here is the thing - i'm not that guy who read a bunch of sci-fi books when they were like 15, neither i'm the one who is being obsessed about them now. however after silly con valley made me read douglas adams, then andy weir, then i started hearing casual references to bodies of work that i not even familiar with in various niche tech optimist gatherings it made me curious whether am i truly missing out on something cool in my life. (of course, it also made me question wether i am even authentic enough to hang out in those cirles but i decided to slide that illiteracy to the highly progress-isolated enviroment i grew up in and that it is never late to catch up on some reading)
at that point i started chatting with claude about what i found interesting in those space tech lectures i saw, about douglas adams, andy weir, and previous things i read, asking him to get me onboardded to all the foundational sci-fe i missed and i got the result that i really enjoeyd that grouped those works in categories i find very reflective of how people name drop things in real life in diffreent social scenarios
hereby i present you:
tiers of sci-fi
tier 0: foundational
good to reference, but quoting them doesn't impress anyone
- Isaac Asimov – Foundation, Robot series
- Arthur C. Clarke – Rendezvous with Rama, 2001: A Space Odyssey
- Philip K. Dick – Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, Ubik
- Frank Herbert – Dune
- Ray Bradbury – Fahrenheit 451, The Martian Chronicles
tier 1: authentic flex
this is the Stephenson / Vinge / Egan zone — VCs eat this up
- Neal Stephenson – Snow Crash, Cryptonomicon, The Diamond Age
- Vernor Vinge – A Fire Upon the Deep, Rainbows End
- William Gibson – Neuromancer, Pattern Recognition
- Bruce Sterling – Schismatrix Plus, Islands in the Net
- Greg Egan – Permutation City, Diaspora
- Charles Stross – Accelerando, Glasshouse
- Iain M. Banks – The Culture series
- Peter Watts – Blindsight, Echopraxia
- Liu Cixin – Three-Body Problem trilogy
- Ramez Naam – Nexus trilogy
tier -1**0.5: transhumanist online
dropping these names gets nods from the very online transhumanist crowd
- Ted Chiang – Stories of Your Life, Exhalation
- Stanislaw Lem – Solaris, The Cyberiad
- Samuel R. Delany – Dhalgren, Nova
- Olaf Stapledon – Star Maker
- J.G. Ballard – Crash, High-Rise
- John Brunner – Stand on Zanzibar
tier 42: guilty pleasures
great reads, but referencing them feels normie / pop-sci
- Andy Weir – The Martian, Project Hail Mary
(thats right, i guess i'm a normies after all)- Douglas Adams – Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
- Orson Scott Card – Ender's Game
- Michael Crichton – Jurassic Park, Prey
surely, at that point i have gained anough dopamine hits from categorising shit and talking about work (reading) instead of of doing it so i lost all interest in reading it.
luckly - there is one thing that saves me - i'm deeply untrusting person towards AI and I cant let this slide without verifying that those vibe tiers are actually reflective of vibes i'll be truly getting from each of the books. after all - image how terrifiling it would be to name drop Vernor Vinge thinking you are slithering the epitomes of hard takeoff singularitarianism only to reaslise that you are scaraping the burned pot of utopian libertarian think-tank fiction
this and solely because of this fact i'm commited to read them all in pseudo chronological, techno-futurist evolutionary progression
i dontknow how long will it take, but rest asured below will be the diffs of tiers for each books after i'm done with it:
guilty pleasures, confirmed:
- Andy Weir – The Martian
- Andy Weir - Project Hail Mary (thats right, i guess i'm a normie after all)
- Douglas Adams – Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
- Douglas Adams – Restaurant at the End of the Universe
foundational tier, confirmed:
- Ray Bradbury – Fahrenheit 451