I wouldn’t know which work is best qualified to win as I haven’t read them all. I do find this helpful for suggestions on what to read next.

I liked Kaiju Preservation Society and can highly recommended it as a relatively light and silly read.

  • modulus
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    21 year ago

    I think the only one out of those I read is the Golden Enclaves, and it’s good.

    Whatever Greg Egan writes is always amazing.

    Other than that hard what else to choose.

      • modulus
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        21 year ago

        Great article on Greg Egan, and yes, he is all that. The Orthogonal series is incredible, and melds absolutely rigorous SF set in a completely different physics from us, with the thrill of making sense of experimental results, working out the maths, and sorting out social problems that have analogues to our own. I can’t recommend it enough.

          • modulus
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            21 year ago

            It’s hard to summarise, there are two major threads. One of them is using experimentation and reasoning to understand and save the world. The plot involves a lot of science, and not just in a superficial way, but characters trying to work out the peculiar rules to their universe. There’s a major threat to their world that can only be tackled this way.

            The other major thread is dealing with social issues that get in the way of science, but also of life in general. Again without spoilers, this involves the particular way that people reproduce in this world.

  • HSLOPM
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    11 year ago

    I see Nona the Ninth on there - after working my way through the first two books, I’m not sure I dare pick it up.

  • @jonpacker
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    11 year ago

    Sad that Katherine Addison/The Grief of Stones didn’t win. That book was incredible in my opinion.