After last week's Mind Meld on Underrated Fantasy Series, we asked the obvious follow-on question of this week's panelists:
Read on to see what they said...and be sure to tell us your picks below!
First, there's George Alec Effinger's Marid or Budayeen series:
Then there's Kay Kenyon's just-concluded The Entire and the Rose tetralogy:
And there's my favorite series, spread out more than a third of a century. I don't know that it's "overlooked", but at one point Ballantine gave up on it, more fools they, and Tor picked it up, and that of course is James White's Sector General or Hospital Station series:
I have other series I enjoy, but things like Fritz Leiber's Gray Mouser and De Camp & Pratt's Incompleat Enchanter stories can hardly be considered underrated or in need of attention. Similarly, the best of them all are C.L. Moore's Northwest Smith stories, but since they can all fit in one book (the complete collection is currently in print from Paizo/Planet Stories) I don't suppose it counts.
My favorite under-rated series is by Australian author, Terry Dowling., featuring Tom Tyson, sandship captain extraordinaire. How can you resist stories that blend powerful AIs, genetic engineering, Aboriginal Dreamtime, and sandships in the Great Outback -- and manage to stay science fiction, not fantasy? These stories stand out as truly original in a field much cluttered with cloned material.
My pick for this has to be Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis saga, Lilith's Brood (Dawn, Adulthood Rites, and Imago). Don't get me wrong, it gets a lot of love from those who've read it but it seems like it never shows up on a 'best ever' list and I totally think it should.
Octavia Butler was great, and for my money this is her at her best. When she came up with the Oankali, she invented one of the most well-developed, unique, and interesting alien races I can remember. I'm glad Science Fiction is strong enough as a genre that I've actually become jaded to alien creations, but jaded I am and the Oankali really pulled me in from their unique physiology, to their motivations and philosophies. After watching the human race nearly wipe itself out, they are not willing to save what's left of it but instead offer an interesting alternative; merge their genes with the Oankali through cross-breeding so that at least some small piece of humanity survives (to the benefit of both species), or die out. Either way, the human race as we know it goes extinct. It's a hard choice, and predictably not all of those rescued agree about what to do. Watching the remains of the human race struggle with this genetic merger, and how it plays out in the generations which follow, made for an amazing read. There are some biblical allegories folded in here, but even without that added layer it's a great series with deep characters, fantastic world building, and a well thought out beginning, middle and end. It's a great series, and a great example of what Science Fiction can be.
The first is the Continuing Time series by Daniel Keys Moran, which began with Emerald Eyes, (and continued with The Long Run, Last Dancer). The second book features one of my all-time favorite characters, a thief named Trent the Uncatchable. Also, DKM invented the Peaceforcers (a clever shortening of the United Nations Peacekeeping Force) which is a concept that has stayed in my head long after I finished reading the stories -- and mutated and changed as I continued to play with it. In fact, in my new prequel to my own AngeLINK series (coming out from a small press this fall!), I have an homage to his PKFE.
The second is a cyberpunkish series by Wilhelmina Baird which begins with Crashcourse and includes Clipjoint and Psykosis. I haven't reread her series lately, but I wonder, particularly, how her vision of reality TV would stack up to what has become the reality of reality TV. She also invented characters who refused to leave my head -- particularly Sword and Dash -- long after I put the books on the shelf.
The last (though I'm sure, given time, I could come up with others) would be Karen Lowachee's series that started with Warchild and continues with Burndive and Cagebird). She got a little buzz with this series, as it won some awards, but I still feel it's underrated. These are very powerful, not-the-usual-space-opera action stories that have a lot of emotional resonance. Her characters are hard, and hard to like, but compelling and, ultimately sympathetic. Very worthy reads.
The Foreigner series by C.J. Cherryh, published by DAW Books. It's not only some of her very finest work, but in my opinion her most widely accessible to any reader. It's rich with sympathetic characters, an ongoing and fascinating story, and the setting? Wow! It skews between the alien and familiar with great skill. The interplay between Human and Atevi, told through the point of view of the sole interpreter, Bren Cameron (a character I adore) is simply fabulous. The premise of meeting a species we think we understand but don't is entirely plausible, while the way they've managed to forge a stable relationship despite this over time is convincing. And entertaining! I don't usually say this, but I must. I can't believe none of these books or the entire sequence hasn't won every award going by now. Hopefully they will.
James Blish, Cities In Flight (hardcover omnibus, Overlook Press, 2000).
These four novels, published in various forms from the 1950s through 2000, present a one of a kind future, rarely influencing other works until space habitats became more obvious in later works, my own Macrolife among them in 1979 (available in a 25th anniversary edition from Pyr Books in hard and trade pb, and from E-Reads), which turned against the colonization of planets as presented in the old SF traditions.
I find it odd that my book is in the Easton Press Masterpieces of Science Fiction collection of leatherbound volumes and Blish's is not.
What did I like? The high adventure on a distant, exotic world under the harsh, brassy glare of a dying sun. The dark and antiheroic hero, Eric John Stark, who was larger than life in some ways, yet unable to defeat it in others. The noir sensibility (not that I'd seen a noir film yet, but Brackett guaranteed I'd like the form, which she helped to shape). The strange and colorful, yet compelling and believable cultures, steeped in a genuine sense of antiquity. The sense of inevitable doom. The strong, fine prose. And, not least to my budding feminist soul, the fact that the author was a woman outwriting the guys writing this toughguy stuff.
With one novel, Leigh Brackett became the favorite author of my teenage years (though, of course, I promptly read everything of hers that I could get my hands on, including the rest of the Skaith trilogy).
I recently reread The Ginger Star (1974) and its sequels, The Hounds of Skaith (1974) and The Reavers of Skaith (1976). I found they still hold up. And I discovered new pleasures, overlooked by my decades-younger self.
If you haven't already, but want to make Brackett's and Stark's acquaintance, the Paizo Publishing imprint Planet Stories has recently reprinted The Ginger Star, The Hounds of Skaith, The Reavers of Skaith, and a pre-Skaith Stark title, The Secret of Sinharat.
Enjoy.
I considered the Night's Dawn Trilogy (which everyone should read) but felt that Ken MacLeod's Fall Revolution series fit the bill better. When people speak of MacLeod's work it is generally positive, but at least here in the States availability has been patchy.
What distinguishes MacLeod from his peers is the way he uses Science Fiction to explore political systems. We've seen plenty of military societies and there's never been a shortage of utopias. But how often do you see a functioning anarchist society? Socialist? Green?
And these are fully functioning societies. MacLeod shows us both the good and the bad of the various political extremes that he presents in each of the books in the series. This is a refreshing change to simply having an author's political views shoved down your throat. Instead we are given protagonists whose political views probably radically depart from our own and still makes them relatable. I frequently had to pause in reading these books to argue against the claims the characters were making.
But don't worry, this is a science fiction series, not a political one and there's plenty of science at work. The books are set in various different periods of mankind's future and technology varies accordingly from near future cyberpunk to far future androids and singularities
Structured as a loosely connected series of 4 novels(The Star Fraction, The Stone Canal, The Cassini Division and The Sky Road), The Fall Revolution series is not an easy read by any measure, but it is a very rewarding one.
Usually these kinds of questions leave me racking my brains and gnashing my teeth, but this time an answer sprang to mind almost immediately: Elizabeth Hand's trilogy comprising Winterlong (1990), Aestival Tide (1992), and Icarus Descending (1993).
Any fan of Hand's, or for that matter any knowledgeable reader of speculative fiction, is probably familiar with Winterlong, her brilliant debut, which established her at once as an important new talent. That decadent romance of the far future, as extravagantly plotted as it is gorgeously written, filled with eccentric characters who nevertheless are deeply human-perhaps none more so than Miss Scarlet Pan, an ape-was brought back into print in 1997, but the other two novels were much less popular, for a variety of reasons, and basically faded out of memory, especially as Hand shifted her output toward her distinctive brand of fantasy.
Winterlong is an almost claustrophobic hothouse of a novel, exuding a rare combination of sensuality and intelligence, and marked by a fearless imagination naturally drawn to the weird: people, science, art. In Aestival Tide and Icarus Descending, Hand's plotting skills improved, and her vision expanded; the final two books constitute a harrowing but not hopeless portrait of a grimly martial post-apocalyptic world where genetic engineering has run amuck, resulting in many beautiful monsters. Hand ransacks the genre, from novels to movies, to decorate these books-they are both an homage to her influences and an escape from them. They are filled with strikingly original images and wordplay-already Hand was a formidable stylist.
Her stature today is such that I think it would behoove a small press to bring out an omnibus edition of this overlooked, underappreciated trilogy.
1) Lilith's Brood by Octavia Butler (Dawn, Imago, Adulthood Rites) is a trilogy that chronicles the blending of human and alien, exploring many of Butler's customary themes about love, kinship, consent or lack thereof, and unwilling communities that become tight-knitted. People argue over which of Butler's works are the best, but for me, these three books are clearly the height of Butler's intensity and power, and I come back to read them every few years. They are probably my favorite series of books. They already receive attention, so they're not a perfect answer for your question, but no matter how much attention they receive, they deserve more.
2) Otherland by Tad Williams. Each book in this series could be split into many books; they're some of the thickest paperbacks on my shelf. These near-future cyberpunk books take place primarily in an immersive virtual reality, and weave together a rich, diverse set of characters in an enormous range of settings--some of which (like the endless house where some of the characters wander awhile) are extremely beautiful. One of Williams' most striking world-building techniques is his choice to begin each chapter with a media clip; taken together, these fictional intertextual moments vary and increase the sense of a vibrant, inhabited world beyond what could be achieved with the characters' points of view alone. I've read this series twice, and each time I found it seductive, intense, and immersive--but both times when I finished reading, I came away with a sense of disappointment in the series' flaws. There are some cliches--like the murderous henchmen--which are increasingly annoying as the books progress. Worse, the books tackle too many plot threads to successfully resolve, and the reveals at the end can't do justice to the pulse-raising tension in the beginning and middle. In 2010, at least 5 years since my last reread, I also wonder whether the technology in these books would seem quaint now--but even if it does, I think the books will still remain interesting as a snapshot of an imagined, bypassed future.
Comments (21)
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Posted by John DeNardo at Wednesday June 02, 2010 at 12:29 AM
© 2010 SF Signal
I agree, I thought the James White books were great. I really like that C.J. Cherryh series that Julie E. Czerneda listed, but my favorite Cherryh books and in my opinion most underrated is the Chanur series. I think that's among the best SF written. It's got it all, the solid science she has always been known for, the character development and ... the humans are the aliens. Inventive and entertaining.
Posted by Cunningham on Wednesday June 02, 2010 at 3:21 AM
Not sure what to recommend on this, there are books and authors that I love that when i talk to my friends who are also interested in the genre don't know about. However these authors tend to be building a great reputation for themselves such as Charles Stross, Richard Morgan, John Scalzi. I think these guys are great new authors and have huge amounts to contribute and whilst they aren't as recognised as they should be, its just a matter of time before their names will join the greats.
Posted by Andy W on Wednesday June 02, 2010 at 6:24 AM
When gravity fails was quite good book in my opinion but I dissapointed in the rest and I didn't read Budayeen nights. How that was, compered to others?
Posted by Science fiction fan on Wednesday June 02, 2010 at 7:04 AM
"a bypassed future" for Tad William's Otherland? Really? You sure you read those twice?
We've bypassed a future where we conduct most business plugged in via neural network to a virtual internet with avatars a la the Matrix (written 5 years before The Matrix came out, by the way).
So, we've bypassed that? I don't think so.
Posted by Jennifer on Wednesday June 02, 2010 at 9:51 AM
Cast another vote for the James White SECTOR GENERAL books, and I'm delighted to see them mentioned here. They are very good indeed, and in an absorbing, big-picture SF way, space opera with the close-up twist of medical puzzles. Really great stuff.
Also the Cherryh, though I agree with Cunningham (comment above) that the Chanur books are very, very good also, and for me it's a toss-up which series I'd choose. So, read them all!
The books by Skaith books by Leigh Brackett are excellent as well, I read them years ago and reread them recently and enjoyed them as much the second time, perhaps more.
I'd also vote for the Blish, but I wonder how many contemporary SF readers would find them a little old fashioned? That's not a bad thing to me, but might be for some readers who prefer 21 century-style SF.
The only one listed twice is the series by Octavia Butler. I've not read these books, but the covers are so awful I'd have a hard time picking them up! Matter of fact, there is a lot of crummy cover art here, the worst being the covers on the books by Effinger, MacLeod, Hand and Williams. I recognize art and imagery is a very personal thing, maybe others find these covers pleasing. For me, they are off-putting. Too bad.
Lastly, Tad Willimas seems to have a real problem completing a series and keeping the thing under control, tied together and moving forward pleasingly. The last book in his Memory, Sorrow and Thorn trilogy was a huge letdown, after a very good opening book and a pretty good middle novel. I'm of the opinion that TAILCHASERS SONG may be his best. But then, it's about cats, which I suppose would turn off most SF fans.
Posted by Richard R. on Wednesday June 02, 2010 at 12:33 PM
Thanks Mike, for the mention of James White.
I've been recommending his books to people for years. It always pleases me to see them show up on a list like this one.
The early books in the Sector General series suffer from the sexism of the time period they were written, but are still readable and fun medical puzzle stories.
Posted by carlos m. hernandez on Wednesday June 02, 2010 at 1:16 PM
Dear gods, how I love Elizabeth Hand's Winterlong series. The imagery is so deliciously decadent and insane....
Posted by Derek C. F. Pegritz on Wednesday June 02, 2010 at 2:16 PM
The only question I have is: underrated by who? I'd expected series that had never made an impression or had sunk without a trace into the trough of obscurity. As for instance Ian Wallace's Croyd novels or Mack Reynolds' LaGrange series. I don't think anyone seriously underrates anything by Octavia Butler or C.J. Cherryh or... oh, well. Just curious about the metrics. Otherwise, a terrific suite of recommendations.
Posted by Mark Tiedemann on Wednesday June 02, 2010 at 2:41 PM
I am having a hard time thinking of any series of science fiction books that I've read that haven't been either wildly acclaimed or at least well known enough that I couldn't consider them underrated. It was great seeing the James White books mentioned, a series that I had only recently learned about earlier this year and am excited about exploring.
Posted by Carl V. on Wednesday June 02, 2010 at 2:42 PM
I vote for Brian Daley's trilogy of Requiem for a Ruler of Worlds, Jinx on a Terran Inheritance, and Fall of the White Ship Avatar. The adventures of Hobart Floyt and Alacrity Fitzhugh. Space opera with some of the funniest scenes I've ever read.
I wish someone would at least reprint them. My paperbacks are falling apart.
Posted by Eugenia on Wednesday June 02, 2010 at 5:39 PM
I vote for David Zindell first novel, Neverness, and the three novels that followed, titled, A Euology for Homo Sapiens. The series meets all the literary requirements to be called epic. A heroic story that occurs over great distances and time periods, involving many characters engaged in memorable struggles. There is science, religion, mysticism, war, betrayal, personal growth, philosophy, and good overcomes evil at condiderable cost. Some have staated the pacing is off, sometimes racing, sometimes plodding. I never felt that way. I was happy to stay in that world as long as it lasted.
Posted by honey on Wednesday June 02, 2010 at 8:58 PM
I don't think something can be underrated if it's still in print (Octavia Butler). Hmmm, the best out of print sf books, the next mind meld?
Posted by tam on Wednesday June 02, 2010 at 10:39 PM
Definitely agree with Dowling and Brackett, as might be obvious :- http://rynosseros.blogspot.com and http://leighbrackett.blogspot.com
Others :-
Christopher Hinz's Paratwa series, Liege Killer, Ash Ock and the Paratwa.
Julian May's Galactic Milieu combined. Both the Saga of the Exile and Jack the Bodiless
Sean McMullen's Greatwinter Souls In the Great Machine, the Miocene Arrow, Eyes of the Calculor etc.
Sean Williams and Shane Dix Evergence Series The Dark Imbalance, the Dying Light etc.
Posted by Blue Tyson on Thursday June 03, 2010 at 3:15 AM
I'll put in my vote for Stephen R. Donaldson's Gap Cycle.
This series is one of the most visceral, intense, uncomfortable, provocative, gritty, and relevant SF series I have ever read, yet it seems to have flown almost completely under most people's radar.
Highly recommended.
Obligatory Wikipedia link. :-)
Posted by Mike J. on Thursday June 03, 2010 at 11:05 AM
"I vote for David Zindell first novel, Neverness, and the three novels that followed, titled, A Euology for Homo Sapiens. The series meets all the literary requirements to be called epic."
Hear, hear! Three cheers for Zindell!
Great series. Ever since I've read it, I wanted a lightship.
Posted by John C. Wright on Thursday June 03, 2010 at 12:13 PM
Otherland - the technology Tad imagined is seen as influential, innovative and predictive, according to the geeks we hear from in Silicon Valley. The themes of Otherland are too big for the books to age. What's more, there's an Otherland, MMOG coming in 2011, which is probably going to be a whole new bunch of attention. Sincerely, @mrstad
Posted by Deborah Beale on Thursday June 03, 2010 at 1:47 PM
Glad to see I'm not the only one who remembers Blish's Cities series with fondness.
Two more series I keep re-reading: S. Andrew Swann's Moreau books, Forests of the Night, Emperors of the Twilight and Specters of the Dawn (and the later sequel, Fearful Symmetries); and panelist Lyda Morehouse's AngeLINK books, Archangel Protocol, Fallen Host, Messiah Node and Apocalypse Array.
Posted by Frank on Friday June 04, 2010 at 1:39 AM
Got to agree with some of the posters above ... really, Julie, Cherryh underrated? Among whome? Certainly not your own fen! OTOH it's always good to be reminded I'm far from the only fan of The Fall Revolution.
On the gripping hand, my own vote for most underrated series would go to Christopher Rowley's Fenrille series, startig with The War For Eternity.
Posted by B. Ross Ashley on Tuesday June 08, 2010 at 12:04 PM
Kristine Smith's Jani Kilian books: CODE OF CONDUCT, RULES OF CONFLICT, LAW OF SURVIVAL, CONTACT IMMINENT, and ENDGAME.
Brilliant, complex, fascinating science (Smith has a background in chemistry, specifically pharmaceuticals), outstanding aliens, solid deep characterization. Individual style, but if you had to make a comparison it might be the later Cherryh combined with Le Carre.
Posted by Elizabeth Moon on Tuesday June 08, 2010 at 12:20 PM
I'll second Frank - Lyda Morehouse's tetralogy: Archangel Protocol, Fallen Host, Messiah Mode, and Apocalypse Array is really a terrific science fiction cyberpunk series. And completely unknown. When I read it, I was furious that I hadn't heard of it at all. Some good news - there's a sequel, Resurrection Code, coming out soon!
Posted by Anastasia on Tuesday June 22, 2010 at 9:59 PM