Message from @Ecarttev

Discord ID: 543499960407031809


2018-01-19 13:30:26 UTC  

This guy's books are worthy of note because he took the tack of "classic" science fiction, with a story that has no cursing, no sex, no gratuitous violence, no homosexuality, etc. And nothing but whites--no tokens, no obligatory interracial relationships! He's got very subtle redpills in the books, or at least elements that are at the very least sympathetic to our goals.

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/395788594553421834/403904034047787008/The_Way_of_the_Dhin_2nd_Edition_Ad_with_Cover.1.png

2018-01-19 13:30:52 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/395788594553421834/403904145028808715/51cL5mUOtZL.jpg

2018-01-19 19:27:02 UTC  

De wey

2018-01-29 13:13:14 UTC  

@Why Tea I always thought it was weird that the second act of every sci-fi story had a casual sexual interaction. It turned me off to sci-fi since the purpose is to live vicariously through the characters, implying that sex is something that you can only experience through someone else

2018-01-29 13:17:19 UTC  

Yeah, it was strange to me too, when I started seeing more and more works that had seemingly a requirement for there to be not just a love interest as part of the construction, but actually a sex scene. In some of the classics and in that style, you don't even have people eating, and certainly not taking a crap, unless it's relevant to world-building or constructing the specific scene properly for the plot.

2018-01-29 13:18:23 UTC  

You tend to get info in the future worlds about how food is grown/meals created, and how they clean up and shower, but other than that, the authors don't focus on the visceral.

2018-01-29 13:19:31 UTC  

"Modern" (or (((modern))) if you will) always seems to have to bring in a gay character, or a drug addict, or sex scenes, or something. Dude I'm just here for the lasers and flying cars.

2018-01-29 13:20:57 UTC  

I just love the technical descriptions of society

2018-01-29 13:21:27 UTC  

Idgaf about some guy who doesn't exist getting his bone on

2018-01-29 13:21:46 UTC  

Yeah if the author does a really thoughtful analysis of what future life will be like, from a civilization/society perspective, that's great.

2018-01-30 02:04:53 UTC  

Read Halo

2018-01-30 02:05:06 UTC  

0% lewd

2018-03-04 20:52:03 UTC  

Has anyone here read the Dune series? I'm thinking about starting it over spring break.

2018-03-04 20:55:54 UTC  

The original Dune was fantastic. I never made it through the rest of the series. When his son put out some, it was entertaining to read some of the books that were the foundation of things that were the history of the original, but they weren't as epic as the original. I read Dune at least 3 times.

2018-03-04 20:56:58 UTC  

I know my husband read it years ago & he really liked it. Said he read the 1st 3 and said 1st was best.

2018-03-09 01:41:14 UTC  

Read the first three for sure, @Travis - IN. Some people don't care for Dune Messiah (the 2nd one) but it's short, and that way the 3rd one will have much more impact. This series is one of the most "important" ones in Science Fiction. Read it. I really liked Heretics of Dune and Chapterhouse Dune when I read them too, but they're not as "important" as the first three.

2018-03-09 01:41:51 UTC  

I can't stress that enough. If you like Science Fiction and have not read the Dune series, you must stop what you are doing and read it.

2018-03-09 01:44:03 UTC  

@Algrin "Bailey" Bagley - PA Yeah the ones his son wrote with Kevin Anderson were good but not quite the same.

2018-04-12 04:28:15 UTC  

@Travis - IN Certainly read the first book, at least. My only criticism would be something that bothers me in nearly any sci-fi story...the need to invent language, which nearly always draws on some guttural language as it's base. I may be corrected here, but in Dune, that would be a semitic a language. There are some strong parralels, intended or not, between Herbert's work and middle eastern politics and history.

2018-04-12 22:43:58 UTC  

This is pretty close to being identitarian science fiction, set in a long post apocalyptic future https://www.amazon.com/Fitzpatricks-War-Theodore-Judson/dp/0756401968

2019-02-08 18:35:06 UTC  

Caliphate by Tom Kratman

2019-02-08 18:35:19 UTC  

Free download from publisher

2019-02-08 18:37:40 UTC  

22nd century spy novel with the American Empire fighting the European Caliphate.

2019-02-08 18:40:19 UTC  

Writing seems sophomoric in places to me.

2019-02-10 23:49:39 UTC  

An asteroid breaks into pieces heading towards earth, resulting in global destruction and a restarting of society. Very interesting read. Good characters and action, during Cold War, makes some good point on capitalism vs communism (in passing), has overarching themes like systems of of distributed intelligence (even galaxy brains can’t recreate most things we take for granted on their own), +.

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/395788594553421834/544303972106895384/91eE4IFHsAL.png