HACKER Q&A
📣 lostmsu

What are less known hard Sci-Fi books to read?


From the popular ones I've read quite a few from Ian Bank's Culture series, but en summe they feel a bit like spy stories with a bit of cyberpunk sprinkled around.

The Three-Body problem was good, but still very pale in comparison to Permutation City, which I just discovered recently.

Anything along the lines of Permutation City, Asimov's works, Lem, or something like Martian Chronicles (e.g. about facing a totally different culture).


  👤 ThePhysicist Accepted Answer ✓
Check out the nominations to sci-fi awards (e.g. Hugo or Nebula). The winners get most of the publicity but there are many great works that don’t win but are still quite good. The nominations are sometimes hard to find, the Verge e.g. has articles with the complete (?) lists for recent years and Wikipedia has a list of nominees and winners over the years as well.

👤 Wildgoose
"Blindsight" by Peter Watts is just amazingly good, as are his other works. He does have a bleak view of humanity though.

Also check out his friend and fellow Canadian Karl Schroeder's "Candesce" series of books set in an enormous globe of air floating in space. Feels like fantasy, but isn't.

Vernor Vinge has already been mentioned. "A Fire Upon The Deep" is one of my favourite novels. He was a professor of Computer Science and he also popularised the concept of the coming Technological Singularity.


👤 sfifs
Rainbows End by Vernor Vinge. It's definitely where I feel our modern tech world is heading... We're halfway there with ubiquitous mobility, personalized medicine and every year, I see AR heading there.

While the plot is somewhat meh - the description of the techno society and how it changes out life is uniquely prescient I think - much more so than cyberpunk heros like Gibson or Stephenson etc. I re-read it about once a year.


👤 lgl
Hope you read the entire Three body problem trilogy as I'm not quite sure how well it stands by reading only the first book as it's been a while since I've read them, but it's a brilliant trilogy. Totally agree with you on Permutation City, really awesome. And as somebody else already suggested, you should really read Diaspora for some more Greg Egan goodness.

I have some generic sci-fi recommendations, although some are probably not considered "hard" sci-fi and most are pretty well known but here they are anyway.

- Children of Time/Children of Ruin by Adrian Tchaikovsky

- Hyperion by Dan Simmons

- Accelerando by Charles Stross

- House of Suns/Revelation Space series by Alastair Reynolds

- Pandora's Star/Judas Unchained by Peter Hamilton

- The Bobiverse series by Dennis E. Taylor

Cheers

EDIT: also, here's a good website to track the winners for most sci-fi awards:

https://www.worldswithoutend.com/books_index.asp


👤 qubex
Permutation City is one of Greg Egan’s better-known works, and I strongly suggest you look into the rest of his ouevre which (aside from his Orthogonal trilogy) tends to be of a consistently high standard.

https://www.gregegan.net


👤 haihaibye
I'm an Egan fan and really liked Blindsight by Peter Watts.

👤 etherio
You already know Greg Egan, so I would very much recommend Diaspora. Really amazing book. I wrote about it here: http://uzpg.me/literature/2019/04/29/diaspora.html

> (e.g. about facing a totally different culture).

I would also recommend The Player games by Iain Banks. Not hardsf per-say but really nice and complex story.


👤 poormystic
If you're prepared to call Lem hard sci-fi you might also accept Jack Vance. I also suggest the Strugatsky Brothers' Roadside Picnic.

👤 chadcmulligan
The paratwa trilogy by Christopher Hinze? Genetically bred assasins

reddit.com/r/printsf is a gold mine for book recommendations


👤 sudoaza
Probably not so lesser known but the mars trilogy by Kim Stanley Robinson is very good

👤 fiftyacorn
Becky Chambers books are a good read -

The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet

A Closed and Common Orbit


👤 joycian
The Quantum Thief trilogy by Hannu Rajaniemi.

👤 steve_g
Inverted World by Christopher Priest.

An oldie, but a weirdie.


👤 Mustan
The Door into Summer by Robert A. Heinlein