BOOKS:
INFLUENTIAL SCIENCE FICTION BOOKS
These books have become part of the popular culture, have
influenced thought, or become popular memes in our society, some to the point
of the ideas becoming separate from the book that launched them. Just think of “Open the Pod Bay Doors, Hal”,
or Frankenstein’s monster, or the Three Laws of Robotics. Some have even
introduced new words to our language, like “grok” or “Waldo”.
Lord of the Rings/The
Hobbit – J.R.R. Tolkien
Synopsis: Bilbo Baggins is a hobbit who lives in Middle
Earth, and finds a magic ring, which he leaves (50 years later) to his nephew
Frodo Baggins to destroy by throwing it into a live volcano.
Why: This story is now famous thanks to the movies, but used
to be a geek right of passage. The archetype
of all “swords and sorcery” fantasy since and the inspiration for countless
video games, Dungeons and Dragons, etc. While this fantasy book is not science
fiction, its influence on the entire genre is so great it has to be included.
Frankenstein – Mary
Shelley
Synopsis: Don’t think
you know this story if you have not read the book. The monster (properly called Frankenstein’s
Creature) in this book is intelligent, articulate, and longs to be accepted by
other humans who seem to fear him. In the
story, Dr. Victor Frankenstein re-animates a body pieced together from various
corpses. The resulting creature is abandoned
by his creator and suffers a lot of neglect and abuse. The creature gets revenge by murdering
Victor’s brother. The creature demands a
mate be made, which the Doctor complies with, then destroys. The enraged creature murders all of Victor’s
family and leads Frankenstein on a chase across the world, ending in the
Arctic.
Why: This story has become so much a part of culture that we
take its precepts for granted, that man should not “play God” and bestow life,
a concept that was repeated with later robot stories. Most of our impressions of this story – the
mute creature with the flat head – come from the movies, not from this book. Read the story yourself and learn why this is
a classic.
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