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#31 |
Booklegger
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OK, you can talk about Firefly. But if you try to talk about Farscape I'm leaving! Popping open the cockpit the minute you come to a stop after being sucked into an alien spaceship - and no helmet! And then calculating a slingshot trajectory with a crayon on the bridge floor! Sheesh! I have my standards...
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#32 |
Wizard
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Well, and it is completely unbelievable that Rygel didn't get flushed out a space toilet.
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#33 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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As far as I'm concerned, Farscape was just as believable and likely as Star Trek. Even Firefly didn't explain how a cheap old freighter had gravity control. None of them are "hard" SF. That doesn't make them bad. |
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#34 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Plenty of Science Fiction for the Kindle at Amazon.
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_no...pera&x=20&y=16 I don't think Asimov's is losing subscribers so much as they are changing over to a Kindle format either. I have been getting the Kindle edition of Asimov's SF Magazine for the last few months for the sum of $2.99 (per month) which I'm sure is lower than the paper edition's cost. It just downloads to my Kindle as the month comes round. Last edited by crich70; 06-02-2011 at 10:53 PM. |
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#35 |
Addict
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Working at a Barnes and Noble and perusing the sci-fi aisles don't give me hope. It's mostly Tolkien-esque fantasy, or else uber-ridiculous military sci fi where they all have oversized robot uniforms and ginormous guns. I miss the days of Clarke, Asimov, etc.
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#36 | |
Maratus speciosus butt
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(FWIW, I liked SG:Universe and SG1 but not SG:Atlantis.) |
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#37 |
Wizard
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They got into a better swing after the whole first season, IMO. The first season commander, Michael O'Hare defines the term "wooden." He was painful to watch compared to Bruce Boxleitner who got his job in season 2, though O'Hare makes wooden returns at times.
The characters, like Londo, evolve considerably. He isn't quite so clownish in later seasons and even acquires an air of menace (he gets an assistant to play the clown). G'Kar doesn't stay the extremely annoying minor villain he is in the first season and turns into quite the character. Stuff like that. I don't recommend skipping any seasons. Not every episode moves the larger multi-season story arc(s) ahead but they mix those in along with one-shot episodes. |
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#38 | |
Geographically Restricted
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Seasons 2 - 5 changed all of that. Those two characters are so full of depth, probably more so that any of the other main characters in the series. Bottom dollar was both characters were essentially good people. |
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#39 | |
Samurai Lizard
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#40 | |
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![]() In fact, I dislike the mixing of fantasy and science fiction. I like my scifi to at least be on the edge of possible--except for time travel, which I love to read as long as it's thought provoking. But a lot of fantasy is written by people who seem to have little appreciation for the known laws of physics. That's just too frustrating to read. |
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#41 |
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What exactly constitutes hard scifi?
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#42 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#43 | |
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So why do bookstores mix those two different groups as if they were the same? |
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#44 |
Zealot
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"What exactly constitutes hard scifi?"
Science fiction that concentrates more on paying attention to current scientific knowledge than merely stories with spaceships in. Alastair Reynolds' Revelation Space series, Stephen Baxter and Greg Egan qualify as hard sf to a greater or lesser extent. |
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#45 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Because if you go back far enough they have a common origin. They're two sides of the same coin. Spacemen fly in spaceships while the being of Fantasy ride dragons or have wooden ships that fly through the air. And as Arthur C. Clarke said," Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." Wizards use levitation charms (Harry Potter) and people from the future or other galaxies use anti-gravity (Star Trek, Star Wars). It's more that the props are different than anything else (IMO).
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