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| wandering Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: Australia, Western Australia
Posts: 1,502
| Favourite Clarke I was reading the Rama and Childhood End's threads and wanted to mention Fountains of Paradise so I thought I'd start a general thread for people's favourites. Having been a bit overloaded on fantasy I've started really looking into science fiction for the first time and these three are good examples of what I'm enjoying about the change. Childhood's End - an absolute classic, works so well as a short novel. Rendezvous with Rama - I love alien artifact stories, still debating whether or not to read the series with so many mixed reviews. Fountains of Paradise - I read this recently and really enjoyed it, I was impressed reading about the space elevator in Robinson's Mars Trilogy but Clarke beat him to it by about 30 years. I haven't read any of the Odyssey series (or seen the movies) so that's probably next. Has anyone read Beyond the Fall of Night? I've enjoyed what I've read of Bedford as well but collaborations have a habit of not working. So what else do people recommend ![]() |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| Moderator Join Date: May 2006 Location: Texas
Posts: 13,183
| Re: Favourite Clarke Well... though it's fairly early Clarke, I'd still recommend reading an omnibus volume titled Prelude to Mars, which includes the novels Prelude to Space and The Sands of Mars, as well as a selection of 16 of his short stories; as well as some of his story collections, perhaps The Sentinel or Expedition to Earth, or perhaps The Wind from the Sun.... WorldCat: Prelude to Mars; an omnibus containing the complete novels Prelude to space and The sands of Mars and sixteen short stories Expedition to Earth - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Amazon.com: The Sentinel: Books: Arthur C. Clarke The Wind from the Sun - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jun 2007 Location: Bath and North East Somerset
Posts: 48
| Re: Favourite Clarke love Clarke, he's long been a favourite but have to say that for me Tiger Tiger burns quite bright . A very short story (from Tales of Planet Earth, i think) but one i read years ago and stayed with me |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jul 2007 Location: UK: ENGLAND:
Posts: 29
| Re: Favourite Clarke I have enjoyed most of the Clark I have read; Rama is an old friend, Imperial Earth I remember fondly and Fountains introduced me, as so many others to the beanstalk concept. Of his short stories; the Sentinel is potent and I think 'the nine billion names of God' one of the best short stories of any genre, well up there with 'The monkey's paw' or 'The selfish giant'. However, it is for two novels 'Childhood's end' and 'The city and the stars' that Clark will be remembered long after he has passed away. They are both written in a simple, almost naive way. Characterisation is awful in the cases where it is more than minimal. And yet, and yet ... both of these books sing to the human spirit. Yes they are both packed full of ideas like many other Clark offering but thier true values is in thier humanity and spirit. |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: USA:
Posts: 25
| Re: Favourite Clarke Though I haven't read anything of his outside the Odyssey series, I saw the movie Night Fall, the one with David Caradine, and just loved it. I think the entire Odyssey series is fantastic, and just love the conclusion 3001, where we learn the monolith is a computer put on earth to monitor humanity. Upon David Bowman and Hal being absorbed by the Monolith and warning humanity that it may destroy earth because of their bad development, and they decide to destroy the computer before it destroys them, by giving Bowman a computer virus to make it go haywire, was real nice touch, and really mind blowing to me was also they gave Bowman a computer disc to download themselves onto after the monolith was destroyed was really an incredible idea. In essence it says to me that computers can make us immortal, very much inline with Clarke's belief that a sufficiently developed technology would be indistinguishable from magic. |
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| ]==[]===© • Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Darlington
Posts: 5,578
| Re: Favourite Clarke Well i started out on SF when I found an old copy of 2001 for sale in the library. Took it home and read it. Then bought the movie so this is my altime fave. But there are many others to choose from and even if you haven't read the odyssey books yet 3001 is a brilliant book! And Rama is just class!(the movie is still in pre-production,Morgan Freeman is awaiting a good script) |
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| Prehistoric Irish Cynic Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: California
Posts: 1,689
| Re: Favourite Clarke Quote:
Jim | |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| River Crossing Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Canada
Posts: 26
| Re: Favourite Clarke Childhoods End - VERY cool concept, but the ending made me mourn the end of humanity as we knew it. Imagine the reaction of coming home only to find no one was there. City and the Stars - balsy of Clarke to write about a million years in the future - a real departure from his "provable" novels. The Rama Series - I love discovery-type sf. |
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| | #11 (permalink) |
| ]==[]===© • Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Darlington
Posts: 5,578
| Re: Favourite Clarke I enjoyed City and the Stars/Against the Fall of Night but could not get my head round Benford's sequel. Didn't understand a word of it and I've read all of Benford's brilliant sequence including Great Sky River(the first Benford book I read) |
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| | #12 (permalink) | |
| Prehistoric Irish Cynic Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: California
Posts: 1,689
| Re: Favourite Clarke Quote:
Jim | |
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| | #15 (permalink) | |||
| Senior Member Join Date: Oct 2008 Location: USA:
Posts: 2,236
| Re: Favourite Clarke Some general comments on the thread: Quote:
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Specifically on topic, my favorite of all Clarke books so far (after all these years I still haven't managed to read them all) is, like most people's, probably either Childhood's End or Rendezvous with Rama, with an honorable mention to The Fountains of Paradise. The last is fairly slow, but extremely well done and does have the nifty space elevator concept. (Incidentally, Charles Sheffield published The Web Between the Worlds at the same time. That book also featured a space elevator and the paperback came with a preface explaining that neither had stolen the idea from the other but were using common non-fiction sources, IIRC.) Rendezvous is the classic Big Dumb Object story, which is actually pretty hard to do well, IMO, as famous classics like Ringworld underwhelm me. Childhood's End may not hold up as well as I remember it but was pretty impressive and economical. So CE if it holds up and probably RwR otherwise. | |||
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