starlady: Quorra fights CLU's black guard programs (for the users and for me)
Electra ([personal profile] starlady) wrote2011-06-05 03:37 pm
Entry tags:

Because this has been bothering me since Wiscon

Poll #7183 Greatest living SF writer?
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 35


Greatest living SF writer?

View Answers

Ted Chiang (source: owner of Dreamhaven Books)
0 (0.0%)

Samuel R. Delany (source: me)
2 (5.9%)

Ursula K. LeGuin (source: me)
28 (82.4%)

Gene Wolfe (source: Neil Gaiman)
0 (0.0%)

someone else I will name below
4 (11.8%)

Write-in candidate?



I just can't believe someone would put Ted Chiang over the woman who coined the term 'ansible,' but maybe I shouldn't be all that surprised.
lnhammer: the Chinese character for poetry, red on white background (Default)

[personal profile] lnhammer 2011-06-06 04:13 am (UTC)(link)
My suggestion is Nova -- it's the most coherent and accessible of his science fiction, without losing any of the intelligence. Linguistics geeks are also directed to Babel-17. If you've ever thought "Gosh, I wish Finnegan's Wake had been written in plain English with the psychosexual stuff as text instead of subtext," then Dhalgren's for you.

(Using "subtext" advisedly, as Joyce's tale is so weighted under the language that the basic plot is arguably a subtext.)

---L.
lnhammer: the Chinese character for poetry, red on white background (Default)

[personal profile] lnhammer 2011-06-06 03:03 pm (UTC)(link)
The FW connection is half a joke, but only half -- notice, for example, that the last sentence is incomplete and is finished by the fragmentary first sentence.

---L.