Scott is propagating a book meme: bold the books in this list you’ve read.
The list seems to come from the Guardian’s Geek Novels poll; it’s not really any sort of definitive canon of science fiction or anything else. Three books by Neil Stephenson? I’ve not only bolded but added a few words about the ones I’ve read.
1. The HitchHiker�s Guide to the Galaxy � Douglas Adams
Not only that, I’ve read all five of the trilogy, despite the fact that the last two really aren’t very good.
2. Nineteen Eighty-Four � George Orwell
3. Brave New World � Aldous Huxley
4. Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? � Philip K Dick
I read the book before seeing Ridley Scott’s “Blade Runner”. While it’s still a classic film, there’s so much more to the book.
5. Neuromancer � William Gibson
One of the greatest opening lines in all fiction, which sets the tone for the book. One of the few SF books ever written that had a significant impact on the real world. Gibson invented the concept of ‘Cyberspace’ before such a thing existed in reality. If the book hadn’t been written, you probably would not be reading this blog post.
6. Dune � Frank Herbert
I remember getting into a great argument in the CompuServe SFLIT form with one of the Sysops, who insisted that Dune was a truly terrible book because it wasn’t sufficiently character driven. She didn’t seem to be able to understand the concept of a book where the setting itself was a central character, and she seemed to think I was an idiot.
On the other hand, the boring sequels are best avoided. The fourth, God Awful of Dune, is the worst.
7. I, Robot � Isaac Asimov
No, I haven’t seen the film, which I’m told is horrible, and does to Asimov’s work what Paul Verhoeven did to Heinlein’s “Starship Troopers”. Except the latter richly deserves it.
8. Foundation � Isaac Asimov
I remember enjoying this one at a formative age, then trying to reread it several years later, and finding it rather dated. Such is the fate of much of the so-called ‘Golden Age’ of SF. It’s not even Asimov’s best writing (I think the later “The End of Eternity” is his finest work) Still better than the contrived and flatulent sequels he pumped out in the 1980s, which ruin the memory of the original.
9. The Colour of Magic � Terry Pratchett
This is actually a book I’d recommend you don’t read unless you’re a fantasy fan; you won’t get the jokes, and it makes a very poor introduction to the Pratchett’s never-ending Discworld series. Start with “Guards! Guards!”, “Wyrd Sisters” or “Mort” instead.
10. Microserfs � Douglas Coupland
11. Snow Crash � Neal Stephenson
Probably the greatest first chapter in the history of SF, and it’s all about pizza delivery, of all things. Nothing in the rest of the book can top that first chapter, although it tries hard.
12. Watchmen � Alan Moore & Dave Gibbons
13. Cryptonomicon � Neal Stephenson
When Stephenson reached the point where he was two successful to edit, the result being a bloated collossus that’s at least 200 pages longer than it needs to be. His more recent baroque trilogy is even longer, but seems to contain less obvious filler.
14. Consider Phlebas � Iain M Banks
What struck me about this book is now RPG-like a lot of it was. The early sections read like a Traveller game with a particularly sadistic GM. When Banks wrote the book he intended to write something literally unfilmable, with scenes so totally over the top that no special effects budget could put them on screen. Nowadays, CGI technology has reached the point that the biggest problem would be the typically Banksian downer ending.
15. Stranger in a Strange Land � Robert Heinlein
16. The Man in the High Castle � Philip K Dick
I love alternate histories. A lot of ‘serious’ books seem to focus on the change point; in contrast, classic AH novels extrapolate things forward to come up with what might have been. This, along with Keith Roberts’ “Pavane” are the standard by which others are judged.
17. American Gods � Neil Gaiman
I found this one moderately entertaining, but no more. It’s had some very mixed reviews; I’ve heard it accused of gross sexism, and crude anti-Americanism (I don’t really get the latter argument)
18. The Diamond Age � Neal Stephenson
It’s considered by many that writing fiction set 50-100 years in the future is the hardest type of science fiction to write, and I tend to agree, but Stephenson manages it better than most.
19. The Illuminatus! Trilogy � Robert Shea & Robert Anton Wilson
20. Trouble with Lichen - John Wyndham