I need sci-fi (book or novella) comfort food. I’m tempted to do Culture but I juuuust re-did it last year. What else?
@luis_in_brief Scalzi. If you haven't read Scalzi "The Interdependency" trilogy, go for it. Or "Kaiju Preservation Society".
@hub though maybe I’ll go further back and hit Old Man’s War.
How many times can I recommended Murderbot? :)
But also if you have read those and enjoyed, her other books are also great.
@luis_in_brief Monk and Robot novellas? They are such comfort.
@corbet @adapalmer ooh, I am due for my third read of Terra Ignota.
@hub @luis_in_brief Starter Villain also good depending if to you "comfort" also has an absence of violence. Also of course Becky Chambers Monk/Robot books
@luis_in_brief I've picked up Three Body Problem, and Eastern Standard Tribe recently :)
@davidthewid I loved Three Body but it was a lot of mental work (and honestly I did not love the sequel). Haven’t read EST in… forever?
@luis_in_brief these are just the cool books I found in my local free library, only recently getting into sci-fi :) what're your favs?
@davidthewid oooooooo
I have a liiiiiist. It is on the Other Site; I will have to find it and port it somewhere more useful. Unless @josh has a copy handy somewhere (since it was his similar question that prompted me to blurt it out).
@josh @luis_in_brief @davidthewid Luis, you might like Jo Walton's Thessaly series if you haven't read it already. Not exactly comfort reading but very readable. (I guess that's its own question - what makes something comfort reading? Readable prose? Humor? Lovable characters? Hopepunk vibes?)
A lot of people recommend Becky Chambers as a sci fi comfort read.
@luis_in_brief If you haven’t read it already, Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir (The Martian).