Geek Grotto: Geek Your Home Library

In an earlier edition of the Geek Grotto, I shared some fun Star Wars decor and appliances for your home. This week, we're looking at the home library. Okay, okay, most of us don't have real dedicated libraries, but if you're a reader, you've probably got a spot full of books and hopefully a comfy chair. I went digging and found some fun things that might inspire you to revamp your reading nook. Geek style.

Star Trek bookshelf

First off, appropriate book shelves are a must for a geeky book worm. This Instructables article will teach you how to build an Enterprise shelf. Hey, as long as you're stuck at home, why not take up woodworking?

Tetris Book cases

If you prefer to purchase bookshelves, you can find a number of Etsy sellers willing to bring some old-school games to life. Nothing fits together quite like Tetris blocks.

Knob Creek Metal Arts

 



Once you've got your bookshelves sorted, you're going to need some appropriately geeky book ends to prevent any spillage. I confess that I'm an owner of the alien abduction book ends from this seller (Knob Creek Metal Arts). I picked them up for a gift a couple of years ago and somehow forgot to give them away. I had to get something else for that particular person.

The Hobbit Book Nook shelf

Book nooks, or little artistic inserts that go between your books on your shelves, are an up-and-coming trend right now. There are a whole bunch of them you can check out (including one inspired by Blade Runner) in this Bored Panda post. The one above was inspired by The Hobbit.

Captain Kirk chair

And what about a comfy reading chair for the library? I'm sad to inform you that this $5,000 Captain Kirk chair is no longer in production, but perhaps someone can let us know if there's a how-to out there for the handyman Original Trek fan.

Wampa bean bag chair

In the meantime, perhaps this far more affordable (and available) Star Wars Wampa bean bag chair would do. Who doesn't love a bean bag for chilling around the house?

Books coffee table

Once you've got your book shelves and chair sorted out, you'll need a table. This one isn't for sale and appears rather homemade, but maybe if you need another DIY project? A proper books coffee table should be sufficient for holding your drinks and e-reader.

Dice display

And finally… these shelves aren't for books, but for all you gamers in the house, here's a way to display all the cool dice you've picked up over the years. I found this piece at the Fun Board Games Etsy shop.

Do you have any geeky things in your book nook?


Lindsay has early memories of convincing childhood friends, pets, and stuffed animals to play the roles of characters in her worlds, so it’s safe to say she’s been making up stories for a long time. 

When she’s not writing, she’s usually hiking with her dogs, practicing yoga, playing tennis, or eating entirely too much dark chocolate (she only does one of those things truly well, and she will let you guess which it is). She grew up in the Seattle area and still visits the Pacific Northwest frequently, but after realizing she was solar powered, she moved to Arizona and now lives in the mountains north of Phoenix.

She's written several sci-fi series: Fallen EmpireSky Full of Stars & Star Kingdom.

You can follow Lindsay on FacebookTwitter and her website.

The Top 10 Best Friendships in Science Fiction

“Lots of people want to ride with you in the limo, but what you want is someone who will take the bus with you when the limo breaks down." —Oprah Winfrey. 

Leave it to Oprah to accurately and succinctly get at the heart of what makes a true friend. The friendships you submitted as examples of the very best in science fiction ran the gamut, but what is true for all of them is this: no matter circumstance or the risk—be it to their person or to their pride—they show up for one another. Still, only one can take top spot. Curious to find out who? Read on to find out! 

As always, these top ten lists are not meant to be all-inclusive or definitive, but give a great finger on the pulse of our communities interests and favorites. Want to see who missed out? Here's the original nomination list from the blog.

Without further ado, based on the combined nominations and votes here on the Discover Sci-Fi blog and the Facebook group, here are your top choices for the best friendships found in the pages of science fiction.


10. Alex and Julien from The Silver Ships

When asked in a reddit AMA about the inspiration for Julien, the SADE of his Silver Ships series, author S.H. Jucha had this to say, "Julien is the 'stalwart man' even though he's a SADE (self-aware digital entity). He's the kind of friend each and everyone of us wishes they had ... always with us and dependable through thick and thin, but his trust has to be earned." Knowing that Julien was written to be, above all else, a loyal and reliable friends, it is no surprise that this pair made the top 10; yet, the fact that they only just made it suggests that just maybe there are a fair number of you in our community who are unacquainted with the series. If you are one of those folks, be sure to put The Silver Ships on your TBR list!

An explorer-tug captain, Alex Racine detects a damaged alien craft drifting into the system. Recognizing a once in a lifetime opportunity to make first contact, Alex pulls off a daring maneuver to latch on to the derelict.

Alex discovers the ship was attacked by an unknown craft, the first of its kind ever encountered. The mysterious silver ship's attack was both instant and deadly.

What enfolds is a story of the descendants of two Earth colony ships, with very different histories, meeting 700 years after their founding and uniting to defend humanity from the silver ships.

Start The Silver Ships
here on Amazon


9. Kim and Casmir from the Star Kingdom Series

Fans of Lindsay Buroker know she often puts some romance in her series, but she told us that when she started plotting out the first Star Kingdom book Casmir and Kim came to mind, that she knew right away that they would be roommates and best friends, and that things would stay that way. 

We readers aren't treated to a lot of male-female buddy relationships in fiction, and so to come across one like the Kim and Casmir's makes for a refreshing change! Their world (universe) goes crazy and their lives change forever, but they can always lean on each other. They don’t always agree with each other’s choices, but they’ve got each other’s backs, and we think everyone can agree that we all need friends like that.

What if being a hero was encoded in your genes?

And nobody told you?

Casmir Dabrowski would laugh if someone asked him that. After all, he had to build a robot to protect himself from bullies when he was in school.

Fortunately, life is a little better these days. He's an accomplished robotics engineer, a respected professor, and he almost never gets picked on in the lunchroom. But he's positive heroics are for other people.

Until robot assassins stride onto campus and try to kill him.

Read Shockwave, Book One in the Star Kingdom Series here on Amazon.


8. Alex, Amos, Jim and Naomi from The Expanse

While most of the friendships nominated were between two, we were not surprised to see a few ensemble selections, and we were especially unsurprised to see the crew of the Rocinate on the list. This team has been through it all, and it’s only served to deepen their bonds.

The first book in the revolutionary New York Times bestselling Expanse series by James S.A. Corey, is a modern masterwork of science fiction. Leviathan Wakes introduces Captain James Holden, his crew, and Detective Miller as they unravel a horrifying solar system wide conspiracy that begins with a single missing girl. Now a Prime Original series.

Get your copy of Leviathan Wakes here on Amazon.


7. The crew of The Phoenix from Omega Force

Courageous, loyal, stalwart, and implacable. These are terms that describe the men and women that have served in elite fighting units since the beginning of warfare. They are not, however, terms that apply to Omega Force.  

The Omega boys are a collection of borderline sociopaths that, while trying to mostly do the right thing, would just has happily knife each other as they would the enemy. This has actually happened twice over suspected cheating at cards. The mercenary crew operates under a loose mandate to help those that can't help themselves… and if they can turn a quick buck by killing some scumbag that had it coming? All the better. They are a team forged in the fire of common purpose, individuals so completely different from each other they would have never been friends otherwise. But after fighting and bleeding together for years, they've formed an unbreakable bond. If you come at one of them, just know that they would all die protecting each other.

Jason Burke was a man hiding from himself in a small cabin high in the American Rocky Mountains when his simple, quiet life was shattered one night by what he first assumed was an aviation mishap. But when he investigates the crash, what he finds will yank him out of his self-imposed exile and thrust him into a world he could have never imagined.

Start the adventure with Omega Rising here on Amazon.


6. Elijah Baley and Daneel from the Robot Series

What began as an unlikely friendship, became one for the literal ages when thousands of years after Baley’s death Daneel is asked about the now mythic figure of Baley (whose existence is now questioned), and he states that Baley was greater than any myth claimed him to be.

Daneel is introduced in Issac Asimov's book The Caves of Steel, where he is tasked to assist Elijah Baley in the investigation of the murder of his creator, Roj Nemennuh Sarton. Initially, Baley is suspicious of Daneel and constructs two separate theories in which the Robot is responsible for the murder. After both theories are disproven, Baley begins to feel a friendship with Daneel. At the same time, watching Baley gives Daneel a more nuanced view of justice, coming to understand that it is better to convert evil to good than to simply destroy evil.

Baley's and Daneel's friendship grows with each novel, ultimately leading to Daneel being the first of only two robots to ever set foot on a Settler world when Elijah Baley specifically asks to see him on his deathbed.

A millennium into the future two advancements have altered the course of human history: the colonization of the galaxy and the creation of the positronic brain. Isaac Asimov’s Robot novels chronicle the unlikely partnership between a New York City detective and a humanoid robot who must learn to work together.

Grab the first book in Issac Asimov's Robot Series, The Caves of Steel, here on Amazon.


Like what you're reading?

If you're enjoying this top 10 list, why not join the DSF community for more awesome content? You'll get to be notified whenever a new top 10 list, or any other articles of interest goes up on our site. It's free to sign up and you'

ll also get recommendations for new releases and discounted ebooks from our expert editorial team, from bestsellers to hidden gems.


5. Arthur Dent and Ford Prefect from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

Publisher’s Weekly described Douglas Adams'
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy as “a whimsical odyssey” and we couldn’t agree more! At the center of it, are friends Arthur Dent and Ford Prefect, an unlikely pair perhaps, but one which readers through the years have become incredibly fond of.

Where are these pens? Why are we born? Why do we die? For all the answers, stick your thumb to the stars!

Seconds before Earth is demolished to make way for a galactic freeway, Arthur Dent is plucked off the planet by his friend Ford Prefect, a researcher for the revised edition of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy who, for the last fifteen years, has been posing as an out-of-work actor.

Together, this dynamic pair began a journey through space aided by a galaxy full of fellow travelers: Zaphod Beeblebrox—the two-headed, three-armed ex-hippie and totally out-to-lunch president of the galaxy; Trillian (formerly Tricia McMillan), Zaphod’s girlfriend, whom Arthur tried to pick up at a cocktail party once upon a time zone; Marvin, a paranoid, brilliant, and chronically depressed robot; and Veet Voojagig, a former graduate student obsessed with the disappearance of all the ballpoint pens he’s bought over the years.

Get your copy of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
here on Amazon.


4. Honor Harrington and Nimitz from the Honorverse

The bond of a treecat to a human might be one of the most intense described in science fiction, and one that is, in most cases, only broken through death. Nimitz and Honor Harrington shared just such a bond, forged when she was 12 T-years old, and maintained through her distinguished life and career; through her most trying and triumphant times, Nimitz was by her side.

You see Nimitz perched on Honor’s shoulder on the cover of the first book of David Weber's bestselling Honor Harrington series, On Basilisk Station, and upon cracking the cover, you are immediately introduced to him in a scene that gives you a sense of exactly how important these characters are to each other and how instrumental the friendship is to the story.

The book finds Honor Harrington exiled to Basilisk Station in disgrace and set up for ruin by a superior who hates her. Her demoralized crew blames her for their ship's humiliating posting to an out-of-the-way picket station. The aborigines of the system's only habitable planet are smoking homicide-inducing hallucinogens. Parliament isn't sure it wants to keep the place; the major local industry is smuggling, the merchant cartels want her head; the star-conquering, so-called "Republic" of Haven is Up to Something; and Honor Harrington has a single, over-age light cruiser with an armament that doesn't work to police the entire star system.

But the people out to get her have made one mistake.

They've made her mad!

Get your copy of On Basilisk Station
here on Amazon.


3. Han and Chewbacca from Star Wars

These two go together like peanut butter and jelly. Seriously. Can you even think of one without thinking of the other? And when it comes to a willingness to put everything on the line for the other without question, is there really any competition? Apparently so! While the fan favorite twosome landed in the top three they fell a whopping 100 votes short of 1st place. Still a pair worth celebrating and definitely one worth reading about!

With so many Star Wars books out there, it can be hard to know where to start, but if you really want to get an idea of Han and Chewbacca and what makes their relationship one worth aspiring to, we suggest you start with The Han Solo Adventures by Brian Daley.

Han Solo trusts no one, and does no favors. But when the best illegal ship rebuilder in the galaxy disappears, Han and Chewbacca agree to go after him—after all, the Millennium Falcon needs some very special repairs. Their search pits them against powerful and ruthless enemies out to destroy them, and finally leads them to an airless speck of desolate asteroid—the Authority prison planet known as Stars’ End.

Get your copy of The Han Solo Adventures 
here on Amazon.


2. Joe and Skippy from Expeditionary Force

The comments section of our poll was alive with Ex-force fans in favor of a more unconventional paring here, but as one fan wisely pointed out, the relationship between Joe and his <ahem> shower, well, “that’s not friendship, that’s love.” Hat tip to the conversation though, because the joke itself originated with Skippy the Magnificent, infamous AI with a biting sense humor—the kind best reserved for enemies, or for the very best of friends. If you like your military sci-fi action packed and your friendship with a side of hard-hitting humor,  Craig Alanson's WILDLY popular Expeditionary Force is definitely the series for you!

The Ruhar hit us on Columbus Day. There we were, innocently drifting along the cosmos on our little blue marble, like the native Americans in 1492. Over the horizon come ships of a technologically advanced, aggressive culture, and BAM! There go the good old days, when humans only got killed by each other. So, Columbus Day. It fits.

Start the series with book 1, Columbus Day, here on Amazon.


1. Kirk and Spock from Star Trek

Is it fair to say that what most people understand about the relationship between Captain Kirk and the Vulcan, Lieutenant Commander Spock, comes from the T.V series or from the Star Trek movies? While the iconic friendship was canonized on screen and only later made into a book series, we felt the friendship was well worth inclusion on this list, fully supporting the nomination and not too surprised to see it shoot to the top of the list, landing in first place! 

The first books were novelizations of the episodes; later, original novels were published, the first of which was Spock Must Die! written by James Blish in 1970. Whether you are feeling nostalgic for an old favorite or <gasp> haven't read it yet, now is as good a time as any to take a read! 

When a freak transporter malfunction during a Klingon attack creates an an imposter Spock, Captain Kirk must discover how to save his friend from the machinations of his exact replica

Read Spock Must Die! 
here on Amazon.


The best friends are yet to come?

One thing that jumped out at us about the selections on this list is how representative they are of science fiction, past and present. Starting with The Caves of Steel, published back in the 50s, there is a friendship from almost every decade represented. What does that mean for the future? Among other things, it means that years from now, as new books come out, this list could look very different. We are almost certain that some of these favorites will remain, but who knows? Maybe the best is yet to come. For now, visit us  here in our Facebook group to chime in on the debate, and then check out our most recent poll while you're there. Don't have Facebook? Feel free to add to the comments below.

*All book-related copy in this post was pulled from Amazon, Goodreads & Wikipedia, unless otherwise credited.

The Top 10 Most Terrifying Alien Invaders in Science Fiction

"They either come here to find some resource they don't have on their own planet, or they want to use us for some unauthorized breeding experiment." —Seth Shostak 

Here, the esteemed astronomer Seth Shostak was speaking about how alien invasions are portrayed in movies (and by extension, in books), and he was quick to suggest that in reality, a scenario where they would come to devastate our planet and kill or enslave us is far less likely. Still, peaceful encounters seldom make for good stories, do they? Give us something to fear, we're hooked. Give us a threat from beyond our solar system (and our wildest imaginations?), even better. Last week we asked you to vote on the top 10 most terrifying alien invaders in science fiction, and the results are in! Read on to find out what species came out on top.

As always, these top ten lists are not meant to be all-inclusive or definitive, but give a finger on the pulse of our communities interests and favorites. Want to see who missed out? Here's the original nomination list from the blog.

Without further ado, based on the combined nominations and votes here on the Discover Sci-Fi blog and the Facebook group, here are your top choices for the most terrifying alien invaders of science fiction.


9. The Fithp from Footfall by Jerry Pournelle and Larry Niven

Yes folks, this week our top ten is beginning with ninth as we have a tie! First up, ninth place, we have the alien Fithp from Footfall by Jerry Pournelle and Larry Niven.

The Fithp resemble baby elephants with multiple prehensile trunks. Sounds kinda cute, right? And as one Discover Sci-Fi Facebook member pointed out, “The Fithp couldn't even take over a single planet while owning the high orbitals. So probably not that worthy of terror.” It might cause one to wonder how they made our list at all. Is it that we are inherently fearful of species with a greater command of technology than we have (ie: anything that could find us before we could find them)? Or, maybe that they rebuked the human’s attempt at peaceful contact, something we mightn’t have expected from a species resembling the peaceful elephant? Perhaps it speaks more to the fact of how deeply the book has worked its way into our hearts than of any legitimate fear the Fithp might stir up. Food for thought!

Regardless of the whether the Fithp are truly terror inducing or not, Footfallthe book in which they appear—and one which is considered by many readers to be the best alien invasion novel to date—is certainly a classic worth reading.

An alien craft is approaching Earth. Attempts to communicate go unanswered. The welcoming committee of Americans and Russians at a space station is blasted, its occupants killed or captured. Soon the entire Earth, with special emphasis on the United States, is bombarded by asteroids, destroying dams, highways, and infrastructure. The message to humans: total surrender or death to all. A giant rock, the “footfall”, is launched towards Earth, causing even more damage. The aliens land, determined to conquer or utterly eliminate the human race. Understanding a truly “alien” culture and learning how to confront such an overwhelming power make Footfall stand out as an exciting and truly original novel.

Experience the science fiction classic, Footfall  here on Amazon.


9. The Buggers from Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game

Next, in our tie for ninth place, we have The Formics, commonly known as Buggers. The Buggers are a fictional ant-like alien species from the Ender's Game series by Orson Scott Card. The Formic species consists of hive-minded colonies directed by queens. In Ender's Game, Graff described them as being an insect that "could have evolved on earth, if things had gone a different way a billion years ago," and that their evolutionary ancestors could have looked similar to Earth's ants. 

Anyone who knows anything about ants knows that while they may be essential to our ecosystem, they can do one hell of a lot of damage even in their present day, earthly forms.  Just imagine, for a moment, the kind of damage a much larger, advanced species of them equipped with spaceships and firepower might be able to do! Terrifying, for sure!

The Formics attacked Earth 50 years before the novel begins, attempted to colonise the planet and were barely fought off by a New Zealand soldier known as Mazer Rackham. The first book in the series, Ender's Game, largely stems from the human quest to defend themselves from this species.

Is Ender the general Earth needs? The war with the Buggers has been raging for a hundred years, and the quest for the perfect general has been underway for almost as long. Ender's two older siblings are every bit as unusual as he is, but in very different ways. Between the three of them lie the abilities to remake a world. If the world survives, that is.

Read Ender's Game, the first book in the Ender Quintet here on Amazon.


8. The Scum from Daniel Arenson's Earthrise

Pictured: A proud HDF private holding a baby scum. (Source: Human Defense Force archives, photo #B1539, July 2144.)

In eight place on our list are The Scum, the genuinely terrifying alien antagonists from Daniel Arenson's bestselling Earthrise Series. If you've yet to become acquainted, get ready!  

The giant centipedes came from deep space. They came to destroy us. The scientists call them the Scolopendra Titania. Talk about a mouthful! Everyone else just calls them the scum.

They're nasty bugs. As long as alligators. Lined with claws. Fiercely smart too. And did we mention bloodthirsty?

Thankfully, our boys and girls in the Human Defense Force protect us. The scum thought they could kill us all. We'll give 'em hell!

Fifty years ago, bloodthirsty aliens devastated the Earth. Most of humanity perished. We fell into darkness.

But now we rise from the ashes. Now we fight back.

Marco Emery was born into the war. After his mother is killed, he joins the Human Defense Force, Earth's ragtag army. Emery must survive basic training, become a soldier, and finally face the aliens in battle.

Against the alien onslaught, Earth stands alone. But we will fight. We will rise. We will win.

Join Marco Emery in the battle for earth in Earthrise Book 1, Earth Alone here on Amazon.


7. The Daleks from Doctor Who

"Exterminate! Exterminate!"

In seventh place on our list is The Daleks. The Daleks, are a fictional extraterrestrial race of mutants principally portrayed in the British science fiction television programme Doctor Who, and later immortalized in books.

They don't look nearly as menacing as some of the alien species on our list, but it is hard not to be terrified of something so completely emotionless.  Not to mention, they came around at a time when we, as a society were generally pretty scared of robots, our collective early imaginings of which the Daleks could be said to closely resemble.

If you aren't familiar with the series, or if you are, but haven't read the books, you might not know where to start reading about these heartless and terrible creatures, hellbent on destroying us. We'd suggest Doctor Who: War of the Daleks by John Peel as the place to dive in! 

The Doctor is repairing the TARDIS systems once again when it is swept up by a garbage ship roving through space, the Quetzel.

When another ship approaches and takes the Quetzel by force, the Doctor discovers that he and Sam are not the only unwitting travellers on board - there is a strangely familiar survival pod in the hold. Delani, the captain of the second ship, orders the pod to be opened. The Doctor is powerless to intervene as Davros is awakened once again.

But this is no out-and-out rescue of Davros. Delani and his crew are Thals, the sworn enemies of the Daleks. They intend to use Davros as a means to wipe out the Daleks, finally ridding the universe of the most aggressive, deadly race ever to exist. But the Doctor is still worried. For there is a signal beacon inside the pod, and even now a Dalek ship is closing in...

Start the adventure with Doctor Who: War of the Daleks here on Amazon.


6. The Overlords from Arthur C. Clarke's Childhood's End

They come in peace... don't they?

Childhood's End by Arthur C. Clarke follows the peaceful alien invasion of Earth by the mysterious Overlords, whose arrival begins decades of apparent utopia under indirect alien rule, at the cost of human identity and culture. 

Clarke's idea for the book began with his short story "Guardian Angel" which he expanded into a novel in 1952. Childhood's End sold out its first printing, received good reviews and became Clarke's first successful novel. The book is often regarded by both readers and critics as Clarke's best novel and is described as "a classic of alien literature."

In the near future, enormous silver spaceships appear without warning over mankind’s largest cities. They belong to the Overlords, an alien race far superior to humanity in technological development. Their purpose is to dominate Earth. Their demands, however, are surprisingly benevolent: end war, poverty, and cruelty. Their presence, rather than signalling the end of humanity, ushers in a golden age . . . or so it seems.

Without conflict, human culture and progress stagnate. As the years pass, it becomes clear that the Overlords have a hidden agenda for the evolution of the human race that may not be as benevolent as it seems.

Grab your copy of the classic Childhood's End, here on Amazon.


Like what you're reading?

If you're enjoying this top 10 list, why not join the DSF community for more awesome content? You'll get to be notified whenever a new top 10 list, or any other articles of interest goes up on our site. It's free to sign up and you'

ll also get recommendations for new releases and discounted ebooks from our expert editorial team, from bestsellers to hidden gems.


5. The Posleen from John Ringo’s The Legacy of the Aldenata

We have reached the top 5!  In fifth place is the Posleen from The Legacy of the Aldenata, also known as the Posleen War Series, the fictional universe of one of John Ringo's military science fiction series.  

The Posleen are a race of genetically-engineered reptilian centaurs with crocodile-like heads. They were supposedly designed by the long lost race—the Aldenata—to be the ultimate warriors. The Posleen invasion is shaped by their (over)engineered physiology - Posleen are omnivores and capable of sustaining themselves by eating a wide variety of organisms (including humans). They must eat almost constantly or starve. Inevitably, they exhaust the resources of every environment they inhabit, resulting in a phenomenon they call orna'adar - planetwide conflicts that always end in nuclear holocaust, with the survivors fleeing in starships to repeat the process on new worlds, leaving lifeless radioactive desert planets in their wake.

The first book in the series is the epic, A Hymn Before Battle. With Earth in the path of the rapacious Posleen, the Galactic Federation offers help to the backward humans -- for a price. You can protect yourself from your enemies, but God save you from your allies!

Find the first book in the series, A Hymn Before Battle
here on Amazon.


4. The Thing from Who Goes There? by John W. Campbell Jr.

In a respectable fourth spot on our list of terrifying aliens is The Thing from “Who Goes There?” by John W. Campbell.  “The Thing” from Campbell’s novella made such an impression on filmmakers that it was brought to the screen in the 1951 film “The Thing From Another World” and then again in 1982 with John Carpenter’s cult classic “The Thing”, which is likely where most of us became acquainted with this particular alien.  This year we will be treated to yet another movie remake. Something to look forward to!

"Who Goes There?" is the John W. Campbell classic about an antarctic research camp that discovers and thaws the ancient, frozen body of a crash-landed alien. The creature revives with terrifying results, shape-shifting to assume the exact form of animal and man, alike. Paranoia ensues as a band of frightened men work to discern friend from foe, and destroy the menace before it challenges all of humanity! The story is hailed as "one of the finest science fiction novellas ever written" by the SF Writers of America! 

Revisit the classic, Who Goes There?
here on Amazon.


3. The Slugs from Robert A. Heinlein's The Puppet Masters

Want to be completely terrified? Just imagine gigantic slugs that can control your mind. That should do it and that is exactly what science fiction master Robert A. Heinlein imagined with “The Slugs” from his science fiction classic, The Puppet Masters.

First came the news that a flying saucer had landed in Iowa. Then came the announcement that the whole thing was a hoax. End of story. Case closed.

Except that two agents of the most secret intelligence agency in the U.S. government were on the scene and disappeared without reporting in. And four more agents who were sent in also disappeared. So the head of the agency and his two top agents went in and managed to get out with their discovery: an invasion is underway by slug-like aliens who can touch a human and completely control his or her mind. What the humans know, they know. What the slugs want, no matter what, the human will do. And most of Iowa is already under their control.

Pick up your copy of The Puppet Masters 
here on Amazon.


2. The Weeping Angels from Doctor Who

How long can YOU go without blinking?

The Weeping Angels are a race of predatory creatures, resembling stone statues. In their usual form, Weeping Angels resemble silent human-sized stone statues in the form of winged angels. Generally, their facial features are bland and serene and their proportions human-normal. However, as they close in on more aware victims they transform to a more horrific, bestial, and demonic aspect with wide-open mouths, vampiric teeth, and clawed hand.

According to the Doctor, the Weeping Angels "are as old as the universe (or very nearly), but no one quite knows where they come from." He also describes them as "the deadliest, most powerful, most malevolent life-form evolution has ever produced." Weeping Angels are unusual as predators in that they neither kill nor directly parasitize their prey. Their usual mode of feeding is to make use of time paradoxes – with a single touch, a Weeping Angel can send a person into the past to a point before his/her own birth, and can then feed off the "potential energy" of the years which that victim would have lived in the present.

Are you a fan of the TV series who isn't sure where to start with the books, or new to the Doctor Who universe all together? If that is you and you'd like to become acquainted with these terrible creatures (from the safety of your favorite reading chair) look no further than Jonathan Morris's Touched by an Angel.

In 2003, Rebecca Whitaker died in a road accident. Her husband Mark is still grieving. He receives a battered envelope, posted eight years ago, containing a set of instructions with a simple message: "You can save her."

As Mark is given the chance to save Rebecca, it’s up to the Doctor, Amy and Rory to save the whole world. Because this time the Weeping Angels are using Mark himself as a weapon to change history. Will the doctor stop Mark or will the angels feast?

Get Doctor Who: Touched by an Angel
here on Amazon.


1. The Borg from Star Trek

For the second poll in a row, the Star Trek franchise sweeps the voting to take the top spot! Overwhelmingly, you voted for The Borg as the most terrifying alien invaders.

What does it mean to be human? Is it our relative autonomy? Free will? What would it mean to have that stripped of you, your body co-opted? Does the thought terrify you? It should. But resistance is futile…

The Borg are cybernetic organisms, linked in a hive mind called "the Collective." The Borg co-opt the technology and knowledge of other alien species to the Collective through the process of "assimilation": forcibly transforming individual beings into "drones" by injecting nanoprobes into their bodies and surgically augmenting them with cybernetic components. The Borg's ultimate goal is "achieving perfection.”

As when dealing with any character born of a TV series that was only later made into books, it can be hard for book lovers to know where to start, but we’ve got you! While The Destiny Trilogy by David Mack doesn’t represent the first appearance of the Borg in books, it does feature the Borg heavily and is one you can jump right into without prior experience with the franchise.

Book one, Gods of Night, begins half a decade after the Dominion War and more than a year after the rise and fall of Praetor Shinzon, the galaxy's greatest scourge returns to wreak havoc upon the Federation -- and this time its goal is nothing less than total annihilation.

Start the Star Trek Destiny Trilogy 
here on Amazon.


What nightmares have we yet to encounter?

As another commenter in the DSF Facebook group mentioned, "any alien species that comes to conquer and destroy us may well be beyond our wildest imagination."

Until then we will happily rely on the brilliant creativity of the authors of science fiction who, in the absence of present day alien threat, give us plenty to fear through their books. So what will they dream up next? That remains to be seen, and whatever it is, it may knock one of these invaders right out of our top 10.  As always, these lists are a snapshot of a moment in time in our community and while we are almost certain that some of these favorites will remain, who knows? Maybe the best is yet to come. For now, visit us  here in our Facebook group to chime in on the debate, and then check out our most recent poll while you're there. Don't have Facebook? Feel free to add to the comments below.

*All book-related copy in this post was pulled from Amazon, Goodreads & Wikipedia, unless otherwise credited.

What Are the Best Sci-Fi Books or Series Employing Parallel Universes?

“If a coin comes down heads, that means that the possibility of its coming down tails has collapsed. Until that moment the two possibilities were equal. But on another world, it does come down tails. And when that happens, the two worlds split apart.” —Philip Pullman, The Golden Compass

We've probably all seen the question floating around, the one asking what you'd be doing right now if there weren't a worldwide pandemic dramatically altering your life; the question, what is going on in your own personal parallel universe? For most of us, it's not terribly hard to imagine because, well, it'd just be our lives, as usual. The question isn't asking us to draw on our imagination, rather it's a hat-tip to acknowledging that this shared experience is hard. That, quite likely, we are all giving up, or missing out on something. That said, we can't be the only sci-fi lovers who hear the question and find our mind wandering toward the parallel universes of science fiction. And Those? Those are another thing altogether. 

Our favorite science fiction writers have been imagining parallel universes for about as long as science fiction writers have been writing. While it can be a tricky tool to pull off well, some of the stories that have come from these imaginings are among the very best sci-fi has to offer. This week, we're asking you to think about your favorite books employing parallel universes and submit the ones you think are the very best.

We've jump-started the conversation with a few suggestions of our own, but in order for these polls to be truly representative of the favorites of our community we need your submissions! As this is the first round of voting, please feel free to add as many nomination(s) as you'd like and then be sure to vote for as many as you'd like as well. 

As always, we base our lists on the votes and nominations from this blog and our Facebook Reader group, and we want to hear your opinion!



What Are the Best Sci-Fi Books or Series Employing Parallel Universes?
  • Add your answer
 

What Are the Most Terrifying Alien Invaders in Science Fiction?

"One day, we might receive a signal from a planet... But we should be wary of answering back. Meeting an advanced civilization could be like Native Americans encountering Columbus. That didn't turn out so well."—Stephen Hawking

This is what the brilliant Stephen Hawking had to say when discussing Gliese 832c, a possibly habitable extrasolar planet 16 light years away. It seems our favorite authors largely agree with him as oftentimes, the aliens of science fiction are painted as malevolent beings or, at the very least, those whose interests pose a serious threat to humans. But like anything, there are levels, and in the interest of turning our attention to a terror not presently making headlines, this week we are taking a deep dive into the scariest alien invaders of science fiction.

We've jump-started the conversation with a few suggestions of our own, but we want to hear from you!  Add your nomination(s) for most terrifying alien invaders below and then vote on your favorite(s). If you need a little inspo, take a peek at this post from Discover Sci-Fi's own Daniel Arenson from back in January. You guys had some strong opinions on what did and didn't make Daniel's list back then and now is your chance to be heard! 

As always, we base our lists on the votes and nominations from this blog and our Facebook Reader group, and we want to hear your opinion!



What Are the Most Terrifying Alien Invaders in Science Fiction (Books)
  • Add your answer

What does a post-MCU sci-fi landscape look like?


Yes, yes… I realize that the MCU (Marvel Cinematic Universe) is still ongoing. 

I suppose a more accurate way of saying it would be; "what does a post-Avengers cinematic landscape look like?" Marvel/Disney is obviously still going to be producing movies within the MCU, but after Avengers: Endgame I feel like interest will begin to wane now that the story arc that began with Iron Man waaay back in 2008 has concluded.

While many would (rightly) argue that Marvel's cinematic juggernaut wasn't really science fiction, it's impossible to ignore that the series of superhero movies completely dominated a space where science fiction would normally reside. The MCU sucked so much oxygen out of the room that, other than Star Wars, there wasn't a lot of room left to talk about anything else. The new Star Wars may have sold a lot of tickets, but it seems to have as many people who loathed it than people who adored and obsessed over it. So, for the sake of this argument, let's assume that the MCU is firmly within the science fiction spectrum… what do audiences have to look forward to next?

Looking past the big boys of LucasFilm and Marvel, the sci-fi movie scene is pretty bleak. 

The Star Trek reboot seems to have lost steam and nobody wants to take the chance on new, untested properties. Sci-fi is expensive to make. It's hard to get studios to commit to something that isn't guaranteed to make a profit in a time when ALL movies are struggling to get funding. But the sci-fi market globally is enormous and hungry. How do you service that need if you're not willing to take risks on new projects?


Like what you're reading?

If you're enjoying this article, why not join the DSF community for more awesome content? You'll get to be notified whenever a new top 10 list, or any other articles of interest goes up on our site. It's free to sign up and you'll also get recommendations for new releases and discounted ebooks from our expert editorial team, from bestsellers to hidden gems.


Could the indie filmmakers fill that void? 

We've all seen low-budget sci-fi movies on deep-cable. The more popular ones have their own drinking games attached to them. In other words: they're entertaining because we point and laugh at them, not because they're good films. I realize that some of that is deliberate on the part of the filmmaker… at least I hope it is. If the guy who made Sharknado was trying to make a serious movie then that's a whole other problem. So is there any good news? Yes. Things are changing within the industry for the better. Technology is becoming cheaper and more prevalent and filmmakers are no longer beholden to the big studio dinosaurs to get their movies made.

Check out the work of director/producer Hasraf "Haz" Dulull (HazFilm.com). Haz is able to make compelling films and he's doing it without the backing of huge studio bucks. His shorts have a real "big movie" sensibility about them and you honestly feel like his work is something you'd see in the theater after paying $14 for a ticket and $2,500 for concessions. He's able to create a lot of what we expect to see from big-budget sci-fi using the leading edge of visual tech… and, of course, no small amount of talent and skill.

Can filmmakers like Haz change the sci-fi cinema landscape and steal back some of the momentum from the monolithic companies like Disney and Paramount? 

With some help from distributors willing to play the movie in theaters, I'd like to think so. The mega-studio movies will continue to have top billing… but I, for one, would like to see indies begin to do for movies what they did for books: provide more options and a quality alternative to what the gatekeepers say we must watch.


JOSHUA DALZELLE
Joshua Dalzelle grew up in a small, rural town and joined the US Air Force as a teenager to see the world and work in aviation, one of his enduring passions. 

After his first enlistment as an avionics technician on B-1B bombers, he left the military and worked in the aerospace industry in various capacities while earning a master’s degree in aeronautical science.

During this time, he continued to write as a hobby, occasionally submitting a short story or novel for publication.

In 2012 he discovered indie publishing so he dusted off the dream of being a writer one more time and in 2013 released his first published novel.

He is a USA Today bestselling author, an Amazon Top Ten Bestselling Science Fiction author, and creator of the hugely popular Omega Force series.

You can follow Joshua on Facebook & Twitter.

Steven Konkoly on Predicting the Covid-19 Pandemic


I arrived at a rather unenviable and hopefully “once in a lifetime” position recently—having accurately predicted the novel coronavirus now sweeping the globe. 

It’s an inexplicably eerie feeling. A pandemic is not something you ever hope to be “right about.” You hope it never happens. Unfortunately, one of my greatest fears has come true. A fear with its roots firmly planted in my first novel, The Jakarta Pandemic (TJP for short), published ten years ago.

The idea for TJP sprang from an already unhealthy obsession with viral outbreaks. Captain Trips from Stephen King’s epic, The Stand, was burned into my psyche from an early age. I burned through The Andromeda Strain by Michael Crichton in a single sitting. The book Hot Zone by Richard Preston and movie Outbreak was like a one-two punch, released a year apart in 1994-95. The movie 28 Days Later in 2002. Max Brooks brilliant novel, World War Z a few years after that. I couldn’t get enough of these stories. And then the Swine Flu pandemic hit in 2008! Looking back, it should have come as no surprise to anyone, especially me, that my first stab at writing a novel would center around a pandemic. 

However, despite my initial enthusiasm—the project barely got off the ground. The usual first time, part time writer challenges applied. Didn’t know what I was doing and wasn’t sure it would be worth the effort. Limited time to write. Busy with two young kids. Everything got in the way, but the biggest delay came from what turned out to be the novel’s greatest strength.


Like what you're reading?

If you're enjoying this article, why not join the DSF community for more awesome content? You'll get to be notified whenever a new top 10 list, or any other articles of interest goes up on our site. It's free to sign up and you'll also get recommendations for new releases and discounted ebooks from our expert editorial team, from bestsellers to hidden gems.


I spent at least six months researching past pandemics, virology, disease epidemiology, U.S. and world pandemic response protocols and detection capabilities, vaccine production, the U.S. healthcare and medical infrastructure, U.S essential services infrastructure, supply chain dynamics.

I consumed every article or paper publicly available that could help me understand the various impacts of a pandemic on society. I had hit what writers call “research paralysis,” where I was obsessed with collecting and digesting more information than I truly needed to write the novel.

When I finally broke through to the other side, I decided to tell the story differently. I steered away from the heroic CDC scientist hopping from one jet to another to reach the next hot zone or the critical response team fighting against all odds to stay one step ahead of the pandemic. Instead, I focused on a single family’s tense and claustrophobic struggle to stay alive during the most lethal pandemic in recorded human history. Of course, I threw way more at them than an unseen virus. Society collapses in my novel (along with nearly all essential services), pitting neighbor against neighbor in a vicious struggle to survive.

What does this have to do with me predicting the COVID19 Pandemic? 

Fast forward ten years from the publication of The Jakarta Pandemic to January of this year. Without going into exhaustive detail (I’ve already taken up enough of your time)—YOU DON’T LOCKDOWN AN ENTIRE CITY OF 11 MILLION PEOPLE FOR THE SEASONAL FLU. I had been watching the virus news closely when Wuhan was locked down by Chinese authorities, noting that the first case detected in the U.S. a few days earlier, had recently returned from a trip to Wuhan. That was all I needed to know.

Interested in going deeper into Steve's thoughts about the current Covid-19 situation? You can read about the rest of his Paul Revere ride through the coronavirus pandemic on his personal blog HERE


Steven Konkoly is the USA Today bestselling author of over twenty novels and novellas.

His canon of THRILLERS includes: the FRACTURED STATE books, a “24-style,” near future conspiracy series set in the southwest United States; the BLACK FLAGGED books, a gritty, no-holds barred covert operations and espionage saga; and the ALEX FLETCHER books, a tense, thriller epic, chronicling the aftermath of an inconceivable attack on the United States. He recently released HOT ZONE, the first book in a thriller series chronicling the events surrounding a bioweapons attack against the United States.

You can contact Steven directly by email or through his blog.

Review—The Forever War


Author – Joe Haldeman

I’ll start by plagiarizing a meme (if that’s possible) and say:

The Forever War is the granddaddy of today’s Military Scifi genre. Change my mind. 

Of course, you’d say, ‘Well, there’s Heinlein’s Starship Troopers.’

And I’d reply:

Starship Troopers is the great-granddaddy of today’s Military Scifi genre. Change my mind. 

I’ll cover Starship Troopers in my next Classic Review. Today, it’s going to be The Forever War.

First, a little history. I bought this book in paperback twice. Once back in the 80s because I loved the title, once in the 90s because it had a different cover, and I didn’t realize it was the same book. Unfortunately, I used to buy a lot more books than I had time to read them (that really hasn’t changed), so I never read either until much later. At the time, I thought it was a fantastic book.

The copy I purchased this time around was the audiobook, and that’s what I’ll be reviewing here.


Like what you're reading?

If you're enjoying this review, why not join the DSF community for more awesome content? You'll get to be notified whenever a new top 10 list, or any other articles of interest goes up on our site. It's free to sign up and you'll also get recommendations for new releases and discounted ebooks from our expert editorial team, from bestsellers to hidden gems.


A little about the narration:

The audiobook was recorded in 1999, and to me, the audio quality sounded just a tad substandard. Perhaps that was all in my imagination. It didn’t, however, inhibit my ability to understand the narrator at all. He read clearly, with excellent diction. He was just a tad dry for my tastes. I did, however, listen at 150% speed. Was that the narrator's style, or the story making me want to hurry it along? I can’t say. But at 150%, it worked for me.

On to the story: I loved it the first time I read it.

I’ve recommended the story to my friends for years. This time around, I thought it was thoroughly okay.

It is Military SciFi, but it is not a high-action story. Of course, there are space battles, even the big climactic throw-down at the end—very satisfying. But, the military action is a bit sparse when compared to many of the more modern books I’ve read in the genre.

So, what do you get instead of rock’em-sock’em war? 

Well, you get a lengthy newbie soldier training sequence. That’s a pretty standard trope in many military stories before the hero(es) goes off to war. You also get a heaping helping of world-building, a world that needs to get built and rebuilt several times because the author chooses to tell his story in a hybrid FTL universe.

What I mean by this is that one of the things authors have to consider when they sit down to write a space opera of any sort, is whether faster than light (FTL) travel occurs in their new universe. The choice carries significant implications for the story that develops. In The Forever War, Haldeman employs ‘collapsars’ the same way wormholes are employed in more modern fiction, as gates through which space travelers can jump from one area of the galaxy to another. For journeys in areas where no collapsar is in the vicinity, travelers in Haldeman’s books move at some significant fraction of the speed of light. Hence, time dilates. So, soldiers go off to battle and come back decades or centuries later. Haldeman squeezes this set of circumstances for lots of pretty interesting chapters, many of which have to do with explaining a world a hundred or several hundred years in the future.

Overall, it’s a good book — worth a read.

A few notes I should mention, however: Haldeman, through his character’s voice, does offer up an editorialized point of view on many of society’s changes. Perfectly fine, we all do it. That’s part of the fun of being an author. However, a few points arise in the book, one where female soldiers were required to sexually service their male counterparts, and one where homosexuality was portrayed as a choice, not a genetic outcome. He presents both of these without the irony that his character seems to view nearly everything else. That seemed a tad odd to me, as though Haldeman were presenting both as natural beliefs. I don’t agree with any point of view where such things are natural, at the same time, I’m not one to get offended by much. But if you, as a reader, are, then beware, there may be a few other pitfalls for your sensibilities wrapped into the text of the story.

Bobby Adair

* If you feel like I’ve been unnecessarily harsh on a masterpiece, or too easy on a terrible POS, please read my Disclaimers, Caveats, and Excuses page before you flame me.


Bobby Adair is a former programmer, with a long-lived passion - and only recently fulfilled desire - for writing.  He is the author of the Freedom Fire series, the Slow Burn series and the Ebola K series.

One of Bobby's favorite quotes:

“It’s not just about me and my dream of doing nothing. It’s about all of us...Michael, we don’t have a lot of time on this earth! We weren’t meant to spend it this way. Human beings were not meant to sit in little cubicles staring at computer screens all day, filling out useless forms and listening to eight different bosses drone on about about mission statements.”
- Peter Gibbons, Office Space

You can follow Bobby on FacebookTwitter and his website.

Time to Decide: What Are the Most Terrifying Alien Invaders?

How long can you keep your eyes open?

Whether they come to strip away your individuality and assimilate you, have the capacity to shapeshift into the image of your best friend, have enough firepower to blow up the earth and beyond or just LOOK downright gnarly, well, the alien invaders of science fiction give us PLENTY to fear. Last week we asked you to name your fears—to name the most terrifying aliens invaders in science fiction—and you served us up a selection of nightmare material to last us a lifetime! 

But now, it's time to decide.

Last week you were free to nominate and vote for as many selections as you'd like; this week, we're asking you to narrow down your choice to one selection. Which one do you think is the most terrifying? With ten truly nightmarish selections to choose from, we know it won't be easy! Read on to see what made the cut and if you are curious to know what didn't, you can see the original list of nominations in our facebook group.

*As alway this list is made up by combining votes from this blog and our Facebook group.  



Time to Decide: What Are the Most Terrifying Alien Invaders in Science Fiction