I feel like I wrote this post from time to time on Reddit and I think I’ll start this tradition here. I’m. a Honor Harrington fan. I’ve read several other space operas and they always fall short. The three that came close were Lt. Leary, Kris Longknife and Vorkosigan saga. Lt. Leary was nice, but it failed on World building. Kris Longknife also failed on world building and had astronomical levels of cringe with aliens and plot, but I enjoyed it. Vorkosigan saga had better world building and it was nice overall, but the books without Miles Vorkosigan weren’t enjoyable. There were other series that I enjoyed: Serrano Legacy, Vatta’s War (those are some of my favorites but they were too short), Starship’s mage (it declines with every new book), The Lost Fleet (it has a serious plot problem, the plot doesn’t move forward), Old Man’s War (it was really nice), Dread Empire Fall (also awesome), Teixcalaan (good, but short), Alarm of War (good, but short and pretty generic), Bobbiverse (I read until book 3, it isn’t for me), Red Rising 1st trilogy (really nice, but too Hunger Gamish, this whole dividing society into a cast system is getting old), Ark Royal. The Three Body Problem was awesome and, contrary to most series, didn’t leave me craving more after it was over. Edit: forgot to mention The Expanse, it was OK.

I think that what won me over on HH was the fact that she is a complete Mary Sue and other character don’t fall far from the tree, there is a nice world building, characters die, and there is a ton of action.

On the other hand, there are some long books that I enjoy that aren’t space operas. I really enjoy the Dresden Files (because he is cool and it is a long series), I absolutely love Jack Reacher (it is just a nice fun read, it’s like a nice Big Mac), I also enjoy The Spellmonger series, and I enjoyed the Riyria. I disliked Takeshi Kovacs (lack of sequence and plot) and I absolutely hate Southern Reach (VanderMeer), and there is another popular sci-fi book that is written as a report, which I also hated. I don’t like those very innovative mystery stories where you are trying to figure out wtf is going on or waiting for a plot to start until the middle of the book.

Got any suggestions? =)

(OMG, after writing this post, I see myself as an incredible hard reader to please)

  • A_Wild_Zeus_Chase@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Two obvious suggestions are Frank Herbert’s “Dune” series, and Issac Asimov’s “Foundation” series.

    Both are sci-fi classics (Dune is still the best selling sci-fi book of all time I believe) and are space operas of a massive scope.

    They are also some of my personal favorites.

    • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      I also immensely enjoyed Asimov’s “Robot” books. Three fun little whodunnit’s set in an interesting universe.

      • Bleeping Lobster@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        About four years ago, on a whim I decided to buy the entire Asimov scifi collection (inc short stories which I’m usually not keen on). Really surprised me how prescient and creative he was, considering how long ago it was written.

        He has a really ‘comfy’ writing style, only way I can explain it… trying to read some hard scifi afterwards was a bit of a slog. Like a reading version of wading through treacle.

        • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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          1 year ago

          And he’s funny, too!

          You always hear about how forward thinking and philosophical his stories were, never how human and alive his characters are, or how he regularly gets a smile out of the reader.

      • A_Wild_Zeus_Chase@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Those are also some of my favorites, the only reason I didn’t recommend is because I didn’t consider it to be quite the same genre, but agree they are excellent!

        They are also in the same universe, as foundation makes a few references to that series, which are also fun to catch.

  • Qualanqui@lemmy.nz
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    1 year ago

    No love for Iain M Banks? The Culture series looks like it will tick all your boxes and instead of following a single protagonist the Culture itself is the protagonist so each book has it’s own cast of interesting characters.

    • Mr_Tenno@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I really enjoyed the Culture setting but had to give up after Look to Windward because that was about 3 books in a row with unsatisfying endings.

    • gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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      +1 - Banks is probably my favorite sci fi author (as you might have guessed based on my username). The Culture series is excellent and highly entertaining.

  • Bleeping Lobster@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Dan Simmons - Hyperian KCantos. Four books in the series, well worth a read imo… I loved it

    Adrian Tchaikovsky - Children of Time / Children of Ruin / Children of Memory (not read the third but am sure it’ll be as good as the first two)

      • dave@feddit.uk
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        1 year ago

        I want to know if OP has read AT and what they think. I love all his books (just finishing Lords of Uncreation) and so could use OP’s list for things to go to next :)

      • Bleeping Lobster@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        No idea why my brain had me put a K instead of a C. I haven’t played Mortal Kombat in a while so can’t even blame it on that

  • Kayel@aussie.zone
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    1 year ago

    Alastair Reynolds - Revelation space i.e. Inhibitor sequence

    Peter F Hamilton - Void trilogy in the Commonwealth universe

    • givitashot@lemmynsfw.com
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      1 year ago

      I absolutely love Hamilton’s Commonwealth universe! Pandora’s Star then Judas Unchained, then the void trilogy followed up by The Abyss Beyond Dreams. I’ve read all of them 3 times and thinking of doing a 4th round soon!

      I’ve also seen House of Suns mentioned here a few times. It gets my vote for the exploration of deep time due to the speed limits of causality.

      • soben@orcas.enjoying.yachts
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        I don’t know what it is, but I struggle with both series that take place in the Commonwealth. Pandora’s Star took quite a bit for me to get into, hooked me right as the book ended, but I enjoyed Judas Unchained after that.

        I just finished Dreaming Void (Void #1), and it flowed the same as Pandora’s Star to me, but I’ve grown a little over that kind of lead-up and then just end the book. On top of that, the world shifted too much, and it’s hard for me to feel like I understand it in the slightest. I’ve been hesitant to continue it.

    • parared@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      fwiw, I really liked Pandora’s Star and Judas Unchained from the Commonwealth series for wonderful world building. not a space battle every chapter, but there is some really insightful warfare going on.

  • SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    Children Of Time Trilogy.

    Amazing books that explore topics like Consciousness and Intelligence from angles you wouldn’t expect

    • DoisBigoOP
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      1 year ago

      I’ve read it and it is awesome. Worth mentioning whenever someone wants a light read.

  • Car@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    John Scalzi’s Old Man’s War series was a long and pretty interesting read.

    Premise starts out as a “humanity vs the stars” kind of story, but instead of sending young people to their deaths, the futuristic human society instead recruits old people who have already lived full lives. You can enlist towards the end of your natural life to transfer your mind to a (photo)synthetic purpose-built humanoid super soldier body. If you survive a period of time (5 years?), you earn another shot at life and can elect to become a colonist for far away worlds. Most don’t get that far. Your usual “long-term relationship tensions,” “humans are always bad guys,” “what will technology think of next?” tropes apply.

    Another series I liked is the Castle Federation series by Glynn Stewart.

    This series spans a much shorter timeframe throughout its books but contains much more civil-war type political intrigue and seems to focus more on an important battle or two per book. As such, you get a more granular view of one starship officers experiences from the unit level up to the fleet. Tactics, deception, and an almost constant state of Pyrrhic victories help to make you feel like you aren’t simply following around a grand hero figure who is the unspoken savior of the galaxy. I don’t really remember how the series starts, but it’s mostly (or all) human-vs-human conflicts.

    Last series I enjoyed is the Frontlines storyline by Marko Kloos.

    In contrast to the stories above, it’s humans (mostly) good, aliens bad. A dystopian future is rocked by the sudden appearance of monolithic and seemingly invincible stegosaurus-like alien beings. They show up, terraform your world with CO2, and brush off humanity like we’re ants. You follow a few main characters who give you insight to how the big governments operate, how soldiers are thrown into unwinnable conflicts, and how freedom fighters back home protest against the majority of humanity’s production efforts going towards war while ignoring the problems at home. There’s a good mix of hopeless alien combat, human conflict and frustration towards the military industrial complex, Judge Dredd-like slums, and some anthropology thrown into the mix. Facing an existential threat, would you throw everything at offense and let your people starve?

  • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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    Have you read any of Alastair Reynolds’s books?

    House of Suns, while just a single book, felt like it had one of the biggest universes I’d ever read a story set in, and is my favorite sci-fi book, ever.

    For something bigger, look into his Revelation Space series. It’s a bunch of books, some connected, some not, all set in the same universe.

    • 8ender@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Seconding Revelation Space series. His books are great about being epic and mildly disconcerting at the same time.

      • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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        A fellow fan! Ima gush a bit.

        It seems we might get more books set in the universe, at some point. I really want to know what happened to the first machine race. If it was indeed birthed by the boy Abigail played with as a child, as is implied. His family specialized in robotics, and he got stuck in palacial, which later became the brain scanning tech to create the lines using Gentians cloning tech, as opposed to digitizing, like the machine cloud Campion and Purslaine meet, which was originally human.

        And I also want to know if Purslane is indeed Abigail, as her having palacial aboard her ship implies.

        Man. I’ve never read a book with so many dots to connect, as House of Suns. And two main characters who are already a couple, and that’s just how they are for the whole story? How unusual is that!?

  • elephantium@lemmy.world
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    If you like Star Wars (original trilogy, that is), I’d recommend Heir to the Empire by Timothy Zahn. I can also recommend his Conquerer’s trilogy and Cobra series.

    I liked The Lost Fleet, personally. The space battles are excellent, and they’re quick reads. Agreed about the plot, though, it takes a while. Worth it overall IMO.

    You might consider the Iron Druid series, too. It’s written in a lighter tone than the Dresden Files, but it’s got a similar vibe.

    You might check out Dead Witch Walking by Kim Harrison, too. It’s another urban fantasy with an interesting world premise. I struggle a little to recommend it – I lost interest fairly quickly, but if you don’t mind some romance in your urban fantasy, you might like it more than I did. And if you do like it, it’s a long series, over a dozen books!

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I really like Neal Asher’s books. Sprawling long series (what is the plural of series?) and so good.

    Was recommended the Children of Time books, am halfway through the first and WOW. I love it.

    • Cmot_Dibbler@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Children of time was amazing. What a unique, interesting concept. The following books were good too but for me didn’t live up to the first one. Which is okay, i still liked all of them.