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Other Science Fiction Universes Found Only in Books?

VulcanMindBlown

Commander
Red Shirt
I don't know where to start if I got into science fiction that was outside of a TV show or movie. It's not that it can't have a good storyline, but I sometimes fail to visualize the story as it goes along.

Where do I start? I heard that @Christopher L. Bennett wrote for a hard science fiction book. What are the popular ones?
 
There are thousands of books that have never been made into movies or tv shows. Start with authors you've heard of. Larry Niven is a good one.
 
I was going to recommend the Culture too. There's so much out there to choose from, though. Prose science fiction is a much more diverse field than the film/TV stuff. It would help to know what sort of stories you're interested in.


I heard that @Christopher L. Bennett wrote for a hard science fiction book.

https://christopherlbennett.wordpress.com/only-superhuman/

My other works in that universe to date are only short stories, several of which are long out of print. I'm looking into the possibility of a story collection, though.
 
The Ship Who Sang Series about humans (children) with severe physical handicaps and deformities integrated into starships and (in one case) space stations. They are human, complete with emotions and desires. After they work off their time of indentured service (payment for being given a new life in a body - they work off the purchase of the ship), they are allowed to do as they please.

Children of the Stars
series by Juanita Coulson. Follows four or five generations of a single family as they rebuild Earth from the ashes of war, colonize Mars, develop FTL, make contact with aliens and become members of a larger galactic community.

Alliance/Union Universe by CJ Cherryh. ANYTHING BY CJ CHERRYH. Hard scifi series about an expansive human controlled galaxy. There is the Alliance and the breakaway Union. Some war, some diplomacy, some exploration, some freighter stories. Runs the gamut. Also included would be her Chanur novels and the Mri novels. A similar but different universe is her Foreigner series.

Grand Tour series by Ben Bova Several books set entirely in the solar system. Different colonies from Mercury to Pluto. More hard scifi.

Poul Anderson has a large body of works in multiple universes
 
Also by Anne McCaffrey is The Dragonriders of Pern, which seems like fantasy at first blush but is really science fiction set on an alien planet with genetically-engineered dragons. It's a long series that's told out of chronological order and has been taken over by her son, I think, following her passing.

There are the classic universes of decades past. There's Larry Niven's Known Space series, best known for the Ringworld novels. Hugo mentioned Asimov's Foundation series, which is part of a larger Asimov future history also including his Robot and Galactic Empire series (which started out separately but were tied together into a larger whole in his later works).

If you want stuff from Star Trek authors, there's David Gerrold's War Against the Chtorr series, which has been unfinished for a couple of decades now, but Gerrold says he's getting close to completing it at last. Of course, he's done plenty of other standalone books, but you asked about universes. He's done a couple of others, like his Star Wolf series and the Dingilliad, a trilogy in the vein of Robert A. Heinlein's juvenile novels. Let's see, Trek novelist A.C. Crispin and others did a series called Starbridge, IIRC, about a sort of interspecies space academy -- kind of Trek-like in spirit, but with more diverse aliens.
 
Robert Heinlein's "Starship Toopers" (because the film doesn't do it justice) "stranger in a Strange Land" and "Citizen of the Galaxy."

Anything by Ben Bova, for the most part. It's usually a little bit harder as well.
Kim Stanley Robinson's "Red Mars" series.
 
If you like big galactic sagas, you can also check out Peter Hamilton's work.

And, yes, you should definitely check out Christopher's book, Only Superhuman.

(Full disclosure: I edited that one.)
 
Here are some of the most popular ones:

Peter F Hamilton - Night's Dawn
Peter F Hamilton - Commonwealth
Stephen Baxter - Xeelee
Iain M Banks - Culture
Lois McAlister Bujold - Vorkosigan Saga
Isaac Asimov - Foundation
Vernor Vinge - Zones of Thought
Dan Simmons - Hyperion Canton
Alastair Reynolds - Revelation Space
Gene Wolfe - Book of the New Sun
Known Space - Larry Niven
David Brin - Uplift Saga
John Scalzi - Old Man's War
 
The Speed of Dark by Elizabeth Moon
Replay by Ken Grimwood
Speaker for the Dead by Orson Scott Card
Dying Inside by Robert Silverberg
Starplex by Robert J. Sawyer
The Vorkosigan Saga by Lois McAlister Bujold
The Honor Harrington Series by David Weber
 
I haven't read them yet myself, but I've heard good things about The Uplift series by David Brin.
Are you looking for just space sci-fi? There's quite of bit of Earth based future, near future, and even present day sci-fi.
I just got an e-book copy of Neuromancer, which is the classic cyberpunk sci-fi novel.
 
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I haven't read them yet myself, but I've heard good things about The Uplift series by David Brin.

...
I can recommend The Uplift saga. Great non-human characters.

For more Earth-based, atleast in the beginning, science fiction I can recommend The Long Earth - series by Pratchett & Stephen Baxter.
 
Going back away, you also have these series:

The Stainless Steel Rat by Harry Harrison
Dorsai by Gordon R. Dickson
Witch World by Andre Norton
 
There is of course EE 'Doc' Smith's Lensman series which I've heard inspired both Star Wars and the Hal Jordan Green Lantern.
 
There's David Weber's Honor Harrington universe, which started off great, but got bogged down in boring interstellar politics after a while. But the early books are fantastic. It's strictly military sci fi, tho, if that matters to you.

Likewise David Drake and John Ringo are masterful military sci fi authors with a number of series.

I second the Iain M. Banks mention above. Wonderful universe he's created.

I also like Alastair Reynolds and Jack McDevitt's far-future societies. McDevitt's Prescilla Hutchins universe is especially appealing.

Larry Niven is a given (it rhymes!) for his Known Space stories.

Stephen Baxter and Greg Bear don't have specific universes, but they're certainly two grand masters of science fiction.

James Alan Gardener's Expendable series is really good.

I loved Elizabeth Moon's Vatta's War series.
 
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