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Who is the Grand Master of Science Fiction Writers (Original Post) Bluestocking May 4 OP
HG Wells DBoon May 4 #1
I have only read "The Time Machine" Bluestocking May 4 #2
War of the Worlds is amazing. thucythucy May 4 #11
Joe Haldeman Maninacan May 4 #3
Asimov is number one The Blue Flower May 4 #4
As an author overall, yes FBaggins May 4 #8
I came across a collection of jokes that he edited The Blue Flower May 11 #24
I like Clifford Simak. FalloutShelter May 4 #5
A Simak fan!! I see he was the third Grand Master by the SFWA electric_blue68 Thursday #25
Way Station would make a great movie. Jeebo Thursday #33
Robert Heinlein /nt bucolic_frolic May 4 #6
I put Heinlein at number 3 Bluestocking May 5 #19
Heavy ScFi - Charles Sheffield Lochloosa May 4 #7
I will have to add him to my list Bluestocking May 5 #20
Might as well add his wife to that list. Nancy Kress Lochloosa May 5 #22
Frank Herbert. The Madcap May 4 #9
I really liked the first three books Bluestocking May 5 #21
Clarke Aviation Pro May 4 #10
No Doubt Timewas May 4 #12
He's the Ultra for sure. byronius May 4 #13
I Have Timewas May 4 #14
Have you seen Variable Star? FBaggins May 5 #23
According to the SFWA, NewLarry May 4 #15
Phillip K. Dick Pluvious May 4 #16
I was hoping he'd get a mention EverHopeful Thursday #27
Sooo many film ideas came from his creative mind ! (Nt) Pluvious Thursday #32
No women? hunter May 4 #17
James Tiptree was the best female science fiction writer of all, IMHO. Easterncedar May 5 #18
For adapting to technology I would say Inkey Thursday #26
I've read all the greats and it's no contest 303squadron Thursday #28
Martha Wells Laurelin Thursday #29
Kim Stanley Robinson mtairyguy Thursday #30
I struggled to get through Red Mars Bluestocking Thursday #31
I want to tell y'all something about Asimov. Jeebo Thursday #34
I know this sounds cliche Bluestocking Thursday #35

thucythucy

(9,154 posts)
11. War of the Worlds is amazing.
Mon May 4, 2026, 09:29 PM
May 4

The first time I read it I was in junior high, and the first paragraph can still send chills down my spine:

No one would have believed in the last years of the nineteenth century that this world was being watched keenly and closely by intelligences greater than man's and yet as mortal as his own; that as men busied themselves about their various concerns they were scrutinised and studied, perhaps almost as narrowly as a man with a microscope might scrutinise the transient creatures that swarm and multiply in a drop of water. With infinite complacency men went to and fro over this globe about their little affairs, serene in their assurance of their empire over matter. It is possible that the infusoria under the microscope do the same. No one gave a thought to the older worlds of space as sources of human danger, or thought of them only to dismiss the idea of life upon them as impossible or improbable. It is curious to recall some of the mental habits of those departed days. At most terrestrial men fancied there might be other men upon Mars, perhaps inferior to themselves and ready to welcome a missionary enterprise. Yet across the gulf of space, minds that are to our minds as ours are to those of the beasts that perish, intellects vast and cool and unsympathetic, regarded this earth with envious eyes, and slowly and surely drew their plans against us. And early in the twentieth century came the great disillusionment.

Maninacan

(349 posts)
3. Joe Haldeman
Mon May 4, 2026, 08:48 PM
May 4

We all know the big names but this guy really wrote a story that foresaw machines making decisions.

The Blue Flower

(6,613 posts)
4. Asimov is number one
Mon May 4, 2026, 08:48 PM
May 4

His ideas fueled books, movies, and tv shows for years. He was the source of so much we expect and enjoy.

The Blue Flower

(6,613 posts)
24. I came across a collection of jokes that he edited
Mon May 11, 2026, 03:01 PM
May 11

It was at a library, many years ago. I was disappointed at how sophomoric, literally, they were. At a teenage boy's level. On the other hand, I read a nonfiction book of his, explaining how climate systems work around the globe, that was excellent. Clear and succint.

electric_blue68

(27,383 posts)
25. A Simak fan!! I see he was the third Grand Master by the SFWA
Thu May 21, 2026, 02:08 AM
Thursday

I don't hear him mentioned much but I particularly love his early - middle stuff. Might have to check out the later books again.
In very late '50s, early '60s I was watching The Giant Behemoth, Forbidden Planet. Then prwtty sure before I read "A Wrinkle in Time" I saw paperback of "Time Is The Simplest Thing", by him on my dad's side of my folks bureau. I asked if I could read it.
I didn't understand it all but I was fascinated!

My favorites are: Way Station, All Flesh Is Grass, and Ring Around The Sun.

Just looked at a list w descriptions. Might have to leisurely look for some these later ones 70s & '80s. I know I radio a few but didn't "get" them, then.

Jeebo

(2,562 posts)
33. Way Station would make a great movie.
Thu May 21, 2026, 03:00 PM
Thursday

Hollywood screenwriters, are y'all listening?

— Ron

Lochloosa

(16,809 posts)
7. Heavy ScFi - Charles Sheffield
Mon May 4, 2026, 08:59 PM
May 4

Charles Sheffield (25 June 1935 – 2 November 2002),[1] was an English-born mathematician, physicist, and science-fiction writer who served as a President of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America and of the American Astronautical Society.[2]

His novel The Web Between the Worlds, featuring the construction of a space elevator, was published almost simultaneously with Arthur C. Clarke's novel on the subject, The Fountains of Paradise - a coincidence that amused them both.[3] Excerpts from both Sheffield's The Web Between the Worlds and Clarke's The Fountains of Paradise have appeared recently in a space-elevator anthology, Towering Yarns.[4]

Sheffield served as Chief Scientist of Earth Satellite Corporation, a company that processed remote-sensing satellite data.[5] The association gave rise to many technical papers and two popular non-fiction books, Earthwatch (1981) and Man on Earth (1983), both collections of false-colour and enhanced images of Earth from space.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Sheffield

Bluestocking

(814 posts)
21. I really liked the first three books
Tue May 5, 2026, 08:24 AM
May 5

But then the rest were not as good. I tried one of his son’s Dune books and was not impressed. The thing about Herbert was he was a one hit wonder. There was Dune and that was it.

Timewas

(2,786 posts)
14. I Have
Mon May 4, 2026, 10:08 PM
May 4

I have read every book he wrote way back to Podkayne of Mars and Have space suit will travel.. Although I do place Asimov a very close second

FBaggins

(28,772 posts)
23. Have you seen Variable Star?
Tue May 5, 2026, 08:31 PM
May 5

It's an interesting hybrid of a story concept and beginning that is clearly Heinlein - but finished by Spider Robinson.

EverHopeful

(708 posts)
27. I was hoping he'd get a mention
Thu May 21, 2026, 03:55 AM
Thursday

Perhaps not the top but, for me, he was no. 1 for quite a while.

hunter

(40,884 posts)
17. No women?
Mon May 4, 2026, 11:54 PM
May 4

Might as well start with one who lit the fire:

Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley

Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818)


I've read most of Asimov, certainly all his major works, fiction and non-fiction, but he's always seemed a bit cold to me. Clarke? I'm distressed by him.

Ursula K. Le Guin I love like family.

Bumped into Heinlein once, literally, during his final descent into icky weirdness.

Harlan Ellison was always icky, but brilliant. My wife and I had separately disturbing encounters with him before we met and married. Years later my wife and I were walking in Santa Monica and we saw him coming our way. When he saw us he crossed the street. I thought it was me, My wife thought it was her. Only when my wife commented on it did we discover we had another something in common. Sigh. Ellison's last days were sad.

Philip K. Dick is one of my favorites. Maybe because we are both nuts.

Octavia E. Butler ... of course.

Most of the science fiction I read these days is written by women. It's a great tragedy that science fiction was such a boy's club, in the worst way, for most of the twentieth century.

Inkey

(551 posts)
26. For adapting to technology I would say
Thu May 21, 2026, 02:46 AM
Thursday

Gene Roddenberry --- Star Trek really brought in the general public by TV.

303squadron

(853 posts)
28. I've read all the greats and it's no contest
Thu May 21, 2026, 04:01 AM
Thursday

Heinlein for the win.

No book, science fiction or mainstream literature, changed my way of looking at the world than Stranger in a Strange Land.

Bluestocking

(814 posts)
31. I struggled to get through Red Mars
Thu May 21, 2026, 07:47 AM
Thursday

It was really boring. That was the only one of his books I read.

Jeebo

(2,562 posts)
34. I want to tell y'all something about Asimov.
Thu May 21, 2026, 03:16 PM
Thursday

I have heard writers comment about what writing takes out of them. I met Larry Niven at a big science fiction convention in the late 1980s, for example, and he said "I sweat blood" when writing. My father was a poet and he often observed that writing is "one percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration". They all say things like that about writing, that it's hard work.

Except Asimov. He said that writing was "easy" (his word) for him.

I have read all of Asimov's Foundation novels. In the early 1980s he started writing them again, and every time he came out with a new one, I had to re-read the earlier ones to refresh my memory before reading the new one. As a consequence, I have read the original trilogy at least a dozen times, and I never get tired of them. They're space opera, but they're GREAT space opera, FUN space opera. (Recently there was a Foundation TV series, but they took so many liberties with it that they RUINED it. It was almost unrecognizable compared with the original, which is great literature, in my humble opinion.)

I vote for Asimov.

— Ron

Bluestocking

(814 posts)
35. I know this sounds cliche
Thu May 21, 2026, 05:35 PM
Thursday

But I always find the book better than the movie/tv series

The only exception is The Godfather. Book was great but the movie was spectacular.

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