Current reading list

Bori reads

The Night Land (1912)

Was Lovecraft trolling?

Last and First Men (1930)

…it describes the history of humanity from the present onwards across two billion years and eighteen distinct human species, of which our own is the first. The book employs a narrative conceit that, under subtle inspiration, the novelist has unknowingly been dictated a channelled text from the last human species.

Surprisingly creative

Star Maker (1937)

Star Maker tackles philosophical themes such as the essence of life, of birth, decay and death, and the relationship between creation and creator. A pervading theme is that of progressive unity within and between different civilisations.

A great follow-up to Last and First Men

Against the Fall of Night (1948)

Smooth between sea and land, by A. E. Housman

Smooth between sea and land Is laid the yellow sand, And here through summer days The seed of Adam plays.

Here the child comes to found His unremaining mound, And the grown lad to score Two names upon the shore.

Here, on the level sand, Between the sea and land, What shall I build or write Against the fall of night?

Tell me of runes to grave That hold the bursting wave, Or bastions to design For longer date than mine.

Shall it be Troy or Rome I fence against the foam, Or my own name, to stay When I depart for aye?

Nothing: too near at hand, Planing the figured sand, Effacing clean and fast Cities not built to last And charms devised in vain, Pours the confounding main.

Cozy sci-fi

The Dying Earth (1950)

The sun goes dark! Prepare for the chill!

Phoenix (1967-88)

Phoenix is about reincarnation. Each story generally involves a search for immortality, embodied by the blood of the eponymous bird of fire, which, as drawn by Tezuka, resembles the Fenghuang. The blood is believed to grant eternal life, but immortality in Phoenix is either unobtainable or a terrible curse, whereas Buddhist-style reincarnation is presented as the natural path of life.

The Dancers at the End of Time (1972-76)

At least a thousand years before the End of Time!

I am anxious to resume my moral education!

They dance to forget their fate

Akira (1982)

Blade Runner (1982)

Neuromancer (1984)

The Sprawl trilogy shares its setting with Gibson’s short stories “Johnny Mnemonic” (1981), “Burning Chrome” (1982), and “New Rose Hotel” (1984), and events and characters from the stories appear in or are mentioned at points in the trilogy.

Brazil (1985)

The film centres on Sam Lowry, a low-ranking bureaucrat trying to find a woman who appears in his dreams while he is working in a mind-numbing job and living in a small apartment, set in a dystopian world in which there is an over-reliance on poorly maintained (and rather whimsical) machines. Brazil’s satire of technocracy, bureaucracy, hyper-surveillance, corporate statism, and state capitalism is reminiscent of George Orwell’s 1949 novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, and it has been called Kafkaesque as well as absurdist.

Neverness (1988)

Hyperion (1989)

Against a Dark Background (1993)

City of Diamond (1996)

Six centuries ago, the alien Curosa imparted the wisdom of their dying race to Adrian Sawyer and gifted him with three massive intergalactic ships to spread the Curosa Truth across the starways.

From the New World (2008)

The Quantum Thief (2010)

Terra Ignota Series (2016-21)

A Memory Called Empire (2019)

Works of C. S. Friedman

Works of C. J. Cherryh