So, can you name any books that fall into the literary SF category? When I say literary SF I mean titles that are written in a more literary style. I don't mean a confusing style, just something more deeply written than mainstream SF (and I do love mainstream SF, just so nobody throws a fit and thinks I'm being snooty here...the styles are just different and I'm looking for a specific style).
So, can you help? I would like it to be SFish if possible, however works of contempary fantasy in a literary style are welcome too. Anyone can comment, so don't be afraid!
Thanks!
(Don't click the read more, there isn't any more after this!)
John Crowley's works (Aegypt, Little, Big, etc.) are a good starting place. Gene Wolfe, naturally. Ursula Le Guin. J.G. Ballard. Adam Roberts. Terry Goodkind... ;)
ReplyDeleteAdam Roberts? The guy who wrote Splinter?
ReplyDeleteFor Guin were you thinking of Left Hand of Darkness or something else in particular? And Terry Goodkind?
I'm curious about J. G. Ballard. Never read him and I almost bought a Crowley book while I was in Oregon, but decided against it for some reason...
Literary-in-style books that I love by SF writers:
ReplyDeleteJ.G. Ballard: The Terminal Beach
John Crowley: Engine Summer
Samuel R. Delany: Dhalgren
Thomas M. Disch: 334; On Wings Of Song
Ursula K. LeGuin: The Left Hand Of Darkness
Kelly Link: Magic For Beginners
Michael Moorcock: Mother London (but most of his other books are *not* particularly "literary" in style)
Geoff Ryman: The Child Garden
Gene Wolfe: The Fifth Head Of Cerberus
SF-in-content books that I love by "mainstream" writers:
John Fowles: A Maggot
Alasdair Gray: Lanark
Richard M. Powers: Galatea 2.2
I should add that I also love Gravity's Rainbow, but I think it's not quite SF. It's close enough that it might be worth examining, though.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for the suggestions! I really appreciate it!
ReplyDeleteI bought Gravity's Rainbow while on vacation because I've been wanting to read some Pynchon. It doesn't have to be blaringly SF, but if it sort of flirts with the edges that's okay with me. I started reading it and it's quite interesting. I'm not used to his style, so it might take me a bit to dig through it.
Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell. Defiantly some SF elements to it and it is incredible.
ReplyDeleteI'd recommend Robert J Sawyer's works. Especially his latest works Rollback and Mindscan have a lot of literary weight to them. Kim Stanley Robinson's Red Mars would be another good one to take note of.
ReplyDeleteStanislaw Lem's Solaris is great to start with. All about people connecting with themselves, others, and god, and the impossibility of even our advanced science truly uncovering the universe.
ReplyDeleteI haven't read any other works by Lem yet, but they're also supposed to be pretty high-minded.
Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut uses time travel as a plot device despite it being primarily an anti-war novel, so that might count.
ReplyDeleteThough it's kind of ambiguous whether or not Billy Pilgrim is really time traveling...
Mary Doria Russell - The Sparrow
ReplyDeleteTim Walters-
ReplyDeleteMoorcock has written a lot of other literary works other than Mother London. I just checked out a few from my library- the only problem is, his Elric stuff isn't really literary. And his literary stuff usually isn't SFNAL
Although his Dancers at the End of Time sequence is both, literary and SFNAL.
and Le Guin- Left Hand of Darkness and Tehanu. Both really literary and ground breaking.
Also, Hal Duncan's Ink and Vellum are both excellent.