Just finished my first book of the year, Alien Clay by Adrian Tchaikovsky. I think he’s now my favorite author, at least currently writing. He’s so good at so many things, from hard SF to fantasy. He’s created some really interesting worlds, and populated them with interesting characters.

So far, I’ve read these books of his (order I read them, not order published):

  • Children of Time
  • Children of Ruin
  • Children of Memory
  • Made Things
  • Walking to Aldebaran
  • Service Model
  • Shroud
  • City of Last Chances
  • Alien Clay

Each of these is a gem. The children of time series has to be an all-time great SF trilogy. If you want my little paragraph of spoiler-free notes on why of them, let me know.

  • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I love Tchaikovsky, but sometimes I wonder if he’d be better off spending a bit more time with each book instead of cranking out so many of them.

    Like… each of his books seems to accomplish exactly what he wants it to, and as soon as it gets there he sends it to the publisher and starts the next one. But I feel like most of them have room for an extra layer of subtext, if he were to set them aside for a few months and reflect on them and come back to them with fresh eyes.

    But that’s probably more on the genre expectations for speculative vs literary fiction than on Tchaikovsky as a writer.

    • janewaydidnothingwrong@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I agree with this. I am a big fan of his, and I read Alien Clay most recently. It was enjoyable but definitely felt like a concept that should have been fleshed out into a better* narrative. *-better being completely subjective

      With that said, I think he is one of the best in the business in basically all areas.