Shouldn't matter. I don't believe there was much about pac protectors in either Ring World or the Ring World Engineers.Hello everybody. I am wondering should I read the Protector novel before Ringworld or after Ringworld?? Thanks!
Shouldn't matter. I don't believe there was much about pac protectors in either Ring World or the Ring World Engineers.
Like Christopher, I first read Protector after Ringworld Engineers. It works fine that way.
I still need to read Ed Lerner's Fleet of Worlds series, though that series is not held in high regard by Niven fans. AIUI, Niven didn't have a lot of involvement in the books, much like Gentry Lee's sequels to Rendezvous with Rama didn't have much involvement by Arthur C. Clarke.
I think it's probably quite common for people to read the Ringworld books first and then move out to the lesser-known Niven stuff.
I think it was when I got Tales of Known Space and read the chronology in the back that I became motivated to seek out all the other books and assemble a complete set. Although I remember that when I did complete the set and read the whole Known Space continuity (as it then existed) in chronological order, I discovered it didn't fit together as neatly as I'd hoped. As with any long-running continuity, it has some inconsistencies and rethinkings along the way.
The Niveverse is interesting as it took a while for the author to put everything together cohesively.
Not that long. There were only two years between the first Known Space story in 1964 and "A Relic of the Empire," which was the first story that crossed over elements from previous stories and knitted them into a shared universe. By contrast, it took Asimov more than three decades to start tying his Robot, Galactic Empire, and Foundation series into a shared reality.
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