

    Here's a tip I really like: if it's your birthday coming up, ask your good friends to gift you a book they cherish, their favourite book or a book that impacted them in an important way. You read out of your comfort zone and get to know your friends a little better.

    • @HelloFutureMe
      @HelloFutureMe  3 роки тому +87

      This is a great idea!
      ~ Tim

    • @lonestarr1490
      @lonestarr1490 3 роки тому

      @@drewwilson8756 Meh. Could be anything.

    • @rahulraina6303
      @rahulraina6303 3 роки тому +15

      Now off to make good friends before my next birthday.. :)

    • @ink3539
      @ink3539 3 роки тому +6

      I always feel bad for offering books but omg gifting your fave book is always like... such a cool thing like please we can even swap books I don't know, SHARE

    • @Eyecosaeder
      @Eyecosaeder 3 роки тому +5

      Also with every other medium like film, series, music etc.

  • @lukeb8526
    @lukeb8526 3 роки тому +1396

    No, Tim, you can reference Avatar the Last Airbender as many times as want!

    • @elismart13
      @elismart13 3 роки тому +4

      Agreed

    • @EmethMatthew
      @EmethMatthew 3 роки тому +3

      Yes, do it!

    • @Joenah5
      @Joenah5 3 роки тому +9

      Honestly, I find it kinda tiring.

    • @a_karch
      @a_karch 3 роки тому +14

      Litteraly the reason why i follow Tim's channel

    • @elismart13
      @elismart13 3 роки тому +7

      @@Joenah5 honestly you've never seen avatar and if you did that's Just sad

  • @TheBookLeo
    @TheBookLeo 3 роки тому +479

    i love how, instead of reviewing each book in order, you discussed them through these topics that tied some of the books together!
    also i highly recommend the fifth season trilogy, it explores wonderful ideas AND has well-written and interesting characters

    • @ryanoneal8480
      @ryanoneal8480 3 роки тому +4

      I love fifth season, shame nk has just lots of terrible takes outside her writing

    • @lonestarr1490
      @lonestarr1490 3 роки тому +2

      I really enjoyed the first book of the trilogy. I saw the twist coming, but it was well done nevertheless.
      The 2nd book is the typical case of a middle-book of a trilogy, I'd say. Progress was slow and the ideas didn't feel so fresh anymore as they did in the first one.
      The third book, well, I don't know. I mean, obviously you want your climax to be well established. But I guess one can overdo it? When the finale came, it was so clear what must happen, that it didn't take me by surprise even in the slightest. It was inevitable. And I think N.K. Jemisin was aware of that, for the climax felt oddly short and kind of laconic to me.
      So yeah, it's a good trilogy for all the ideas packed into it, like a magic system that is so unique in effect and foundational world building, that it would be worth to read the books just for it. And the characters excel as well, at least the main ones.
      But in my opinion, the first book is by far the strongest of the trilogy. That doesn't make the other two a waste of time - at least I didn't regret the time spent. But they won't deliver the same "Wowzer" as the first one did.

    • @hannahrobbins1017
      @hannahrobbins1017 3 роки тому

      While I liked the first book okay (haven’t yet read the others), I loved her Inheritance trilogy and Dreamblood duology much more

    • @nativezero
      @nativezero 3 роки тому

      Just bought fith season looking forward to reading it. Just finishing off the Vagrant series

    • @loturzelrestaurant
      @loturzelrestaurant 3 роки тому

      Ok, but grammar?

  • @TheSectorM
    @TheSectorM 3 роки тому +359

    Fun fact: Asimov's Foundation trilogy was one of the reasons I decided to start writing sci-fi. I really enjoyed it, so different tastes, I guess.

    • @loturzelrestaurant
      @loturzelrestaurant 3 роки тому +3

      I recommend the Stuff that Onision and Norman B. wrote.
      Not the Books themselves, DUH, but the Book-Reviews
      UA-camrs made of them.
      They are hilarious.
      One is a Famous Unhealthy Atheist, the other is a Famous Unhealthy Theist.
      They are literally 2 Sides of the same Coin.
      I never saw an Reaction- or Coverage-Video about those Books that isnt
      hilarious. Its always a Blast; though if i had to choose one Reviewer,
      I'd go with Krimson Rogue.
      But again: MANY reviewed those hilariously-bad and hyper-cringey books!
      Whetever you like cringe (like Neckbeard-Stories on Reddit) or not: I warmly
      recommend it still.

    • @daneelolivaw1976
      @daneelolivaw1976 3 роки тому +14

      Foundation (the 5 books) that I read in th 90s were the reason I got hooked on SF.

    • @wtk6069
      @wtk6069 3 роки тому +5

      I loved Foundation, except for the final book. It seemed like Asimov left it in a weird place. Maybe he wrote himself into a corner with it.

    • @agnidas5816
      @agnidas5816 3 роки тому +9

      this guy has no business reviewing sci-fi at all. he;s a book nerd who doesn't understand the stories... he just sees characters and plots and the covers.. he doesn't get the authors..

    • @Tiyev
      @Tiyev 2 роки тому +20

      @@agnidas5816 Yeah, how dare someone let the characters or the plot of a story get in the way of their enjoyment of the themes of certain books. After all, while themes and the author's vision is only part of what make a story, we should just ignore when we don't like the plot or the characters in a story, if the characters and or the plot of a story seem like they're only there to serve the theme of the story, everyone should just ignore their own feelings on a book, and if a book does things that break our suspension of disbelief, we should just ignore all that I guess. I guess that's how feelings work, if we don't believe the characters in a story act like real people, we should just pretend they do, for the sake of 'muh themes'. I guess that's what people mean by books stimulating our imagination. 'Good' books stimulate our imaginations, by causing us to have to pretend that we enjoy bland characters or a boring or non-sensical plot or whatever, so long as there is a theme. Because heaven forbid we define good writing in such a way that includes more than one element of the story actually be good.
      But yeah, this guy has no business reviewing sci-fi at all, because opinions other than your own are somehow 'wrong' I guess, even if they do a much better and more thorough job explaining theirs than you did. Actually, he talked about what the stories were about, their themes, so what part of the stories could you possibly claim he didn't understand? Clearly he 'sees' more than character and plots, if he also talked about the themes and subjects of these stories. Also, he didn't even mention the covers, don't know where you got that one, just another empty claim by you.
      Also, if you think this guy has no business reviewing books, maybe you should try and make a sort of gate, and try and keep him out of it. And definitely, definitely, get your knickers in a twist over either my comment, him having a different take on Foundation, or whatever it is that bothered you, or both. And just winge about it.
      I'd tell you to also do jack about him reviewing books and talking about them, but you don't need to be told do that, you ain't doing a damn thing about him and his channel. Just let that sink in, that no matter how much you don't like him or his reviews, all you can do is complain on the internet.
      I'm sorry I typed this comment, because I know it's a waste on you, and you'll probably just continue to ignore half or more of whatever people say, just to try and pretend you have a rebuttal.

  • @W0lfguard1997
    @W0lfguard1997 3 роки тому +79

    Gaiman is the reason I have an interest in short stories. It is incredible how easily he can create a world, magic entities, and relationships within a few pages. Each story can explore new emotions, make you question your preconceptions about "normal" storytelling.
    What I'm trying to say is, you just forced me to reread his short story collections.

    • @Korilian13
      @Korilian13 3 роки тому

      Which of his short stories would you recommend? Gaiman is among my favorite writers, but I didn't really enjoy Fragile things.

    • @W0lfguard1997
      @W0lfguard1997 3 роки тому +5

      @@Korilian13 Im looking at the "Trigger Warning" collection. Looking at the contents I'd recommend: "The Thing about Cassandra", "Adventure Story", "Orange" for the weird story telling style, "Click-Clack the Rattlebag" but in particular: "And Weep, Like Alexander".
      Fragile things might be his weakest collection in my opinion. But it has a few bangers like "Other People" and "The Day the Saucers Came". "The Sunbird" had a very strong American Gods-feeling.
      You can always expect some of the stories not to affect you or be difficult to understand but then you find a gem of comedy, horror or that makes you think.

  • @colin1818
    @colin1818 3 роки тому +137

    Speaker for the Dead is actually where Ender's story started. Orson Scott Card already had the concept for the story thought out and then conceived Ender's Game in order to give his character a strong background heading into the book he was more excited about.

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson 3 роки тому +37

      And those first 2 books are the only ones worth reading. Xenocide is a mess, and Orson Scott Card is a bigot.

    • @milesbarnes6777
      @milesbarnes6777 3 роки тому +21

      @@Richard_Nickerson this. I tried reading Xenocide, but it was so bad and disappointingly horrible that I threw it in the trash and angry-cried for a bit. Then I decided to find out more about the man… I don’t enjoy spending time on social media, so I was extremely late to finding out that he’s actually an absolutely shit guy. I angry-cried some more, but at least I read Ender’s game from my local library and got a physical copy of Speaker for the Dead from a second-hand bookstore… I was gonna read the books when I was way younger; thank god I waited. I’ve had one childhood-forming author end up being horrible, and I don’t know if I could handle 2

    • @Praxaeus
      @Praxaeus 3 роки тому +26

      OSC's really dangerous views and problematic religion shows up in so many of his books. It's vomit inducing. I still have to admit, he's a great writer, but his propaganda is gross.

    • @petrsevcik5044
      @petrsevcik5044 3 роки тому +2

      Realy? Because Ender's Game started as a short story way before it became a novel.

    • @colin1818
      @colin1818 3 роки тому +11

      Not overly concerned with your politics. Was discussing the book.

  • @subtlefire7256
    @subtlefire7256 3 роки тому +561

    "Push myself" holds up The Silmarillion - I love The Silmarillion and I laughed so hard 🤣😂

    • @mounibj4586
      @mounibj4586 3 роки тому +14

      That is a sign of a true nerd my friend he makes us all proud 🥲

    • @nagamata
      @nagamata 3 роки тому +5

      I was looking away from the screen when I heard him say it and only barely saw him put a book down as I turned to see, and had a sly gut feeling🤔…I rewound to see what he picked up and my suspicions were put to rest.

    • @lukeb8526
      @lukeb8526 3 роки тому +12

      Ha, I'm currently reading it. I haven't gone a single page so far without consulting the index of names at the back xD

    • @groofay
      @groofay 3 роки тому +6

      His delivery and timing of that joke was brilliant 🤣

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson 3 роки тому +2

      @@lukeb8526
      Keep the pronunciation guide from RotK handy too. I find not knowing how to pronounce things correctly a big hindrance.

  • @TMWriting
    @TMWriting 3 роки тому +99

    I read the Foundation trilogy for the first time in the last year, and I think I loved it - it remains my favourite book since I read it - for the exact same reasons that you couldn't enjoy it. Foundation, especially the first book, is a story that explicitly doesn't care about telling a character story. The closest thing it has to a protagonist is Hari Seldon, and he's been dead for hundreds of years by the end of the third novel. Foundation, to me, is a story about societies and systems interacting at a galactic scale, where the slightest movement can topple an Empire. I found it shockingly compelling for that reason, watching Asimov set up a domino and then knock it down from a star system away.
    My favourite moment in all of fiction is when the protagonists of one of the novellas that makes up Foundation utterly and completely lose to an invading general - but win the day anyway when the inevitable political reality of the Empire that sent the general takes him out of the equation for perfectly understandable reasons. It's beautifully poetic.
    (Asimov's prose does suck though - but I kind of enjoyed the wooden nature of it, kept reminding me I was reading something properly old).

    • @milesbarnes6777
      @milesbarnes6777 3 роки тому +1

      Oh, wow. I love the 3x genre of videogames, so maybe I would like it. Quick summary of the genre: gameplay is made up of turn-based exploration and often galactic-scale interactions between players controlling one nation-sized group each. Most of 3x is staunchly sci-fi anyway, and even though I lean far more into character stories when deciding what to read, I enjoyed The Silmarillion to the point of it being on equal footing with The Hobbit and LOTR when it spends far more of its time building the world than building the characters in it.
      I enjoyed Nightfall to the point of it being my favorite short story ever written, (for the past 6 years now) so I know that there MUST be more of his stories that I’ll enjoy… I just haven’t found them yet.

    • @ehuber6537
      @ehuber6537 3 роки тому +9

      Yes! It is the life of a species, instead of of a character. For me the dry prose (especially in the early books) was a good choice. It gives it the feeling that you are reading an sociological paper of a culture yet to exist. It reinforces the idea that behavior prediction could be primarily quantitative data driven (sociology), instead of qualitative/anecdotal (like old school anthropology, and much of our day to day policy).

    • @jensraab2902
      @jensraab2902 3 роки тому +3

      Yeah, the moment I realized Tim values character driven stories over plot or idea driven ones, I knew I probably won't have to worry about the books he doesn't like.

    • @Joker22593
      @Joker22593 3 роки тому

      Foundation had such an awesome premise. I use it for most of my D&D settings to justify why there's ruins full of treasure everywhere.
      The profound message that Tim is missing is that all societies are doomed to fail, even Terminus (The Foundation).

    • @alexoelkers2292
      @alexoelkers2292 3 роки тому

      You know there are more than three books? Its been a while since I've read them but I think there are like seven in the series. He kept adding on after he wrote the trilogy. A couple of the books in the series have returning main characters but you are right in that the Foundation series cares much more about the story of the universe than a character story. I love the series but I can completely understand why some one wouldn't get into the series.

  • @rhuntern
    @rhuntern 2 роки тому +58

    I read House of Leaves recently and it was a masterpiece. Very much a "you'll either hate it or love it" kind of book, but damn did I love it. Very weird, very gripping, very mind warping. One particular scene made it difficult for me to sleep.

    • @elyaequestus1409
      @elyaequestus1409 Рік тому

      House of Leaves will live rentfree in my head for the rest of my life. God I love it so much.

    • @hannahyalea
      @hannahyalea Рік тому

      Agreed, I just read it recently & I love it too - one of the most unique books I’ve ever read in my life. It was extremely skin-crawling in its creepiness at times (there was one night I legitimately had to sleep with my light on because I was feeling too spooked to sleep with the closet in the dark behind me), and yet it had some very heartfelt moments and bits of writing, as well.

  • @telefrag93551
    @telefrag93551 3 роки тому +14

    Hyperion is incredible. The whole 4 book series is unbelievable.

  • @TheSandurz20
    @TheSandurz20 3 роки тому +213

    Noooooo I loved foundation! It reads a lot differently when you read the society itself as a character. Not for everyone for sure, but still a fantastic series.

    • @MetalOnLoud
      @MetalOnLoud 3 роки тому +27

      Foundation is an amazing series with an amazingly layered story structure.

    • @JediWreith
      @JediWreith 3 роки тому +11

      It was unclear if he read the full series. I agree with his assessment of the first book. It's essentially a collection of short stories like Robot. The story gets better, though the characters mostly don't.
      edit: Ha got to the point where he says Asimov's short story selections are good. I feel like the first Foundation book definitely should be considered a short story collection and not a 'novel'

    • @Charistoph
      @Charistoph 3 роки тому +8

      @@JediWreith, yeah, the Foundation series is nothing but short stories till you get to the 80's Foundation's Edge and beyond. They were compiled after they were written in to the books we have now. But I guess he didn't know that? They even READ like short stories, so I'm rather surprised he missed it.

    • @Snakedoc7170
      @Snakedoc7170 3 роки тому +2

      So glad to find some others who enjoyed/appreciated Foundation*
      I asterisk it because I can’t really speak to what reading just foundation would be like as I read all three series (robot, foundation, and.. empire? I always mess up the names) consecutively (not by publish date).
      Perhaps Foundation itself is less then impressive by itself, wouldn’t know. Personally I loved each book, and the greater story they were telling. (Cosmere anyone?)
      I actually got into those Asimov books after hearing Brandon Sanderson cite it as one of two main things that kind of lead to/motivated him to write the Cosmere (if you know you know.. gah I hate that phrase, so cocky, but seems best way to put it)

    • @ProudestMonkey100
      @ProudestMonkey100 2 роки тому

      Yeah the first book is riveting for me. The first and second crises are so incredible, with Salvor Hardin’s masterful politicking weaving a thread through each that truly feels like the only possible solution. One mark of a great writer is to make their characters truly feel intelligent without breaking the internal rules of the novel, and many characters in Foundation feel like pillars of intellect in their world.

  • @polishedpebble4111
    @polishedpebble4111 3 роки тому +249

    I really liked Foundations plot. I only had positive memories of it.

    • @polishedpebble4111
      @polishedpebble4111 3 роки тому +38

      Dune = StarWars, Foundation = StarTrek. Depends which scifi consumer you are.

    • @jayglenn837
      @jayglenn837 3 роки тому +13

      @@polishedpebble4111 ahhhh, that makes sense! I like Star Trek best.

    • @calebschultz4270
      @calebschultz4270 3 роки тому +8

      I found that I liked foundation until the jester broke everything. Then it just became a dull "whoever speaks last wins!" situation. and the twist that the 2nd foundation was right where the first one was (or the capital, can't remember wich twist he went with) was a really boring twist that felt like he was self congratulating how smart he was.

    • @Jonanation
      @Jonanation 3 роки тому +8

      i havent watched star trek, or most of the star wars movies for that matter (Since i am oh so very young) but i *have* read foundation just a month ago, and i had dune read for me like, 3 years ago? Point is, i liked Foundation better, so i am guessing i would like star trek.

    • @yaumelepire6310
      @yaumelepire6310 3 роки тому +2

      Up until the 4th... I’d say. I liked it because it was so "upscaled". Asimov‘s prose was always a little wooden though.

  • @theravenmuse7226
    @theravenmuse7226 3 роки тому +189

    “Not LOtR?”
    “No”
    Picks up the hobbit
    “NO!”

  • @Numba003
    @Numba003 3 роки тому +37

    The Foundation trilogy is one of my most favorite sci-fi stories, so I’m afraid I have to disagree on that one lol. Having said that, I have had Hyperion on my list for years and am now even more greatly looking forward to it. Thank you for the book reviews!
    Stay well out there everybody, and God bless you friends. :)

    • @hunterwhitener5650
      @hunterwhitener5650 Рік тому

      Foundation had some creative ideas but it was the most boring book to me, i had to painfully force myself to finish the first book.

  • @StephG26
    @StephG26 3 роки тому +10

    I loved your description of Speaker for the Dead. It's one of the books that I try to get people to read, but it's really hard to convince people to read a book at all, much less the second book in a series.

    • @kassimbabika
      @kassimbabika 2 роки тому

      Exactly my worry - I'm perfectly happy reading both but, if the first isn't really all that and I can jump in to SFTD straight away and not be lost, I wouldn't be against that. Not planning on reading the rest anyways seeing as it seems to be that they got worse so, if only reading one is an option, I'm game.

    • @StephG26
      @StephG26 2 роки тому

      @@kassimbabika I enjoyed all of them and think they are worth reading.

  • @nimrodgirl1
    @nimrodgirl1 3 роки тому +190

    It’s a different flavour of classic sci-fi but I absolutely adore Ursula Le Guin. The Dispossessed and The Left Hand of Darkness have never left me.

    • @marioksoresalhillick299
      @marioksoresalhillick299 3 роки тому +8

      I second that.

    • @alisaurus4224
      @alisaurus4224 3 роки тому +7

      Her short story collections are incredible as well. The Birthday of the World is one i keep returning to

    • @truegrandhighwonko
      @truegrandhighwonko 3 роки тому +5

      Also Wizard of Earthsea is like if Steinbeck wrote Tolkien

    • @marioksoresalhillick299
      @marioksoresalhillick299 3 роки тому

      @@truegrandhighwonko alright. Interesting idea, I guess.

    • @MrHaganenoEdward
      @MrHaganenoEdward 3 роки тому +3

      About to dive into the Dispossessed for the first time. So far I’ve read from Ursula only non-fiction and Earthsea. Really looking forward to this.

  • @stormhawk31
    @stormhawk31 3 роки тому +137

    For Gaiman, you might want to read "Neverwhere", which is...loads of weird fun, and "The Ocean At The End Of The Lane", which is....well...just read it.

    • @jasontankable
      @jasontankable 3 роки тому +4

      Neverwhere was originally a BBC miniseries that he later re-wrote into a book. Like a lot of BBC stuff, the production design is lacking, but the story is great.

    • @FranciscoAreasGuimaraes
      @FranciscoAreasGuimaraes 3 роки тому +2

      I also found Anansi's Children a lot easier to read than American Gods

    • @JimBob4233
      @JimBob4233 3 роки тому +10

      @@jasontankable Apparently it's more like a book that was adapted by the BBC before it was published. Gaiman had the story down, and then they kept changing bits and he kept saying 'That's fine, I'll put it right in the book,' until one day the producer came up to him and said 'we're cutting this scene, and if you say 'I'll put it back in the book' _I_ _will_ _kill_ _you_ .'

    • @SnowAfterFire
      @SnowAfterFire 3 роки тому +3

      I think you will like Clive Barker's Abarat series and The Thief of Always

    • @JekyViews
      @JekyViews 3 роки тому +11

      Neverwhere is amazing! Good Omens, that Gaiman co-wrote with Sir Terry Pratchett is also well worth a read (I also highly recommend the TV miniseries, Michael Sheen and David Tennant are absolutely brilliant).

  • @daviddorsey6460
    @daviddorsey6460 3 роки тому +71

    As another short story collection suggestion: I’d recommend the Things They Carried by Tim O’Brian.

    • @jthompson8177
      @jthompson8177 3 роки тому +2

      great book though i don't remember it being a collection of short stories, more like a web of personal tales that all tie into a single narrative of events but to provide context for each character. great fucking book though

    • @mdeac48
      @mdeac48 3 роки тому

      Read that, didn't like it. The endless thread of fear of death never really chimed with me.

    • @maxaslagolis
      @maxaslagolis 3 роки тому +2

      One of my favorite books of all time.

    • @gracetopherkirk5742
      @gracetopherkirk5742 3 роки тому

      Oh dang, I read this one a decade ago. I wrote an essay about it for my college application, but I haven’t looked back on it since. It might be time to revisit it

    • @willmungas8964
      @willmungas8964 3 роки тому +3

      @@mdeac48 pretty accurate vibe for a frickin Vietnam book though, wouldn’t you say? Some stories freaked me out too, especially “sweetheart of the song tra bong”, but i appreciated how real to the confusion and fear they were and how powerful that made the accounts

  • @GeanAmiraku
    @GeanAmiraku 3 роки тому +16

    Foundation made me fall in love with sci fi ._. I've never really got invested in any characters in any stories I've read. Foundation treats states as characters, and you (or, I guess, me) get invested in the future of humanity. I couldn't care much for the mc in Dune, for example. I wanted to know more about its ecology though. The planet itself is a great character, and I wish there were more stories like foundation and dune, where small pieces of characters and situations create a bigger picture. Doesn't need to be profound, philosophical, and I couldn't care less about flowery language, I love it simple. This format of Foundation really helps me read a story about a whole galactic empire without unnecessary character development for characters that will be short outlived by the narration itself.

  • @seanmanear9860
    @seanmanear9860 3 роки тому +28

    The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Heilein was a great novel, and one of his most self contained and completed works.

    • @cacuinwildstar
      @cacuinwildstar 3 роки тому

      That book and stranger in a strange land made me fall for Heilein

    • @juangamazo5781
      @juangamazo5781 2 роки тому

      👍for both books!

    • @havocmaverick
      @havocmaverick 2 роки тому +1

      Yes those two and starship troopers are my top three heinlein books

  • @TSDTalks22
    @TSDTalks22 3 роки тому +31

    Dunes been sitting in my shelf for the last year, staring at me. This video convinced me to to read it. Thanks Tim!

    • @loturzelrestaurant
      @loturzelrestaurant 3 роки тому

      I recommend the Stuff that Onision and Norman B. wrote.
      Not the Books themselves, DUH, but the Book-Reviews
      UA-camrs made of them.
      They are hilarious.
      One is a Famous Unhealthy Atheist, the other is a Famous Unhealthy Theist.
      They are literally 2 Sides of the same Coin.
      I never saw an Reaction- or Coverage-Video about those Books that isnt
      hilarious. Its always a Blast; though if i had to choose one Reviewer,
      I'd go with Krimson Rogue.
      But again: MANY reviewed those hilariously-bad and hyper-cringey books!
      Whetever you like cringe (like Neckbeard-Stories on Reddit) or not: I warmly
      recommend it still.

    • @robmaclachlan1264
      @robmaclachlan1264 3 роки тому

      It took
      Me three different tries to get through it. Stick to it it. In the end i made it through the whole series and really glad i did.

    • @madiantin
      @madiantin 2 роки тому +1

      You won't regret it. It's SO good.

  • @eeblebeeble
    @eeblebeeble 3 роки тому +36

    The Broken Earth trilogy is so incredibly good(i'm not even done with book three and im still recommending it hshsf)
    nk jemisins writing makes it impossible to stop thinking about the world, the characters, and the many layers of the story
    its a very pleasant mix of scifi and fantasy, done with a lot of commentaries in enthralling ways
    definitely read it, you wont regret the decision

    • @primeirrational
      @primeirrational 3 роки тому +3

      The world of broken earth is so frightening!

    • @JaneTheBrain.
      @JaneTheBrain. 3 роки тому +1

      ugh yesssssss its so gooooodddd

    • @jaycurtis8821
      @jaycurtis8821 3 роки тому +1

      It’s my absolute favorite series. What an incredible story!!

    • @stephenkelly18
      @stephenkelly18 3 роки тому +2

      Another vote for Broken Earth! Fantastic series.

  • @jeffeppenbach
    @jeffeppenbach 3 роки тому +35

    Just going to point out that Foundation IS a short story collection.

    • @HelloFutureMe
      @HelloFutureMe  3 роки тому +16

      I knew they were originally published like that, but they have long been reframed to be a single story nowadays. Even within the text, it does not treat them as short stories, but as a continuation of a single narrative. At no point does the text itself even refer to itself as an anthology or collection. But even if I talked about them as short stories (which I didn't because they aren't presented as that these days), in my opinion they pale compared to other collections I've read.
      ~ Tim

    • @johncarney9018
      @johncarney9018 2 роки тому

      I came here to say that. Sure, that’s not how they are packaged, but it’s what they are: an anthology linked by a central conceit. If you look at each story, it is very much constructed like a short story. It’s hardly surprising as Isaac Asimov was a master of the form. From (distant) memory the later books might be more novel-ish in structure, but it’s been decades.

  • @davidranderson1
    @davidranderson1 Рік тому +5

    I first read the Foundation books in my teens in the 80s. I re-read them during the last year. The books seem as relevant now as they were in the 1940s. Asimov wrote them as the social sciences (sociology, psychology, etc.) were becoming increasingly important in the world's increasing urban, industrial, and bureaucratic societies. He was playing around with the idea that sociology and psychology (combined with mathematics and advanced computing) could predict and direct the actions of large groups. I was intrigued by the idea when I first read the books. Is this kind of power good, bad, or neutral? Could that sort of power ever really be exerted with the level of control suggested by psychohistory. Re-reading it now, it's impossible not to see the parallels with our current world. We are the constant targets of big data, algorithms, and psychology. We're living in the world of the Foundation, but without a benevolent Hari Seldon trying to guide us toward a better future.

  • @mennoberga4133
    @mennoberga4133 2 роки тому +4

    I just finished Annihilation, and - oh, my.
    The way Vandermeer uses this incredibly elegant phraseology to describe at times incredibly abstract concepts, it's fantastic. And that pacing! It knows exactly when to move from beat to beat, constantly keeping me engaged, never boring, never overwhelming (not in a bad way, at least).
    Edit: Reading my own comment, i notice that what i've said so far is only a sliver of what i loved about this book, i - yeah.
    Thank you so much for the recommendation, i'll certainly be passing it along to my friends!

  • @MrSilencedGamer
    @MrSilencedGamer 3 роки тому +106

    I'm not that avid of a reader, but "Rise of Kyoshi" really grabbed me. I read it in only two sittings, which is really weird for me since I mostly read in short bursts.

    • @carlosroo5460
      @carlosroo5460 3 роки тому +2

      I read "The Magician's Nephew" like that. I can't remember if it was 2 o 3 am when I finish it.

    • @kozokosa9289
      @kozokosa9289 3 роки тому +2

      I did something similar with rereading "the lost hero"

    • @loturzelrestaurant
      @loturzelrestaurant 3 роки тому

      I recommend the Stuff that Onision and Norman B. wrote.
      Not the Books themselves, DUH, but the Book-Reviews
      UA-camrs made of them.
      They are hilarious.
      One is a Famous Unhealthy Atheist, the other is a Famous Unhealthy Theist.
      They are literally 2 Sides of the same Coin.
      I never saw an Reaction- or Coverage-Video about those Books that isnt
      hilarious. Its always a Blast; though if i had to choose one Reviewer,
      I'd go with Krimson Rogue.

  • @tintaly
    @tintaly 3 роки тому +25

    "Beloved" by Toni Morrison was the book that really impressed me this year. It's not a light reading, but it is very well written. It tells the story of an ex-slave and her children and the way they deal with trauma of their past. It really helped me dealing with my depression.

    • @n.m.9938
      @n.m.9938 3 роки тому +2

      I left that on the page 25 more or less...not a "light" read at all...maybe, I picked that up a wrong time.
      Will return to that maybe next year 😬

    • @loturzelrestaurant
      @loturzelrestaurant 3 роки тому

      I recommend the Stuff that Onision and Norman B. wrote.
      Not the Books themselves, DUH, but the Book-Reviews
      UA-camrs made of them.
      They are hilarious.
      One is a Famous Unhealthy Atheist, the other is a Famous Unhealthy Theist.
      They are literally 2 Sides of the same Coin.
      I never saw an Reaction- or Coverage-Video about those Books that isnt
      hilarious. Its always a Blast; though if i had to choose one Reviewer,
      I'd go with Krimson Rogue.
      Whetever you like cringe (like Neckbeard-Stories on Reddit) or not: I warmly
      recommend it still.

  • @ryllharu
    @ryllharu 2 роки тому +15

    I'd really recommend A Fire Upon the Deep by Vernor Vinge. It's one of the true mind-bending scifi novels that I've encountered. It can be a rough start, but once it clicks, your own audience journey at understanding *alien thought* coincides with the other characters.

    • @bottlewishez7889
      @bottlewishez7889 2 роки тому +4

      This book, along with A Deepness in the Sky are my favorite novels.

    • @orbismworldbuilding8428
      @orbismworldbuilding8428 2 роки тому

      Ok that sounds amazing, I'm gonna look for it

    • @dauchande
      @dauchande 2 роки тому

      @@bottlewishez7889 I generally agree, but I would put Alastair Reynold's Revelation Space there as well. I've heard similar things about Ian Banks The Culture (I just haven't read enough to have an opinion)

    • @tiskel2000
      @tiskel2000 2 роки тому

      @@dauchande Of these, the Culture series was the hardest for me to really get into, even though I've read them all. The Vinge series is amazing, as is the multiple variations on Revelation Space by Reynolds.

    • @dauchande
      @dauchande 2 роки тому

      @@tiskel2000 yeah, I've only read one culture novel so far, it's on my list to complete though

  • @yesloow
    @yesloow 2 роки тому +7

    Not sure how Ursula K Le Guin didn't show up on your list, but I am pleased to see Childhood's End on it. Fantastic book. Hyperion and Dune are probably the best Science Fiction books ever written. In fact, Simmon's hyperion cantos is clearly the best series. There's stuff in the fourth book that finishes the story in the first book...how he plotted the story from the start is just astounding. Something G.R.R. Martin knows very little about...

  • @BrezelCeviche
    @BrezelCeviche 3 роки тому +61

    I read foundation when I was 15 years old, and it is the book that got me into sci-fi. Maybe I should try Parable of the Sower :)

    • @christopherbacon1077
      @christopherbacon1077 3 роки тому +1

      You absolutely should, or anything else by Butler

    • @edupunknoob
      @edupunknoob 3 роки тому +1

      Yes! I cannot recommend that series (or, really, everything by Butler) too strongly.

    • @scottmantooth8785
      @scottmantooth8785 2 роки тому +1

      *might look into some of the very early works or George R.R. Martian especially the Thousand Worlds short stories and the ones in the Tuf Voyaging arc...there is an excellent channel here on YT run by Preston Jacobs who has audio book versions of these stories...think he reads some of these and his commentary on these worlds is very good and insightful...i really enjoy them*

    • @houston1342
      @houston1342 2 роки тому

      Bruh, no need to highlight your comment

  • @joshuaamy3010
    @joshuaamy3010 3 роки тому +77

    I picked up N.K Jemisin's The Fifth Season on a whim and absolutely devoured the entire trilogy faster than anything I've read before. Such a great story of resilience and cycles of pain and claiming the respect you deserve but aren't afforded

    • @mrsdiss
      @mrsdiss 3 роки тому +4

      yes yes yes! such a good book, such a great trilogy!

    • @zekonja90
      @zekonja90 3 роки тому +1

      Race baiting books. Black writers do not know how to write about something, without mentioning slavery and race.

    • @joshuaamy3010
      @joshuaamy3010 3 роки тому +19

      Imagine being so fragile that a little melanin ruins your ability to enjoy a work of fiction

    • @zekonja90
      @zekonja90 3 роки тому +2

      @@joshuaamy3010 I stated a fact, black writers do not know how to write book that doesn't include racism.

    • @bexyondemand6887
      @bexyondemand6887 3 роки тому +6

      Ahh I Loved that trilogy too! Once I started, I couldn't stop

  • @jacobcoates9104
    @jacobcoates9104 3 роки тому +13

    Hearing your absolute passion and joy throughout this video was wonderful!
    The last book to absolutely blow me away was the Broken Earth series by N.K. Jemisin - a really fascinating and unique spin on fantasy and sci-fi all in one.

    • @lunasophia9002
      @lunasophia9002 3 роки тому +2

      I tried N K Jemisin and second person present is just utterly inaccessible. Any recommendation of N K Jemisin--or any other second person novel, especially second person *present*--needs a disclaimer about it. It's so different and weird and hard to get into that readers need to know about it beforehand. I want content warnings for this narration style.

    • @milesbarnes6777
      @milesbarnes6777 3 роки тому

      @@lunasophia9002 Would something like “Told In The Second Person” being present on the cover be enough of a warning? That narration frame is so incredibly rare to be in a published work, and it’s even rarer still to come across it by accident…

    • @candyisreading8813
      @candyisreading8813 3 роки тому

      @@lunasophia9002 maybe try her inheritance trilogy instead? That series is really great too and a bit more accessible and conventional.

    • @jacobcoates9104
      @jacobcoates9104 3 роки тому

      @@lunasophia9002 I can completely understand that - the 2nd person stuff is very difficult to get into. However, when it's revealed *why* the 2nd person is used, it makes it all so much better.

  • @darkwing1979
    @darkwing1979 3 роки тому +10

    I'm not sure if anyone wants my recommendation but here goes: I'd certainly recommend reading "The Apothecary" by Maile Meloy. A good blend of fantasy and magic with the reality of our world. Plus the sequel, "The Apprentices."

  • @booksluggg
    @booksluggg 3 роки тому +5

    I was surprised by your opinion on Foundation at first. I am a business/econ grad currently studying political science and also have some level of aphantasia... so my preference makes a little more sense now! If you like dry conversations dealing with power structures and can't picture scenery in your head- the foundation series is for you! haha Loved all your recommendations and discussion structure!

  • @Sootielove
    @Sootielove 3 роки тому +30

    The feeling of visiting a classic everyone says is good and..... it's actually good, shouldn't be as surprising as it is
    I really appreciated this video. I read pretty quickly but I do have a niche comfort zone I stick to and, while I'm still not great with darker stuff, I'll have to give some of these a try

    • @Sootielove
      @Sootielove 3 роки тому +4

      @@waggyn Yeah, I definitely see that. It didn't help that my english teacher didn't allow me to critique misogyny/racism in the classics (brushing it off as 'just the time period') or making his interpretation of the work the only one we were allowed to write about

    • @cecilabbott6092
      @cecilabbott6092 3 роки тому

      @@waggyn Oof I have to read that later this year for AP Lang lol hopefully I like it more than you did

    • @mondkalb9813
      @mondkalb9813 3 роки тому

      There is this great video series "Extra Sci Fi" by "Extra Credits" that tackles a lot of classic Sci Fi and shows us what makes them unique and why they are great (starting with Frankenstein):
      ua-cam.com/video/DnSmGFmP8qU/v-deo.html

    • @captainhaddock6435
      @captainhaddock6435 3 роки тому

      @@waggyn What's your problem with "grapes of wrath"? I'm genuinely curious, because I went into it not expecting very much and ended up finding it genuinely amazing, earth shattering, landscape defining...

  • @Cubehead27
    @Cubehead27 3 роки тому +117

    Borges is incredible. Everyone should just read every story he wrote. Also, I'm currently reading The Anthropocene Reviewed, and it's fantastic.

    • @gracetopherkirk5742
      @gracetopherkirk5742 3 роки тому +2

      I’ve only read The Book of Sand, but that one alone was definitely super moving. I literally ended up writing a poem semi-inspired by it that same day haha

    • @Cubehead27
      @Cubehead27 3 роки тому +2

      @@gracetopherkirk5742 That's really cool! I haven't read The Book of Sand yet, but I've read all his stories from the beginning of his career up until The Aleph, and I'm really excited to keep going.

    • @xx99Username99xx
      @xx99Username99xx 3 роки тому +2

      The Library of Babel is in the running for the most thought-provoking piece of short fiction ever written.

    • @Cubehead27
      @Cubehead27 3 роки тому

      @@xx99Username99xx Absolutely

    • @riley8385
      @riley8385 3 роки тому +1

      Random fact: one of my professors at college studied under Borges, right before his exile.

  • @groofay
    @groofay 3 роки тому +30

    Probably my favorite book I've read so far this year is Piranesi by Susanna Clarke. On balance, possibly the most haunting and beautiful novel I've read in years.

    • @Kathywake23
      @Kathywake23 3 роки тому +1

      I've been looking for an idea of what that book was about. Seems like this one review says more about it than most of the reviews online.

    • @tonykirk8295
      @tonykirk8295 3 роки тому +1

      I picked up this book earlier this year and wasn’t immediately drawn into it. I think I may have just been too busy for it - did you find it pulled you in a little further into the book?

    • @groofay
      @groofay 3 роки тому

      @@tonykirk8295 It's definitely one of those books you have to let pull you in and give it a bit of patience. And it does give you more the further in you go.

    • @groofay
      @groofay 3 роки тому

      @@Kathywake23 I appreciate that. I feel like Piranesi sort of resists those "synopsis/here's what the book's about!" reviews somehow, you can't actually get the point of it without just reading the thing and the less said about it the better.

    • @alexanderbrady5486
      @alexanderbrady5486 3 роки тому

      @@Kathywake23 Piranesi is great. The beginning is vague and a bit slow. There is some deeper fantasy stuff going on, but the book isn’t really about that stuff. It is more about the feelings it inspires in the first portion.
      If the idea of a tone piece doesn’t interest you, or if the first couple chapters don’t grab you, I don’t think I would recommend it. More stuff happens later on, but it builds on the first few chapters so skipping those defeats the whole point of the book.

  • @Sorchakitty
    @Sorchakitty 2 роки тому +14

    Please give Red Rising by Pierce Brown, it has everything: amazing character writing, detailed and expansive world building, even Red Wedding moments!

    • @bretneuhaus-lucas5582
      @bretneuhaus-lucas5582 2 роки тому

      I was gonna suggest this before I saw your comment. Big agree; Red Rising and all it's follow-up is totally Game of Thrones in space, but actually hooked me in more for its brand of drama and spectacle. Hail Libertas!

    • @oathkairikeeper
      @oathkairikeeper 2 роки тому

      YES!!! It's my favorite book series for this reason and I'm not a huge sci-fi fan. I actually read Dune because so many compared RR to it.

  • @ramyvance6309
    @ramyvance6309 3 роки тому +8

    Speaker of the Dead is in my top-five favorite books of all time. Love that book. Interesting note: Speaker was the first book that Orson Scott Card wanted to write starring Ender/Andrew, but he didn't think that Andrew's character was believable. As a result, he wrote Enders Game to develop the character and demonstrate how/why someone could be as empathetic as Ender/Andrew is in Speaker.

    • @turquoisesorcerer
      @turquoisesorcerer 8 місяців тому +1

      kind of! but not exactly
      he had already written the story of ender, but only as a SHORT STORY. he then had the concept for Speaker of the Dead in his mind but found it wasn't exactly working the way he wanted it to until he decided to make Ender the protagonist (or got that idea suggested to him by someone idr exactly)
      this then made him go back and rewrite enders story into a whole book, the Enders Game we know and love today, so he could develop enders character and backstory to the point of making Speaker for the Dead work as a sequel!

  • @pvtslade2921
    @pvtslade2921 3 роки тому +45

    I read Hyperion in a fugue state some decade or so ago and not too long ago had the unique experience of reading my favourite book for the first time *twice*.. Cannot recommend it enough, and there are three other books in the saga if you enjoy it!

    • @dododojo905
      @dododojo905 3 роки тому +6

      If you liked Hyperion, you need to read Fall of Hyperion - it's the sequel, and is necessary to complete the plot of the first.

    • @Cauldron6
      @Cauldron6 2 роки тому +5

      Hyperion is an EXPERIENCE. I cannot recommend it enough. I also thought it would make a really cool premise for a D&D campaign!

  • @nebula1oftheseven488
    @nebula1oftheseven488 3 роки тому +39

    I really enjoyed foundation , I don't remember most of it , but it was trippy.

    • @colin1818
      @colin1818 3 роки тому +5

      I read the initial Foundation trilogy last year. I loved the first book, but it certainly didn't conform to the flow I typically expect from a novel.
      Books 2 and 3 weren't as good but still enjoyable.
      Later in life Asimov added a number of additional Foundation books that tried to tie his entire universe together into one large story-arc. I haven't read those yet, but they were all penned something like 30 years later. As a result I think they're probably far less interesting.

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 3 роки тому

      @@colin1818 They're a mixed bag. There are some neat ideas, but the uninteresting character thing is exacerbated by the fact they follow single characters instead of multiple characters throughout time. The exception being Hari Seldon himself in the prequels, but it helps there's and undercurrent in Forward the Foundation of "the author was literally slowly dying while writing this, so the melancholy of it is applied very well in the book".

    • @MauroDraco
      @MauroDraco 3 роки тому +1

      ​@@colin1818 Foundation's Edge + Foundation and Earth are great and the best titles of the series, I'd say. Prelude to Foundation + Foundation Chronicles are ALL about the character Hari Seldon and are very cool too; particularly to fill in blanck and explain stuff from how the Foundation came to be!
      I highly recommend them. They are all for sure different than the Foundation Trilogy and also much more dynamic in the narrative, with a bunch of worldbuilding!

    • @whiskeysour1179
      @whiskeysour1179 3 роки тому +3

      Foundation and Empire was the peak for me, I loved the Mule as a villain.
      Foundation's Edge lost me though, I never read past it as I figured it was a sign of the spark going out. Good series but I don't think it deserves the enormous praise it received, but it came about in a different time.

    • @colin1818
      @colin1818 3 роки тому +1

      @@MauroDraco - Planning on continuing through the series a bit later. Reading some other stuff now.

  • @williamchamberlain2263
    @williamchamberlain2263 3 роки тому +12

    Read Neuromancer on the coach on a school trip when I was 11; excellent book. I love having to read between the lines without explanations being given to you on a plate - the main thing is not to worry about not understanding something right away and trusting that it'll click later; every concept is a potential reveal.

    • @familykletch5156
      @familykletch5156 3 роки тому +1

      Yeah, sometimes you're not *supposed* to understand stuff. A very modern, "please spoon feed me" kind of attitude to expect that.

  • @laundmo
    @laundmo 3 роки тому +5

    i read Foundation a long time ago, when i was quite young. i think it really formed the type of scifi i like now. i really like the sorts of stories that show a society through examples, and jumps around a lot. I'm not one to get attached to characters easily, so i often don't try to, or even want characters that im meant to get attached tho.

  • @idk7173
    @idk7173 2 роки тому +21

    The foundation series is one of the best hard scifi ever written

    • @DukePaprikar
      @DukePaprikar 2 роки тому +4

      Yeah, but all the cool kids say it's bland (no character development, yadda yadda yadda...), so I better hop on the cool train.
      Now seriously, I was surprised when I started hearing these kind of critiques of Foundation. Did we read the same book(s)? I'd give anything if I could erase it from my memory so I could read it again for the first time (and all the rest of Asimov's work, for that matter). I have a theory of why people say (think?) this of this series (I mean, beside the fact it doesn't check the boxes of "proper writing" some fake guru invented and everybody accepted as gospel): they can't accept there's no 'character development' for example because it emphasizes the fact that any one person is completely insignificant on galactic scale of space and time and they just can't deal with that thought. Somewhat like why many people embrace religion even though their reason tells them it's a bunch of fairytales. If you just say "I didn't like it, it's not my cup of tea, it didn't click with me", that's perfectly fine. But no, they (the reviewers) usually start elaborating why it's 'objectively badly written', thus not good (not necessarily the author of this video, but you can see he's part of that pack). The story of Foundation spans several centuries in time and immense distances in space. People are not immortal in that universe. How can you expect any deep character development of particular persons when their lives are but a speck of dust in a dust storm? The Empire and the civilization is in some way the only constant protagonist throughout the whole story, beside (SPOILER ALERT!) that 'guy' from the Robot series after the universes merged.
      And while we're talking about Asimov, why is no one mentioning "Gods themselves"? I've had some people who haven't read Sci-Fi before and to whom I recommended the book say that it's the best book they ever read, period.

    • @VegasUte
      @VegasUte 2 роки тому +2

      @@DukePaprikar Yes the point of "Hard" ScFi is that the science *IS* a (the?) main character. It may not be everyone's cup of tea, but many of us LIKE "idea" driven ScFI....

    • @mbrochh82
      @mbrochh82 2 роки тому +1

      huh? it's not hard scifi at all. it based on the fantastical idea that some mutant can control the minds of people.

  • @Warloser360
    @Warloser360 3 роки тому +25

    *Pulls out the Dune book- Oh, it's big brain time.

    • @sarahsharp5046
      @sarahsharp5046 3 роки тому +2

      Read the entire series, that’s what I did for the first 7 months of quarantine. Actually enjoyed them a lot

  • @gurthangorcus
    @gurthangorcus 3 роки тому +65

    Respectfully, I disagree on Foundation and still really enjoy it. I'm glad you picked up Asimov's short stories, many are pretty great. Did you read any Heinlein?

    • @jeffeppenbach
      @jeffeppenbach 3 роки тому +5

      As I said elsewhere, it's a short story collection. If you read it with that in mind, there you go.

    • @yoshienverde
      @yoshienverde 3 роки тому +11

      I'm a lifetime fan of Asimov, and I swear by the Foundation series... I still wouldn't recomend it to somebody starting on SciFi, and I wouldn't fight any debate where I would need to defend how well written it is.
      I love it because of both the premise and the story itself, but it's not really the best written novel out there (not even a well written one).
      Now, if you put your brain in the right headspace, and have a general idea of what to expect from an Asimov novel series, you enjoy it A LOT more

    • @petrsevcik5044
      @petrsevcik5044 3 роки тому +4

      I enjoyed Foundation as well, but I aggree with Tim here, that it's very mechanical, idea driven and not for everyone.

    • @milesbarnes6777
      @milesbarnes6777 3 роки тому +3

      @@yoshienverde I know it’s not for everyone, but taking notes while reading his works really helped me understand them (at least to the point of not feeling totally lost), and it seems to only work for me with just Asimov’s works. I try doing the same thing with poetry and uni course material, but it’s somehow not working for me. I think it’s because his ideas are still very solid now; they’re this fascinating intersection of stretched, yet still instinctually understood reality and sci-fi’s surrealistic awe in my eyes.
      There’s this awesome surge of feelings when one of Asimov’s short stories fully click in your head. I’ve unfortunately only experienced that with Nightfall so far, so if the Foundation series is similar - even if only in bits and pieces throughout - then I’ll pick them up. If not, I have a very short backlog.

    • @jasontankable
      @jasontankable 3 роки тому +2

      I'm unsure if he read just Foundation (the first book), or the original Foundation trilogy, all of which were originally printed in serial in magazines. (Books 4 and onward are in an entirely different style and feature characters from other books he wrote.)

  • @unclassedmedia
    @unclassedmedia 3 роки тому +6

    also really loved the entire foundation series. I mean asimov does have a very specific style, but there is much to enjoy in there.

  • @kingkusnacht
    @kingkusnacht 2 роки тому +19

    I can't understand how one can hate Foundation so much? It's a collection of shorter stories that portray the rise of a new empire through a number of crisis.

    • @perry.normal
      @perry.normal 2 роки тому +1

      Yeah when I read them it felt like reading a connected series of short stories, and that wasn't an unusual thing. Ray Bradbury had done the same with the Martian Chronicles and several other books. And the as the Foundation series continued it seemed like he invested more into the characters he was developing for those books.

  • @MBogdos96
    @MBogdos96 3 роки тому

    Please never take this video down I am going to have to come back periodically to go check what new books to buy.

  • @sora9138
    @sora9138 3 роки тому +20

    if anyone out there enjoys short scifi horror stories: The Illustrated Man by Ray Bradbury
    tbh not all of them are horror, but like- a good 90%
    edit: they best compare to some of Edgar Allen Poe's short stories, which is... probably not a coincidence, since one is themed around the Fall of the House of Usher

  • @CuriousDeadCat
    @CuriousDeadCat 3 роки тому +29

    Boy, we are going to have a profound disagreement. I love the Foundation series. It's fantastic world building on a micro view. Favourite story was the Merchant Prince having a shield in essential a thumb drive. After that I read the whole series, his Robot and Earth series and most of the Foundation and Empire series....maybe I should go finish it. Also love the Dune series, except Chapter House Dune. Though that may have been fatigue.

    • @Takejiro24
      @Takejiro24 3 роки тому +1

      What's a "micro view"?

    • @CuriousDeadCat
      @CuriousDeadCat 3 роки тому +2

      @@Takejiro24 Think of it as building a world from the bottom up, a small detail or tech that exists in the world. The micro view/perspective then builds on that to answer the "who/what/when/where/why and how" this item, saying, tech, etc regarding this detail.
      In Asimov's Foundation series
      (SPOILERS)
      the Thumb sized energy shield was a product of resource scarcity. They needed the item but couldn't produce the large ship generators, so they had to shrink it. Thus this society is clever, efficiently using limited resources and technologically advanced.
      Hope that helps.

    • @Takejiro24
      @Takejiro24 3 роки тому +2

      @@CuriousDeadCat Thanks

    • @seanclodfelter4242
      @seanclodfelter4242 3 роки тому +1

      By the time he died, he had made his three main series into one series. I won't spoil how he does that though.

    • @CuriousDeadCat
      @CuriousDeadCat 3 роки тому +1

      @@seanclodfelter4242 you got a book or two that I can read for myself?

  • @rupert7565
    @rupert7565 3 роки тому +45

    My biggest recommendation would be The wandering Inn. Not exactly outside the comfort zone of a lot of people here, but it is really great and relatively unknown.

    • @ryanandzach411
      @ryanandzach411 3 роки тому +3

      YES! Someone else gets it! It's my favorite piece of fiction of all-time at this point. It's that enjoyable to read. I can't recommend it enough. More people need to read it!

    • @Namorat
      @Namorat 3 роки тому +1

      I cannot agree less! You probably read all the books by now and love them, but the first 600 pages are such a boring slog with uninteresting characters and a world that is bland and unexplored. Yes, I know all the fans say eventually the world is one of the best (and I am willing to believe that), but for most readers it will definitely be too much of a hassle to reach that point.

    • @ravent3016
      @ravent3016 3 роки тому

      I followed for a long time avidly, and then just stopped. I think I got tired of the innkeeper's blinkered view of the world? I didn't care about her after a while, and read for the many other interesting characters (like the courier). But these webnovel serials are often so bloated and I tend to quite them after several hundred pages. And I say that as a reader who loves long-ass books.

  • @KelsiieBoyd
    @KelsiieBoyd 2 роки тому +9

    Ursula K LeGuinn is another great pioneer of sci-fi/fiction and she also wrote some pretty amazing essays, poetry and short stories. Very prolific and very diverse.

  • @jacobbrasher2511
    @jacobbrasher2511 3 роки тому +2

    You are so beautifully full of life. As someone on a reading journey myself, this is highly encouraging.

  • @jakelee7443
    @jakelee7443 3 роки тому +15

    I just paused Hyperion to watch this video and I can’t agree more. It’s my favorite scifi book of all time.

  • @Eclipse-mf6hc
    @Eclipse-mf6hc 3 роки тому +10

    0:48 who else really wants that spiny thing now?

    • @Eclipse-mf6hc
      @Eclipse-mf6hc 3 роки тому +1

      @Suddenly huh

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson 3 роки тому +1

      I read this as written: spiny, as in to do with the spine.
      Spinny* is what you meant to type, and spinning* is what you should've typed.

  • @UtahSustainGardening
    @UtahSustainGardening 3 роки тому +9

    Foundation is a collection of short stories! AHHHHH!

    • @HelloFutureMe
      @HelloFutureMe  3 роки тому +1

      Only kinda? It was published in a serialised format in the 40s, but more as chapters, not independent stories. And it doesn't present itself as an anthology in the text itself.
      ~ Tim

  • @ionutionescu82
    @ionutionescu82 2 роки тому +2

    Fun fact: the original Foundation trilogy is in fact a collection of short stories ;)
    They were published separately throughout the'40s and compiled into fix-ups in the early '50s (same as with I, Robot).

  • @Amelia-pp4wm
    @Amelia-pp4wm 3 роки тому +1

    Short stories are super underrated! If you want more recommendations:
    - Kurt Vonnegut's Welcome to the Monkey House. It's a good blend of sci-fi's signature question-based plots, paired with solid character explorations. Who Am I This Time is an extraordinarily heartwarming love story, and one of my favorites.
    - I second Asimov. I, Robot has a fun logic puzzle sort of feel, and is great even for non-scifi readers. Also, his non-fiction essays are surprisingly compelling!
    - Also second Aimee Bender (I have her Willful Creatures collection). Her prose is consistently captivating, and she mixes in some great magical realism.

  • @duncanmckechney4535
    @duncanmckechney4535 3 роки тому +9

    I'm genuinely curious whether you would like books 2 and 3 of the Foundation trilogy more. They have a much more continuous, linear story structure and focus largely around the impact of a single character, the antagonist of both books known as The Mule.

  • @Eramiserasmus
    @Eramiserasmus 3 роки тому +14

    Book recommendations, the weekend before semester starts? Well, guess I'm going to be going to class blind from power-reading.

  • @mitspeiler
    @mitspeiler 3 роки тому +5

    That's certainly the most creative pronunciation of Jorge Luis Borges I've ever heard

  • @cindywitte5052
    @cindywitte5052 3 роки тому +1

    I read a variety of genres. My sister-in-law, who is also an avid reader, got me "Educated" for Christmas. It's something I probably never would have picked up on my own. I loved it. Love your channel.

  • @davidranderson1
    @davidranderson1 Рік тому +3

    I'm surprised by how significant the differences are in our reading tastes and histories. Asimov and Gaimen are two of my favorite authors. I adore Foundation, Sandman, and American Gods. Short stories are what first got me into science fiction, and it's probably one of the reasons that I like the original Foundation trilogy so much. And, I did read Dune. In fact, I read it in my teens. You indicated a clear preference for fantasy, and that seems to fit with an interest in characters over concepts. But, I lean the other direction. I'm fine with impressionistically defined characters as long as there's a really interesting concept. But, if there isn't an interesting concept at the center of the story, then the book seems aimless and pointless to me.

  • @kuroazrem5376
    @kuroazrem5376 3 роки тому +58

    I love how you butchered Borges' name; by the way, he's the most famous argentinian writer ever.

    • @HelloFutureMe
      @HelloFutureMe  3 роки тому +14

      I'm so sorry I panicked in the moment when I realised I didn't know 😅 and then that came out
      ~ Tim

    • @genrepunk
      @genrepunk 3 роки тому +1

      Yeahhhh, came here to point this out. It's okay but FYI it's pronounced closer to HOR-hay Louise BOR-hays

    • @loturzelrestaurant
      @loturzelrestaurant 3 роки тому

      @@HelloFutureMe I recommend the Stuff that Onision and Norman B. wrote.
      Not the Books themselves, DUH, but the Book-Reviews
      UA-camrs made of them.
      They are hilarious.
      One is a Famous Unhealthy Atheist, the other is a Famous Unhealthy Theist.
      They are literally 2 Sides of the same Coin.
      I never saw an Reaction- or Coverage-Video about those Books that isnt
      hilarious. Its always a Blast; though if i had to choose one Reviewer,
      I'd go with Krimson Rogue.
      But again: MANY reviewed those hilariously-bad and hyper-cringey books!
      Whetever you like cringe (like Neckbeard-Stories on Reddit) or not: I warmly
      recommend it still.

    • @Llewellyn2844
      @Llewellyn2844 2 роки тому

      @@HelloFutureMe
      To be fair, it was a hilarious, entertainingly bad mispronunciation.

  • @scon4130
    @scon4130 3 роки тому +17

    The Expanse is much closer to Game of Thrones than Dune, IMO.

  • @kebostek
    @kebostek 3 роки тому +6

    I'm disappointed you didn't speak at length about Iain M Banks' The Culture series despite showing Consider Phlebas as a prop. Use of Weapons and Surface Detail have the best endings ever, I had to sit there for a while after finishing those books processing what I had just read.

    • @robertwinslade3104
      @robertwinslade3104 3 роки тому

      I often say that not enough people talk about The Culture then Tim sat there with a copy of Consider Phlebas right in front of him for an entire video and didn't even mention it 😑

    • @HelloFutureMe
      @HelloFutureMe  3 роки тому +2

      I wasn't a huge fan of Consider Phlebas BUT I've loved his other books - I'm reading Use of Weapons now. It's so damn good! Such a profound world. Well deserved praise he receives. Lucky I have a friend who is a massive fan of his who pushed me and pushed me.
      ~ Tim

  • @mmerry6021
    @mmerry6021 3 роки тому +5

    I played a ton of Sid Meier's civilization as a boy, and in a way Foundation reminded me of that type of world building. Enjoyed it.

  • @DanielBeer1
    @DanielBeer1 3 роки тому +1

    I usually don't recommend Foundation to people for Asimov. It usually depends on the person asking, but typically I'll suggest the Robot trilogy (Lije Bailey and R. Daneel Olivaw books), Pebble in the Sky, or The Gods Themselves.

  • @lukeb8526
    @lukeb8526 3 роки тому +29

    So, regarding the predictability of older books, I think what we forget is that it's these older books that INVENTED the tropes we think to be so predictable. The modern books that introduce us to these are, much of the time, simply trying to imitate what came before them... because it was done so well by the original authors! Don't get me wrong, modern books can pull these tropes really well, and expand upon them in new and different ways, but most readers (or future writers) will never truly understand every single thought, insight and belief that went into the original work; much of the time we just see that something works and try to replicate it.

    • @petrsevcik5044
      @petrsevcik5044 3 роки тому +4

      Also most of their followers only copy the tropes on the surface. Like how elves in modern fantasy are done (especialy the elves and dwarves hate each other trope).

    • @lukeb8526
      @lukeb8526 3 роки тому +1

      @@petrsevcik5044 Yeah exactly. It's like when we copy tropes we're relying on the lore and deep thought the original author put into it to support new books, but without putting any of the deep thought into the new books.

    • @UteChewb
      @UteChewb 3 роки тому +1

      This is true not only for fiction but for texts in non-fiction. Past classics explored ideas and new texts will improve on that, but if you read the old stuff you can see them discuss ideas that didn't pan out, exploring tributaries of thinking, and it gives a greater depth. And sometimes you come across ideas that shouldn't have been forgotten. Same with fiction.

  • @wingracer1614
    @wingracer1614 3 роки тому +4

    Since you enjoyed Card and are reading short stories, please PLEASE read his story Unaccompanied Sonata. It's both tragic and beautiful at the same time. Probably my favorite short story ever.
    Also if you like short stories, you have to read Harlan Ellison.

  • @helicopterharry5101
    @helicopterharry5101 3 роки тому +10

    Me who reads Dune and Speaker on a yearly basis: What are you people reading?

    • @dauchande
      @dauchande 2 роки тому

      Personally, I look at the Prometheus Awards, Nebula and sometimes Hugo winners

  • @dougsundseth6904
    @dougsundseth6904 3 роки тому +3

    For SF short fiction, I'd strongly recommend SF Hall of Fame, Vol. 1 (which is short stories), and SF Hall of Fame, Vols. 2A & 2B (which is novelettes/novellas). Some very, very strong work from the early days of the genre. And the variety of styles of writing is an excellent primer for the subject as well as probably providing something for nearly every taste.

    • @thelibraryladder
      @thelibraryladder 2 роки тому +1

      Excellent suggestion! "The SF Hall of Fame, Vol. 1" (edited by Robert Silverberg) is, in my opinion, the best overall collection of SF stories ever published, even though it only covers works before 1965. When reading the stories in that anthology, it's easy to see the profound influences they had on modern SF and pop culture in general.
      Another classic SF collection worth exploring is "Adventures in Time and Space" from 1946 (edited by Raymond Healy & J. Francis McComas). It was one of the first instances where SF was able to escape the literary prejudices of the publishing world and reach a wider audience in the general public when it was republished as part of Random House's Modern Library series in the 1950s. A few of the stories in it are also found in the "SF Hall of Fame" above.
      I'd also highly recommend the short fiction of Ray Bradbury, particularly "The Golden Apples of the Sun" (1953), "The Illustrated Man" (1951), or the broader collections "The Stories of Ray Bradbury" (1980) and "Bradbury Stories" (2003). Bradbury wrote some brilliant novels, but I think he was an even better short story writer. His lyrical prose style is lush and beautiful, but his steady barrage of lovely and creative metaphors can grow a little tiring at novel length. His short stories, though, are like polished jewels that never grow old or dim.

  • @wastrel92
    @wastrel92 2 роки тому +1

    I love Borges' short stories, particularly the collections The Aleph and The Garden Of Forking Paths. The ideas are so huge, and explored so thoroughly. There are a good handful that repeatedly blow my mind and I can keep coming back to. I also loved Hyperion, and the sequel.

  • @AleksandarIvanov69
    @AleksandarIvanov69 3 роки тому +6

    The Ender series is such a beautiful and deeply personal story, especially Speaker for the dead!
    Absolutely a must-read.

  • @naolmstead
    @naolmstead 3 роки тому +5

    Reading Dune, Slaughter House Five, and Catch-22 in high school did a lot to shape how I view the world and events around me. And yes I did read all 6 of the Dune series in high school and no I don't think that made me any smarter. It just filled my head with different ideas.

    • @TheDMFW62
      @TheDMFW62 3 роки тому

      Well, when you've collected enough of them (and reflected on them) that's one definition of smarter.

  • @joshrechenberg3398
    @joshrechenberg3398 3 роки тому +9

    The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho!! It’s a pretty short story but amazing, definitely a favorite of mine
    The Hitchhikers Guide to The Galaxy, is also very good 10/10 would recommend them both

    • @willmungas8964
      @willmungas8964 3 роки тому

      I loved the Alchemist! I really like the mix of the sense of deeper mystery and power coming from everyday things, philosophy that you can incorporate into your life. Because of those, for a somewhat fantasy book, it amazes me how grounded it all still seems

    • @paulrodgers2675
      @paulrodgers2675 3 роки тому +1

      The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy is great, I'm with you 100% on that one.
      However The Alchemist is up there as my most hated book I have ever read. It is however many pages of psuedo-spiritual drivel, the fact that anyone can enjoy is straight up amazing to me. It's so horrible, but you like what you like I guess

    • @loturzelrestaurant
      @loturzelrestaurant 3 роки тому

      @@paulrodgers2675 I recommend the Stuff that Onision and Norman B. wrote.
      Not the Books themselves, DUH, but the Book-Reviews
      UA-camrs made of them.
      They are hilarious.
      One is a Famous Unhealthy Atheist, the other is a Famous Unhealthy Theist.
      They are literally 2 Sides of the same Coin.
      I never saw an Reaction- or Coverage-Video about those Books that isnt
      hilarious. Its always a Blast; though if i had to choose one Reviewer,
      I'd go with Krimson Rogue.
      But again: MANY reviewed those hilariously-bad and hyper-cringey books!
      Whetever you like cringe (like Neckbeard-Stories on Reddit) or not: I warmly
      recommend it still.

  • @jackbaxter2223
    @jackbaxter2223 3 роки тому +2

    For me, one of my favourites is the webserial Worm by Wildbow. It's a superhero story exploring the complex politics and unwritten rules of the setting from the perspective of a teenager who more-or-less-accidentally becomes a villain. It has incredible world-building, fantastic characterisation and a break-neck plot, though it does get very dark at several points. It's 1.67 million words long, and is built on the idea of 'justified tropes'. That is, every single superhero trope and cliché is in full effect, but actually has a really good reason for being in play. How is it physically possible for people to shoot lasers out of their hands? Where does the energy come from? Why do they not burn themselves with their own lasers? Why have superpowers suddenly started manifesting? The best part is the way these answers are all connected to each other and the narrative, with mysteries unravelling and new questions arising as you go.
    I agree with you about American Gods. I just never got into it or found the protagonist to be remotely interesting, and I ended up giving up halfway through.
    I didn't really like Speaker For The Dead. I just found the whole set up to be too ridiculous and I found Novinha to be so intensely unlikable that I just couldn't enjoy it. Though I may also be slightly biased by how incredibly bad the next book, Xenocide, turned out to be.
    Hyperion was interesting, and it was well-written, but it didn't really grip me and I felt no inclination to read the sequels.

  • @Jo-bs2uu
    @Jo-bs2uu 2 роки тому +1

    i get where your coming from with Foundation, usually I'm a characters guy as well. But what I like about the big leaps is it reflects my feelings about these hypothetical science concepts we have now. perhaps we will travel the stars-just not in your life time for me in the real world. It's this grand concept that at one point connects these characters across time but also leaves them behind. something beautiful and true about a story that isn't about a big event made of a few pivotal players but where the player is humanity itself. i hope this made sense lol

  • @test2tester53
    @test2tester53 3 роки тому +5

    The problem with Foundation might be because you are looking at it as a novel. Foundation is not a novel, it is an anthology of short stories set in a shared universe.

  • @d.n.martell
    @d.n.martell 3 роки тому +6

    "Why does this feel like a hill that I am slowly dying on?"😂😂😂

  • @bowmanhuor
    @bowmanhuor 3 роки тому +4

    I've been into the Expanse series lately and I really enjoy. After I'm done with them I'll check out your recommendations.

  • @Sund3v3
    @Sund3v3 2 роки тому +2

    I absolutely loved Annihilation myself. I read the trilogy in a rush and while most reviews said the second book dragged, I found it excelled in atmosphere and character. Overall a very weird, very menacing and disconcerting experience. I can tell it isn't for everyone and it made me uncomfortable quite often but I absolutely loved the main character. I'd never read any other book with this kind of female protagonist and it was so refreshing that I marvelled openly at how the writer made me cheer for her. It's brilliant!

  • @aldipaola9319
    @aldipaola9319 3 роки тому +23

    I’d recommend D.H Laurence if you want to do short stories.

  • @prytooblack
    @prytooblack 3 роки тому +11

    Was I the only one who laughed when hearing "Jorgen Louis Bourgois" in french? Is always funny hearing anglophones trying to pronounce latin names...

  • @donsample1002
    @donsample1002 3 роки тому +8

    I always took that "Hemingway" short story to be about a family that got so many sets of baby shoes given to them at baby showers, etc. that they started selling off the extras.

    • @dubbingsync
      @dubbingsync 3 роки тому +1

      Definitely not the way I took it, bit of a gut punch when I heard that bit.

  • @namron98
    @namron98 3 роки тому +1

    I was looking through the numerous video essays on ATLA recently and I can’t seem to find many VE on the aspects of aangs character. I think it be pretty awesome to hear your thoughts on him. Good and bad. Personally he’s my favorite character and I’m a little disappointed that I can’t find many videos talking about him unlike the rest of the gaang. I look forward to see your future video. You’re my favorite UA-camr. I hope you notice this comment.

  • @kingtigerbooks1162
    @kingtigerbooks1162 2 роки тому +1

    Read a thousand books and live a thousand lives.
    My 3 favorite books are:
    - Planet of the Damned by Harry Harrison
    - City by Clifford D Simak
    - Great Fighter Jets of the Galaxy 1 by Tim Gibson

  • @Iam12778
    @Iam12778 3 роки тому +4

    Hyperion is amazing! It's one of my scifi favorites, but I have to warn: if you expect same kind of stories from rest of Hyperion-cantos, you're gonna get disappointed. They are very idea-heavy as Tim said.

  • @Joe1729
    @Joe1729 3 роки тому +26

    The Night Circus, by Erin Morgenstern. Just beautiful, beautiful, magical dreamlike story

    • @thezroz4041
      @thezroz4041 3 роки тому +2

      I love this book! It was the first time I ever read a book that I would discribe as "Beautiful" and it has always stuck with me.

    • @QuinlanLJ
      @QuinlanLJ 3 роки тому +3

      Poor character development, wonderful world-building.

    • @akshinagupta342
      @akshinagupta342 3 роки тому +1

      One of the few times I have seen compelling usage of second person. But yes the book is all about setting. The worldbuilding is absolutely beautiful and the characters/plot are definitely second fiddle.

    • @247HoneyBadger
      @247HoneyBadger 2 роки тому +2

      Thank you so much for recommending this book! I could not put it down once I started reading it ❤️ It’s now one of my favorites 🙂

  • @wowthnxm83
    @wowthnxm83 3 роки тому +6

    Im here to say read the web serial Worm. Its so good you guys.

    • @rupert7565
      @rupert7565 3 роки тому +1

      If you like worm, try Pith by madwhitesnake.
      And you can't recommend a web serial with recommending The Wandering inn by Pirateaba.

    • @wowthnxm83
      @wowthnxm83 3 роки тому +1

      @@rupert7565 will look in to them thanks.

  • @edenmckinley3472
    @edenmckinley3472 3 роки тому +2

    I didn't think I would like short stories either, Tim, but then I read A collection by Ray Bradbury called The Cat's Pajamas. It was awesome. The stories differed in genre, some being romance, some sci-fi, and some drama, but it really impacted me. There's one story, and I forget it's name, but it is about a team of human scientists who explore an alien planet populated by giant telepathic spiders. The spiders are actually really awesome people, and the scientists realize this, but their encounter has a tragic ending. It explored themes of nature's cruelty, the complexity of human relationships, and how man's fear of what he does not understand hinders peace and progress. All told from the point of view of a giant telepathic spider, who is a well-rounded, sympathetic character.

  • @AlexisBabayan
    @AlexisBabayan 2 роки тому

    from time to time I like to pick up short story compilations because they can be a like a "taster's menu" of different authors and styles (and the short story format works well with my reluctance to "commit.")

  • @stealthyremote7424
    @stealthyremote7424 3 роки тому +3

    Sandman is probably one of the more unabashedly gory books I’ve ever read. It’s seriously good and some parts genuinely made me gag at the level of descriptive detail

  • @Joenah5
    @Joenah5 3 роки тому +8

    Best book I’ve read in the past year (and still reading since it’s rather long) is hands down Worm by Wildbow.

    • @rupert7565
      @rupert7565 3 роки тому

      It is very good, very well written and amazing battle scenes. Unfortunately the story gets worse after the second timeskip, mostly the believability suffers.
      If you like Worm I can fully recommend Pith by madwhitesnake, especially if you give it a bit of time to get started.
      Of course if you like the whole web series thing, The Wandering Inn by Pirateaba is the best one out there hands down.

    • @primeirrational
      @primeirrational 3 роки тому +2

      Worm felt like it was infinitely good in the end…

    • @jackbaxter2223
      @jackbaxter2223 3 роки тому +1

      Worm is absolutely amazing, and one of my all time favourites. His other works are incredible too. Pact is an urban/fantasy/horror with my favourite magic system ever written, about a man who discovers that he comes from a long line of Diabolists (demon-summoners) and has inherited seven generations of bad karma as a result. Twig is a biopunk story set in the 1920s where there was a biological revolution instead of an industrial revolution and the Crown still rules America, following a group of young child experiments as they grow up.
      Pact started out with Wildbow still running in the mode he wrote the end of Worm in, so it can get a bit unrelenting, and he's admitted that he thinks that his current story, Pale, which is set in the same world as Pact, does a much better job at introducing it to people.
      Twig is him more focusing on relationships and features the best character dynamics he's ever written. If you liked Tattletale in Worm, you're going to love the protagonist of Twig, Sylvester.

    • @primeirrational
      @primeirrational 3 роки тому +1

      @@jackbaxter2223 I always wanted to read Twig…

  • @wtk6069
    @wtk6069 3 роки тому +5

    Probably the single best science fiction book ever written is "A Canticle for Leibowitz". I'd say it's the only work of sci-fi that is in the top five books ever written in the English language.

    • @gmosphere
      @gmosphere 3 роки тому +1

      It's also a major inspiration for the fallout video game franchise!

    • @mattmrector
      @mattmrector 2 роки тому

      Agreed. Phenomenal book!

  • @michaeljdauben
    @michaeljdauben 3 місяці тому

    Great book video. Gave me a lot to think about.
    I first read the Foundation Trilogy back in the 60s and I felt then about it much the same as you did. It's never been one of my favorites.
    I do agree with you about short stories, too. I've read some excellent collections over the years.
    Most of the books you discussed here I've already read or already have on my TBR list, but I did add Purgatory Mount to my Kindle before the video ended.
    Plus I just subbed to your channel. 😅

  • @iksaglam
    @iksaglam Рік тому +2

    Hard disagree on Foundation. It comes down to personal taste of course but for me sci-fi is all about grand ideas and Foundation is truly epic in it's scope and ideas. Yes it is not character driven or heavy on plot but the themes it tackles more than makes up for it.
    It comes down to what you enjoy of course. For me modern sci-fi like the expanse feels like reading a detailed movie script rather than reading a novel. So it does not speak to me as much. But I can understand why Foundation would feel dry to such an audience.
    Also like others said you must try Ursula K. Leguin. Left Hand of Darkness, Lathe of Heaven, The Dispossessed. These are all must reads im my opinion.
    As always great video, I really appreciate your points.

  • @brianwilliams3329
    @brianwilliams3329 3 роки тому +5

    Also, for graphic novels, you've got to read 'Y: The Last Man.'

    • @peterhz3128
      @peterhz3128 3 роки тому +1

      just finished reading the series, it was amazing.