NEED Sci-Fi titles

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I have to agree... I thought maybe it was just me.

well..it must be us Corona drinkers! lol!

I was able to get through it and did rather like it, but I also took into account that the author (Christopher Paolini) was 15 when he first started writing it. I can remember being that age and wanting to accomplish something massive like that. I also like fantasy a bit more than sci-fi, so that may be another reason for my feelings towards the series. I've read all three and am anxiously awaiting number four.
 
Post-apocalyptic:
Swan Song by Robert McCammon
The Stand by Stephen King (but who hasn't read that?)
Lucifer's Hammer - Niven

More fantasy than sci fi - Michelle West/Sagara - anything she writes.

-Spooky
 
Here's a tidbit I just ran across. Milo Hastings, who wrote the classic poultry how-to guide The Dollar Hen in 1909, also wrote an early sci-fi classic called City of Endless Night in 1919.
 
Thanks everyone! I've made note of the 3 titles I have not yet read.

Of course I read the Stephen King novels years ago... is it just me, or did those books change your sense of reality for a few days?

I used to own all the Pern books, but I gave them to my daughter.

I do love the Ender series. Finally read the prequel last summer and really enjoyed it.... "a science fiction gateway drug", LOL.


I still need to find the Twilight series somewhere! Of course my place on the library waiting list will come up after I'm dead and gone, lol
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I am lately forced to roam the library choosing books by their covers.


I love Clancy, Ludlow, Robert Littell, but they don't put them out fast enough!

Right now reading Vince Flynn and Catherine Coulter - not on par with Ludlow, but they don't put me to sleep.

Arrrghhh... too many books, not enough years in my life!
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The Crystal Line series is another Anne MacCaffery.

I have to agree with Charlie Bone and the Ember series as well. The first books were good, but couldn't get through the rest.
 
Read the Discworld stuff long ago. Pratchett and McCaffrey seem sort of juvenile to me now... or is it just that they up my juvenile days when I was reading them so much?
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I think the author who I dislike the most now is Anthony. Sometimes I can't believe I used to love his stuff.
 
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oh good... so I'm not alone! I confess to reading all of them in my early twenties.
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I would read pretty much anything when I was young, including the encyclopedia.
 
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Eragon was written by a fifteen-year-old, and published when he was nineteen, I believe. I read the book, but wasn't overly blown away by it. It's okay.
 

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