Female Sci-fi Autho...
 

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[Closed] Female Sci-fi Authors

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Looking through my kindle and bookshelves I realised I have virtually no female authors - any good recommendations ?
Usual reads are Peter Hamilton, Neil Asher and that sort of thing


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 10:46 am
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Anne McCaffrey


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 10:47 am
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For starters I'll give you
Ursula K Leguin. Should be in every SF fans library. Left hand of Darkness is a stone cold classic but her other works Lathe of Heaven etc are also excellent.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 10:51 am
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footflaps +1, surely the greatest?

Margaret Atwood (though to my shame I've not actually read any of her work)


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 10:52 am
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Andre Norton and C. J. Cherryh also worth checking out.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 10:53 am
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Mr Woppit - Member
Anne McCaffrey

I'm not sure I'd call her "good" - while the dragon stuff is fairly entertaining it's pretty light-weight and cheesy...


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 10:53 am
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Read Ursula K Leguin "the lathe of heaven" and won't be bothering with any more.
Margaret Atwood's "Handmaid's tale" looks so depressing I gave that a miss.
Anne McCaffrey - Dragon series is as above - "fairly entertaining it's pretty light-weight"

If you after more modern recommendations:
Ilsa J. Bick: Ashes trilogy though "young adult" seems pretty good (not got the 3rd book yet)

Wasn't particularly taken by Ann Leckie's "Ancillary Justice", but it wasn't a bad book either.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 11:04 am
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C J Cherryh has written some [i]outstanding[/i] sci fi, the Company Wars series is gritty politics and warfare from the P.O.V. of dockers, miners, and pilots. The Faded Sun series is good too.

Elizabeth Moon wrote a good series about a "disgraced" officer turned merchant captain.

Cherie Priest has written some entertaining Steam Punk.

Trudi Canavan wrote a nice series about sorcerers - don't be put off by her calling them magicians, it's not about conjuring at working men's clubs.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 11:07 am
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D.C. Fontana


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 11:10 am
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Le Guin's classic stuff pre-1980 is exceptional, landmark work. Another female pioneer of SF is James Tiptree Jr - pen name of Alice Sheldon. Excelled in the short story format.

CJ Cherryh also great, as mentioned - very people driven stories that could be set in any genre really.

Julian May (a woman) has put out some good page turners - along the lines of Anne McAffrey. Lightweight but fun to read.

Connie Willis is well regarded, wins a lot of awards, but I find her stuff dull myself.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 11:17 am
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Trudi Canavan wrote a nice series about sorcerers

Again, lightweight but entertaining - in fact I [i]think[/i] the first trilogy was aimed at the "young adult" market. (Nothing wrong with that, of course, just something to be aware of).

Another fantasy suggestion: Robin Hobb, definitely adult fiction.

Big list here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Women_science_fiction_and_fantasy_writers


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 11:24 am
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Julian May

There's the 4-part Saga of the Exiles - then the related books:
Intervention
Jack the Bodiless
Diamond Mask
Magnificat


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 11:27 am
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Good recommendations... Avoid Robin Hobb.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 11:33 am
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Ann Leckie is a rising star. Winning awards.
Lauren Beukes - Zoo City is desperate social commentary.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 11:35 am
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Cheers All, I have now downloaded a selection to expand my horizons


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 11:38 am
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OK, I may be a bit controversial here but isn't the quality of the writing more important than the sex of the writer?

I've never even considered whether the author was male or female when reading a book before now...


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 11:48 am
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Avoid Robin Hobb.

Really? Was just about to get the Assassin's Apprentice as it's free on Kindle just now.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 11:53 am
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Really? Was just about to get the Assassin's Apprentice as it's free on Kindle just now.

I thought it was OK, certainly not something I'd actively avoid.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 12:14 pm
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OK, I may be a bit controversial here but isn't the quality of the writing more important than the sex of the writer?

Hard to tell if you've never actually read any books by female authors, though! There might be a difference, there might not.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 12:16 pm
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OK, I may be a bit controversial here but isn't the quality of the writing more important than the sex of the writer?

In a word, yes, but ....

I was trying to expand my horizons and felt that as most of the authors that I followed are the well know ones that routinely get touted around - hence why I know them and have read them - are male, it would a good way to find out more that I liked - i will certainly not read more than one of theirs if I don't like them, but good to spread your wings


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 1:22 pm
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I was trying to expand my horizons and felt that as most of the authors that I followed are the well know ones that routinely get touted around

Apart from the female authors, another good tactic is to find one of the many "top 100 SF books" type lists, and read your way through it.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 1:25 pm
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I did just that ^ & got lots of other books by the authors I liked from the 100, was entertained by stuff I didn't expect to be, and was firmly put off other authors.... and totally left baffled by a couple of the books

Anyways off to try CJ Cherryh, as I love a new author (to me) recommendation

PS: While looking for the name of a female author I'd read, it turns out she was a man, and I always forget Julian May was a woman. So really it doesn't matter to me.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 1:32 pm
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Mary Gentle... Kind of in that weird no man's land between fantasy and sf, but I loved Ash.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 1:52 pm
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Mary Gentle wrote one of my all time fab books : the Golden Witchbreed

Read it


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 1:57 pm
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and totally left baffled by a couple of the books

Sounds interesting - which ones?


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 1:59 pm
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+1 Golden Witchbreed. Must try find a new copy of that


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 3:09 pm
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Off-hand Mogrim:
Flatland by Edwin Abbott Abbott
It's not very often I just give up on a book, I'll read books just to finish them, but this one just wasn't for me.

Valis by Philip K. Dick, was just bizarre


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 3:45 pm
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I too am a Mary Gentle fan, though it's Rats & Gargoyles and Ash that really hit the spot for me.

I am currently enjoying Ann Leckie's Ancillary Justice.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 3:59 pm
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I'm reading Valis at the moment, been consuming Dick at an alarming rate recently!

Valis is definitely at the weirdest end of his scale, but I'm loving it, in the home straight now and everything's coming together beautifully.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 3:59 pm
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Flatland
- Great book, really enjoyed it


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 4:21 pm
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been consuming Dick at an alarming rate recently!

Just couldn't resist it could you. 😆


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 4:28 pm
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Andre Norton, bit old school/dated but some lovely stories and concepts.

Sargasso of Space, Plague Ship, Post Marked the Stars and The Zero Stone are my favourites.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 4:29 pm
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Another name not mentioned, and it's a mighty one - Doris Lessing. Not too many Nobel Laureates have gotten involved with SF, but Doris went all the way in with her [i]Canopus in Argus[/i] series. [i]Briefing for a descent into Hell[/i] is another.

It's difficult stuff tbh - a lot of spiritual and environmental themes that have dated quite badly (IMHO), but the writing hasn't - it's as timeless and weighty as you'd expect. Makes for a strange mix - certainly a unique voice in SF.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 5:19 pm
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66deg - Member
Just couldn't resist it could you.

😀

It's best pulled out when having serious discussions about books.

I need help.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 5:22 pm
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[url= http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octavia_E._Butler ]Octavia E Butler[/url]


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 5:23 pm
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Garry_Lager - Member

Julian May (a woman) has put out some good page turners - along the lines of Anne McAffrey. Lightweight but fun to read.

Funnily enough I read her first books back in the 80s and assumed she was a woman. (Based on the style of writing I think). Picked up one in a bookshop recently, looked at the name and wondered why I had thought he was a she. Now I'm told she is actually a he and I was correct in the first place. Am confused but vindicated! 🙂


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 6:24 pm
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Elizabeth Bear
Marion Zimmer Bradley
Barbara Hambley
Kate Griffin
Andre Alice Norton
Most of those writers are predominantly fantasy, but nothing wrong with that if it's harder edged, none of your rainbow unicorns and fey, pointy-eared elves!
Kate Griffin has done some great Young Adult stuff as Catherine Webb, which has a flavour of Roger Zeleazny, and is also writing more SF-type stuff, not unlike Neil Gaiman, as Clair North


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 6:48 pm
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Another vote for Margaret Atwood.
"Oryx and Crake" and the "Year of the Flood" are great for a prediction of the very near future.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 6:59 pm
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I'll add Linda Nagata to the list along with Jen Foehner Wells.


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 7:51 pm
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and Lois McMaster Bujold with the Vorkosigan Saga


 
Posted : 30/09/2014 8:09 pm
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Avoid Robin Hobb.
Really? Was just about to get the Assassin's Apprentice as it's free on Kindle just now.

I found her books full of angst, hand wringing and pissing about. I really wanted to like the assassins series but each small section of quality writing would be sandwiched amongst a shedload of rubbish. I only finished them because I'd read the first 2.

I was then bought the liveship book 1, (because I'd been reading her other books) and it was the same, but with a much weaker story.

Although I have noticed the only female author I like/have time for is anne mcaffery (Started on her stuff and the belgariad as a kid).


 
Posted : 11/10/2014 9:45 am