The Required Reading List
From Hell
All right, this is my reading list.
First of all, if
you're after the "Great Books," this is not the place. This is merely a
collection of great books.
I am a sci-fi/fantasy freak. (For those
of you who don't know me, my ambition is to be a sci-fi/fantasy author.)
Books that mean a lot to me (philosophically) will be separated out from
the rest in the first bit. However, in my Humble and Unworthy Opinion
(Yeah right) everything here is worth the reading.
More coming soon!
Beware!
Important Books:
- Stranger in a Strange Land,
by Robert
Heinlein. This book has been instrumental in forming my ethical,
theological, and general codes. It is the source of the word, "grok,"
meaning to comprehend fully, (more or less) as well as the term, "water brother." It is a tale of a young Martian
trying to make sense of a terminally disordered world.
- Wave
Without a Shore, by CJ Cherryh. A
philosophical treatise about the nature of consciousness and the quest for
meaning. As usual, Cherryh has created a tangible world with fascinating
characters.
- The Left Hand of Darkness, by Ursula K. LeGuin. An
interesting book about the relations between people. Read the edition
that has LeGuin's introduction, it is a wonderful piece of
writing.
- The Earthsea Trilogy plus one, by Ursula K
LeGuin
- A Wizard of Earthsea
- The Tombs of
Atuan
- The Farthest Shore
- Tehanu
This is here
because of its discussion of the nature of Names. It explains them better
than I ever could.
- The Ender Series, by Orson Scott
Card
- Ender's Game
- Speaker for the
Dead
- Xenocide
These books, particularly the first,
which is the best, scare me. The picture of humanity they present is so
plausible as to be terrifying. From Xenocide, I took my yerm aiœa, which
is the Sanscrit word for life.
- The Dark is Rising Sequence, by
Susan Cooper.
- (Prequel) Over Sea, Under Stone
- The
Dark is Rising
- Greenwitch
- The Grey King
- Silver on
the Tree
This series does a really nifty job of combining old
Celtic myths, Arthurian legend, and some Christian traditions all
together. I really enjoyed it- even if I don't agree with all of it it's
just plain neat!
- The Illuminatus! Trilogy, by Robert Shea and
Robert Anton Wilson.
It's crazy. It's inane. But it makes a lot of
actual sense in bits, and is always good for a laugh. It's one of those
books that you take exactly as seriously as you want to. If you don't
want to take it seriously, fine. I think of it in the way I think of me-
I find it incredibly silly, but I respect the rare occasions it has
something to say.
- And of course, the basis to the trilogy, The
Principia Discordia. Like Illuminatus!, it is an excercise in
silliness. However, it does have an actual, coherent (at least by my
standards) philosophy behind it. On the havens
page there is a link to a copy of the Principia online, and I
know it's in a few other sites as well. This is just to one I happened to
find. It is also periodically available as a book, if you're willing to
expend the effort to actually find the damn thing rather than doing things
the easy way. I have a book.
Fun
Books:
- The Chanur Series, by CJ Cherryh (Here is a fair
warning: CJ Cherryh is my
favorite author. So I put up a lot of her stuff.)
- The
Pride of Chanur
- Chanur's Venture
- The Kif Strike
Back
- Chanur's Homecoming
- Chanur's Legacy
Good,
clean, spaceage stuff with cats.
- Downbelow Station, by CJ Cherryh.
Hey, the Hugo and Nebula Award people can't be all wrong!
- The
Merovingen Nights Series, first book by CJ Cherryh, CJ Cherryh, ed. I'll
put up the titles when I remember them all, until then, I'm afraid I'll
have to say:
- The Myth
Series, by Robert Aspirin. Lighthearted ridiculousness. I'll put up the
titles when I have them in order.
- The Phule sequence, by Robert
Aspirin. Space-age lighthearted silliness.
- Phule's
Company
- Phule's Paradise
- Ringworld, by Larry Niven.
One of the classics.
- The Integral
Trees, by Larry Niven. A fascinating book!
- The Man-Kzin Wars
series, created by Larry Niven. (Titles are easy... Man-Kzin Wars I,
Man-Kzin Wars II, Man-Kzin Wars....)
- Dream Park, by Larry Niven
and some other people. Disneyland gone haywire.
- Neuromancer, by
William
Gibson. The original cyberpunk novel.
- Rocannon's World, by
Ursula K.LeGuin. Another really interesting study of characters in a
strange situation.
- The Entire Middle Earth thing, by JRR
Tolkien. I know, I know, it's clichŽ, and I don't
care....
- The Silmarillion
- The Hobbit
- The Lord of
the Rings
- The Fellowship of the Ring
- The Two
Towers
- The Return of the King
- The Lost
Tales
- And anything else!
- The Narnia Series, by CS
Lewis
- The Lion, the Witch, and the
Wardrobe
- Prince Caspian
- The Voyage of the 'Dawn
Treader'
- The Silver Chair
- The Horse and his
Boy
- The Magician's Nephew
- The Last
Battle
- The Screwtape Letters, by CS Lewis. Advice from a
devil to his nephew on how to corrupt people.
- The Increasingly
Incorrectly Named Hitchhiker's Trilogy, by (of course) Douglas
Adams.
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
- The
Restaurant at the End of the Universe
- Life, the Universe, and
Everything
- So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
- Mostly
Harmless
I need say no more.
Back to
the havens. Or All the way back to the
beginning.