• feature
  • WEDNESDAY JULY 4 2007 12:00 PM

Wil Wheaton's Geek in Review: Five Books Every Geek Should Read (Yes, it's a Rerun)

It's the Fourth of July and most American readers are out shedding a tear for our once great country while getting drunk, blowing shit up, and listening to Sousa, so we're going with a repeat column today.

I've been thinking about summer reading lately, and posted about it on my personal blog yesterday, so I dug through the archives and found a column which may be useful for any of my fellow geeks who need a starting point for their own summer reading.

This column originally ran in November of last year, and was picked by our fearless leaders for inclusion in the first issue of the SG magazine.


Long before we wrote our blogs, long before we argued about the finer points of the Prime Directive on UseNet, even before we nervously waited for ASCII porn to download at 300 baud from Fidonet, geeks buried our faces in books.

Maybe it's because we were easily bored by television and movies (or without the Internet to facilitate arguing about them) or maybe it's because we were less likely to be tormented by a cool kid if we kept our faces safely buried in the pages of some novel, but books are important to every geek I know. We all have huge libraries of well-worn novels, often fighting for shelf-space with our action figures.

This week, I took a walk through my personal library, and picked out five mostly-sci-fi books that I think all geeks should read, if they haven't already. I chose these books for various reasons, including their contributions to the genre, how well they hold up over time, how fun they are to read, and how significant they were to me in my development as a geek. Those of you non-geeks who have a geeky significant other can also use this list as a starting point to eventually understand exactly why your geek looks at Google News and says there's a Seldon Crisis brewing, but this list is by no means comprehensive (Fahrenheit 451 and Flowers for Algernon are conspicuously absent, for example,) but I had to keep it concise; please add your own recommendations in the comments.


I, Robot
Author: Isaac Asimov
Published: 1950

Though published in collected form in 1950, the stories in this volume date all the way back to 1940. It is just astonishing to me that Asimov could come up with the three laws of robotics, and create so many different types of robots (domestic robots on Earth, science robots on Mars) at a time when the zeppelin had just been retired and airplanes were still cutting-edge technology. I'm not talking about canals on Mars, or fantastically spun tales of a journey to the moon—I'm talking about stories and creations that, sixty-six years and countless iterations of Moore's Law later, appear prescient and remain relevant.

Most of the stories in this collection deal with the consequences of the three laws of robotics, but all of them (notably Robbie) challenge the image of robots as one-dimensional servants with flailing arms and stilted speech. Asimov created characters readers could care about and relate to, and balanced the science with the fiction as well as anyone ever has.

Oh, and don't waste your time with the Will Smith movie, if you're expecting anything resembling a faithful adaptation.

Readers may also like: The Foundation Trilogy, The Caves of Steel.


Neuromancer
Author: William Gibson
Published: 1984

Its opening line is one of the most repeated and well-known in the geek universe, "The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a dead channel." Of course, when Neuromancer was written, that meant the sky was a dull grey color, perhaps broken in places by swirling eddies of darkness in the clouds, but if it were written today, it would actually mean the sky was a clear, bright blue color, creating quite a different mood in the heavens above Chiba, and for the entire novel.

While much attention has been paid to Gibson's prediction of the Internet, and his coining of the term "cyberspace," Neuromancer endures because it's a fucking brilliantly imagined novel. It's a tightly-knit, clever (without being too clever) story with smart dialogue, set in a very plausible near future. It's populated with characters that geeks love: they're smart, they're sexy, (they actually have the sex, too, and it's pretty hot) and they're cool. It's one of the few sci-fi books on my shelf that actually gets better with each reading, the same way Watchmen does, revealing new connections and uncovering new layers every time I open its cover and jack in.

Readers may also like: Count Zero, Mona Lisa Overdrive.

Ringworld
Author: Larry Niven
Published: 1970

Larry Niven's Hugo and Nebula award-winning novel follows Louis Wu, a 200 year-old man who's grown bored with life, as he is recruited by Nessus, a Pierson's Puppeteer, and travels with fellow human Teela Brown, and fearsome Kzin Speaker-to-Animals to the eponymous Ringworld, a solid structure one Earth-orbit in diameter, orbiting a star and teeming with life. After crashing on the ring's surface, Louis and his fellow travelers must find a way back home, and figure out exactly who built it, and why.

Ringworld is, like all of Niven's books, dedicated to exploring advanced theoretical concepts and may turn off readers who are intimidated or bored by so-called "hard science fiction." It also has a significant flaw (the Ringworld is unstable) that is so undeniable, he wrote a sequel in 1980 to correct his mistake (and the Ringworld's lack of stability.)

What I (and my unscientific poll of two friends) find so compelling about Ringworld is its sheer size and scope: with the surface area of three million Earths, it could be Science Fiction's original Big Dumb Object. But beneath the mystery of the Ringworld and the Engineers who created it, is a story that's compelling and engaging, and is just begging to be made into a movie.

And all the damn kids today who play Halo can thank Larry Niven; the game takes place on a structure that was clearly inspired by his creation.

Readers may also like: Tales of Known Space, The Ringworld Engineers.


The Hacker Crackdown
Author: Bruce Sterling
Published: 1992

In 1990, the Secret Service launched a series of raids called Operation Sundevil, a nationwide crackdown on computer hackers. A great deal of attention was focused on Phrack, an underground e-zine co-created and edited by Craig Neidorf, (aka Knight Lightning) who faced 31 years in prison for allegedly stealing what Bell South called the source code for its E911 service, valued at over $80,000. At trial, it was proved that the document was not source code, but was more of a memo about the service, and not only was it not valued at over $80,000, but could be purchased from Bell for $13. The charges were dismissed, but the case, and what was eventually determined to be an illegal raid of Steve Jackson Games, lead to the founding of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Bruce Sterling, one of the founding fathers of the Cyberpunk genre, and editor of the definitive Mirrorshades anthology, investigated both of these cases and the entire underground hacker and phreaker culture of the late 80s. The result of his research is The Hacker Crackdown, a highly-readable, comprehensive, entertaining, and fascinating look at the computer underground at a time before the Internet was widely available, when information was traded via "philes" on BBSes, hijacked long-distance phone chats, and in magazines like TAP and 2600.

The entire text of the book was made available, for free, by its author, and has been online in one form or another since 1994.

Readers may also like: Cyberpunk, The Cuckoo's Egg.


The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Author: Douglas Adams
Published: 1979

Every single self-respecting geek in the world has read this book, at least once, likely more, and has also played the Infocom game based upon it, though many of us never got past the goddamn babelfish puzzle.

Douglas Adams' hilarious 1979 novel is the first (and best) of the five books in the incorrectly-and-unapologetically-described Hitchhiker's Trilogy, and introduced generations of readers to Vogon poetry, The Heart of Gold, Zaphod Beeblebrox, Marvin the clinically-depressed Android, Arthur Dent, Ford Prefect, and the ultimate answer, but not the ultimate question, to life, the universe, and everything.

Geeks love this book for the same reasons mundanes don't: it is filled with complex layers of satire and absurdist humor, and its confirms that the world is just not . . . normal.

Like I, Robot, there is a film adaptation, which I personally found quite disappointing and my wife (who hasn't read the book) found confusing. Your milage may vary, but I'd recommend checking out the original radio plays, or the BBC television series, if you want to experience HHG in some non-literary form. Just don't forget to take your towel with you.

Readers may also like: The Restaurant at the End of the Universe, Good Omens.


As I said, this is nowhere near a comprehensive or even definitive list of geeky reading, but all of these titles bring me joy every single time I pick them up, or even glance at them on my shelves while I'm looking for something else. They are all a big part of who I am today, and I suspect many of my fellow geeks can say the same thing about at least one or two of them.

Now tell me why I'm wrong, and tell me what I missed.

Wil Wheaton is a hoopy frood who knows where his towel is.

 

Previous

PAGE: 

1 | 2 | 3

Next

Comments
tadkil

tadkil

Duluth, GA
September 2004

JUL 06, 2007 07:34 PM

mydcmbr81 said:
HHGTTG FTW!!!!

Anyway, I have always been a fan of the Rama series by Arthur C. Clarke and the Mars Trilogy by Kim Stanley Robinson.



Mars series is really good stuff. Don't know how I forgot about them.

Ambience

Ambience

Yuba City, CA
July 2007

JUL 07, 2007 09:49 AM

Chronicles of Amber, written by Roger Zelazni. Zelazni sets up an elaborate world that is mysterious and quite involving to the reader. The newly republished book has all 10 books in the series. I didn't feel like I had quite earned my badge of Geekdom until I read this book.

mydogfarted

mydogfarted

Oakland, NJ
June 2003

JUL 07, 2007 11:00 AM

The response list reads like a who's who of the "I got many wedgies in High School" list.

Roethke

Roethke

SUICIDEGIRL

California, USA

JUL 07, 2007 03:11 PM

I would add Solaris by Stanislaw Lem, and Stranger in a Strange Land by Heinlein.

And of course, Dune.

HarryJohnson

HarryJohnson

Calgary, AB
March 2004

JUL 08, 2007 01:00 AM

Comments on other's selections:
Chronicles of Amber was the first and only Sci-Fantasy to capture my imagination...

Ender's Game. Is it just me, or were there way too many scenes with naked kids for comfort? And lets pick one of the hardest languages on Earth to mess with in Speaker...

Rama Series. WOW; Intelligent, speculative, unimaginably alien SciFi that works!

New Novels for consideration:
Gateway (and the entire Heechee Saga) by Frederik Pohl. [Not to be confused those wacky Gateway religous stories] Going down never was so... ummm... retrospective?!? And, where is my local CHON fast food joint?

Inherit the Stars and the rest of the "Giants" series by James P Hogan. Current CGI can now do these stories justice in scope, scale and flavor. Why have we seen no Movies (yet)? I want to see a film trailer that zooms in on a dead Astronaut who died 50,000 years ago on the Moon!

Code of the Lifemaker once again by James P. Hogan. A jaw dropping start stuns you so hard you have to finish the entire Novel in one long, adventurous read! Was that Evolution or Intelligent Design? ROFL!!! Check out the Prologue on JPH's Official website: http://www.jamesphogan.com/books/info.php?cmd=sample&titleID=2

The Collapsium et al by Wil McCarthy. Wil writes Modern Hard SciFi with an older, colorful flavor that truely engages and entertains with a cargo hold full of new ideas! Quick! Someone Fax me to Saturn, I feel like my Lungs need a tuneup after walking up those stairs on Venus!

Dr_Lizardo

Dr_Lizardo

Indian Orchard, MA
February 2006

JUL 08, 2007 04:54 PM

I'm glad someone mentioned CJ Cherry's ]Downbelow Station. I feel sort of like a subspecies of geek in being huge fan of CJC. I love her conceptions of alien minds, and her device of old enemies learning to talk to and trust one another.

tadkil

tadkil

Duluth, GA
September 2004

JUL 10, 2007 05:42 PM

Dr_Lizardo said:
I'm glad someone mentioned CJ Cherry's ]Downbelow Station. I feel sort of like a subspecies of geek in being huge fan of CJC. I love her conceptions of alien minds, and her device of old enemies learning to talk to and trust one another.


Big fan myself. I think she is very good at taking an alien perspective and bringing the reader inside of it.

I read The Morgaine cycle when I was 11 or 12 and it really shaped the way I understand a well crafted narrative.

Ainur

Ainur

I'm lost
May 2005

JUL 10, 2007 05:57 PM

Thanks to Will and all the comments for offering such great reading suggestions. I'll be heading to Berkeley with a list so large this weekend that if I find them all I might have to choose which ones I really want to buy (even if I find them all used).

lavenir

lavenir

Turlock, CA
June 2007

JUL 11, 2007 12:04 PM

Dune. I actually read it for the first time in my early twenties, and I can understand how it might be a confusing text for younger readers. But I think it's a terrifically complex piece of science fiction. The only warning that I would give to new readers is that they don't read past the first three books; Herbert's subsequent texts really diminished the importance of his earlier Dune stories for me.

The only problem that I have with Dune, however, is that Baron Harkonnen (spelling?) is a stereotypically homosexual villain; I think that the reader's disgust for him is supposed to be further augmented by his sexual desires.

Amelia

Amelia

SUICIDEGIRL

Kentucky, USA

JUL 21, 2007 06:26 AM

Issac Asimov = My Heart and Joy

he knows more about the human heart than anyone..

if only Pinocchio were so lucky

Previous

PAGE: 

1 | 2 | 3

Next