ArisKatsaris comments on June 2013 Media Thread - Less Wrong
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Fiction Books Thread
The Eyre Affair, the first Thursday Next book, is pretty good so far.
http://www.amazon.com/The-Eyre-Affair-ebook/dp/B000OCXHC2/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1370202635&sr=8-1&keywords=eyre+affair
That's my current read! Hey! I'm reading the same EY is!
(Yeah, that actually did make me feel "cool" and "hip" and "with it"...:P )
One of the reviewers is quite discouraged by the overuse of the Deus Ex Machina/Diabolus Ex Machina tropes:
I don't recommend that book, which makes me feel suitably contrarian.
(For roughly the same reasons as shminux's quote. I felt like the universe was interesting on the surface, but didn't have any depth.)
"As" "the" "kids" "say".
"Relevant".
I (like) that site.
Calumet "K" by Samuel Merwin and Henry Kitchell Webster, from 1904. A very Analog/Astounding piece of engineer-fiction about an unstoppable can-do kind of fellow. Despite being completely contemporary, if you'd read this in Analog or Astounding in the '50s-'80s you wouldn't have batted an eyelid. I'm quite surprised it hasn't been taken up by the business literature field.
It's unfortunately most famous as a major influence on -yn R-nd, who appears only to have obtained from it the idea of the hero-engineer, which she then added as flavour to her own weirdness. (Compare the actual influence of You Can't Win by Jack Black on William S. Burroughs - the Black book is very readable and was a best-seller at the time.) Don't let that taint it for you, it's a cracking good read.