Can you guys recommend me books of the following type:
- Hamster
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Can you guys recommend me books of the following type:
Hi everyone. I am fairly new to books in general (which is not to say that I am illiterate

I was looking for a recomendation ( I know there are a ton of these lists, but they genrally dont meet the criteria I am interested in) and hoped you guys could give me a few.
I am looking for a nice sci-fi book that more or less meet these criteria:
- Most important points:
- It should be an actual fiction and not repainted history. I understand that to some degree every author is inspired by past events, that is of course natural. But sometimes its just taken a bit too far.
- In the vain of the last point, it should be detached from the current earth-philosphical dilemas to some extent. Again, this is not possible in full, but basically what I am saying is, no "Do androids dream of electric sheep", and the likes of books. Its nothing aginst these types of books but I am looking for something that really fells like "its far away".
- To elaborate on the last point, far away does not mean it must be some other galaxy or something like that, it can also be the near future earth etc. but basically, the focus should not be earth and its problems.
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Less important points: - Sci-fi should idealy be realatively close to science, cause noone give us better fiction then scientists
. But basically what I am saying, if its about mars (and it does not have to be mars btw), less about green martians and more about human colonists. Though green martians can also make an appearance later, but maybe less like Mars attacks if you guys know what I mean. (Sry for the rant in this point).
- Would be nice if it was a series of books but by no means imporant.
Thanks in advance.
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- Hamster
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- ccarreer
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- Sarah G
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Terry Goodkind is another good author to read for fantasy books.
- moderntimes
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I'm a fan of the 1980s and beyond "new wave" of SF. This is strong and often adult writing and not for everyone, but it's written for literate readers.
I'd recommend Roger Zelazny first. His "Lord of Light" is amazing. It deals with the far future, thousands of years when humans emigrated to the planets and the galaxy and settled planets, terraforming them. One ship, the Star of India, was mostly staffed by distant descendants of Hindu culture. So, when having a technology which is near magic, they create a "New Hindi pantheon" and take upon themselves powers which emulate the ancient Hindu gods, Vishnu, Brahma, Kali, etc. But there are "rebels" on the planet who wish to give powers to all and not just a chosen few. And a battle ensues. Great heroic fiction.
I'd also recommend Robert Silverberg's "Downward to the Earth" -- it's a great discovery journey novel. Earth went thru a colonization period which resembled the old British Imperial era, subjugating the aliens on these planets. One planet was ruled by an "administrator" who was instrumental in this suppression. Later, Earth government underwent a big change and relented the rule. So the former admin guy returns to the planet to make amends and find his soul. It's deliberately written in the homage to Conrad's "Heart of Darkness" (there's even a character named Kurtz) and the book is one of the finest, most intelligent, and exciting SF novels ever.
Another Roger Zelazny novel I'd recommend is "This Immortal" -- the earth went thru an atomic war and survived but things were fragmented. Aliens from another solar system arrive and help the humans. They are more advanced than the humans but don't rule over them, acting like "good uncles" and are patronizing. Enter this guy who has a deep secret -- he's immortal. We never really learn how old he is. And he is hired by the Earth govt to host one of the Aliens on a tour of the "hot zones" which are quite dangerous even now. This novel is thrilling, an adventure and filed with great characters and a terrific story.
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- moderntimes
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- AprilWilsonNolen
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Hope this finds you well.
- moderntimes
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But those are pure-dee fantasy, totally not SF. And likely too rancid and goofy to really entertain an adult. Kinda fun for impressionable kids, though, but with kids today cognizant of the actual facts of Mars? Even kids would probably laugh themselves silly at the impossible plot and characters.
- orskorsk15
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- doyle5
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And to the topic...
have you tried reading in the fairy-tale direction. Alex Flinn has quite a few good books. One that you might of heard of is "Beastly". A really bad movie version of is came out a few years ago. I tell you, it's a very good book, nothing like the movie.
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Also I agree with orskorsk15 about Orson Scott Card. The Ender's Game series is massive and expands over thousands of years and involves different planets and sentient beings. I've read most of the series and wasn't disappointed. Hope this helps!