
Podcast host Mike Duncan on how studying real-world history helped him imagine what a 'Martian Revolution' could look like.

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December book club canceled. Short stories instead!
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Recommendations after the Murder bot Diaries
I'm normally a bit more of a hard scifi reader with the likes of Bobiverse and Expanse (and Andy Weir/Thaichovsky/IanMBanks/Herbert etc) but I really enjoyed this humerous take on a rogue cyborg.
Is there anything out there in this vane I should look into?
WELCOME TO THE 2nd ANNUAL !BOOKS@LEMMY.WORLD BINGO 2025!
I wanted to invite you to join us for book bingo: cross-posted from: https://literature.cafe/post/19468617
Want to read more, but need motivation or direction? Want to gamify or expand your reading? Try book bingo! Our hope with this challenge is to provide a fun way for you to keep up with your recreational reading goals throughout the next 12 months.
The goal is to read something that fits the theme for each bingo square in any single row, column, or corner diagonal of your choice (one work per square). You’re welcome to complete the entire card (or multiple cards) for an additional challenge goal, but you only need to check off a single line of 5 squares to complete the challenge.
So what can you read? Well, anything you enjoy, really. There's no requirement to consume any particular kind of work, so any length, format, subject, or genre is totally fine. Want to read graphic novels, audiobooks, poetry, 10-page memoirs, or works in other languages? No pr
Podcast host Mike Duncan on how studying real-world history helped him imagine what a 'Martian Revolution' could look like.
Ominous strings of Austrian composer Joseph Haydn’s “Oxford” Symphony (No. 92) announce the beginning and end of each episode of Revolutions. The podcast, hosted by author Mike Duncan, walks listeners through history’s most significant turning points, from the French Revolution to the Bolshevik insurrection. Its new season shakes up the formula. This time, Duncan isn’t talking about a terrestrial dustup. He’s chronicling the Martian Revolution.
...
Talking with Big Think over Zoom, Duncan says he hadn’t tackled fiction since his college days of typing out reams of half-finished manuscripts. Returning to fantasy and science fiction after years of nonfiction writing, he finds that his detour into podcasting hasn’t hurt so much as it has helped him. In addition to making him a better writer overall, his knowledge of civilizations — how they change, make war, maintain peace, and divide resources — allowed him to construct an alternative reality that’s as complex and believable as J.
Andor isn't just really good, and timely.
No spoilers for Season 2 other than the magic is back and go watch it.
It's so good it makes other Star Wars almost unwatchable by comparison.
I'm also really inspired to go fight some fascism and blast some space Nazis.
Crossover ....
I know Apple's adaptation of Asimovs books got off the rails but didnt expect this crossover ...
However, it might be a while before the show returns on Netflix.
Your favorite authors?
Mine, not in an order of preference: Jack Vance, Van Vogt, Asimov, Arthur C Clarke and Frank Herbert.
Notes from another year of reading science fiction and fantasy (OC)
A year ago, I made this post with notes I had kept on the books I'd read in the prior year. I wasn't sure anyone would be interested, but I had the notes and figured I might as well post them. I was stunned by the positive responses. Well, it's been another year, so here are my notes from the books I've read since then.
I've tried to write these such that any spoilers are of the kind you might find on the back cover: first chapter setup kinds of things. Also, the original list was just notes for myself to remind me of the books and if I liked them, but I've had friends ask to see them since, and ask for updates, so it's changed the way I write them slightly because I'm aware other people will read them.
Rule 34, Stross Somewhat of a sequel to Halting State, taking place a few years later. Spammers are being killed around the world, many at the same time. Story mostly follows a detective on the case, a psychopath involved, and a flunky who is
Seattle Worldcon 2025, the 83 World Science Fiction Convention is delighted to announce the finalists for the 2025 Hugo Awards, Lodestar Award for Best Young Adult Book, and Astounding Award for Best New Writer.
Exciting news for sci-fi fans! Apple TV+ is bringing Neuromancer to the screen, and we’ve just gotten our first look at Briana Middleton as Molly — a fierce
Who do you consider to be THE sci-fi actor?
My nominees and some of their top sci-fi roles:
Oscar Isaac:
• Star Wars 7-9 - Poe Dameron
• Dune Part 1 - Duke Leto Atreides
• X-Men Apocalypse - Apocalypse
• MCU (Moon Knight) - all 3 Moon Knight personae
• Spider-Verse movies - Miguel O’Hara (Spider-Man 2099)
Christopher Lloyd:
• Back to the Future I-III - “Doc” Emmet Brown
• Star Trek 3 - Kruge
• Star Wars (The Mandalorian) - Commissioner Helgait
Djimon Honsou:
• MCU films (Guardians of the Galaxy, Captain Marvel) - Korath the Pursuer
• DCEU film (Aquaman) - Fisherman King
• DCEU films (Shazam 1 & 2, Black Adam) - the Wizard Shazam
• Stargate - Horus
In the realm of science fiction, Dyson spheres and ringworlds have been staples for decades. But it is well known that the simplest designs are unstable against gravitational forces and would thus be torn apart. Now a scientist from Scotland, UK has shown that certain configurations of these objects...
What are things that mildly annoy you in SciFi?
So I am currently rewatching Stargate SG1 and thinking about certain things that always rub me the wrong way when watching or reading SciFi. Now, I know that Stargate in particular doesn't really take itself too seriously and shouldn't be scrutinized too much. It's also a bit older. But there are still some things that even modern SciFi-Worlds featuring outer space and aliens have or lack, that always slightly rub me the wrong way. I would love to hear your opinion.
I mean, come on, the Goa'uld couldn't figure out a way to install their equivalent of cameras all over their battle ships in order to monitor it? They have forms of video/picture transmitting technology. Star Trek also seems to lack any form of video surveillance. (I'm not up to date with the newest series.) Yes, I get that having a crew member physically go to a cargo bay and check out the situation is better for dramatic purposes. But it always rubs me the wrong way
Book 11 for my 2025 goal of 30 books for the year! Still going! Suddenly, I found myself back in a Fred Saberhagen mood. Saberhagen is one of those science fiction/fantasy authors who doesn’t…
Amazon MGM Studios is working on a TV adaptation of Iain M. Banks' science fiction novel Consider Phlebas. The book is part of Banks' Culture series, which