Sci-Fi Lists

Scientifical Satires

Some sci-fi books satirising all manner of life and creation

The Space Merchants
by Frederik Pohl & C M Kornbluth (1953)

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A good old-fashioned leftist attack on the shortcomings of capitalism. Giant advertising agencies dominate the world, go to war with each other, and use drugs and ad-propaganda to turn us into mindless pulp. Kornbluth died before his time, but for a while was the crackling wit behind Pohl's leftism and a fine writer of short stories.

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Cat's Cradle
by Kurt Vonnegut (1963)

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Vonnegut takes aim at science and religion in this side-splitting nuclear age parable. A scientist invents 'ice-nine' because a general is tired of soldiers' boots getting muddy. An array of misfits take us through some typical Vonnegut mayhem. There is never any doubt about what will happen in the end, but gee it's fun getting there.

The Witches Of Karres
by James H Schmitz (1966)

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Rollicking space opera that scored a Hugo nomination in 1967. A spacefaring merchant trader 'rescues' three young slavegirls from their oppressive masters. He soon discovers that they are witches from the prohibited planet of Karres. All sorts of madcap mayhem follows as he runs afoul of spies, pirates and creepy aliens. Still good for an occasional laugh.

Ubik
by Philip K Dick (1969)

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A time-twisting 'forward into the past' story and a topnotch comedic outing from PKD. The head of future anti-psi security agency which jams up nosy telepaths is apparently killed. Fragments of reality become disjointed as time begins to move backwards. The line between life and death gets blurred beyond belief. Brilliantly bent.

The Futurological Congress
by Stanislaw Lem (1971)

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Cosmonaut Ijon Tichy attends the Eighth Futurological Congress with the Plenary Council of Student Protest Veterans, the Convention of Publishers of Liberated Literature, and a Phillumenist (matchbooks) Society also nearby. Revolution is in the air and a severe injury leads to some ultra-comedic cryogenics. One of Lem's funniest.

Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy
by Douglas Adams (1979)

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It's the end of the world as we know it - and when a book is this funny - I feel fine. The guide, of course, is what we segue to as we follow Arthur Dent, the last human left alive, on his unlikely travels around the galaxy. By book four in the "trilogy" the jokes were wearing a little thin. This one, however, is not to be missed for the world.

The Diamond Age
by Neal Stephenson (1995)

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Stephenson's popular follow-up to 1992's Snow Crash has nanotech engineer John Percival Hackworth stealing a copy of a computer-interactive book he designed for his wealthy employer. Neo-Victorian society is never the same again when an underprivileged girl gets a hold of it and radically reprograms the future. Another winner from Stephenson.

To Say Nothing Of the Dog
by Connie Willis (1998)

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Hugo award winning novel that finds Willis at her maniacal best. The hero jumps back and forth between the 21st century and the 1940s on a mission to find the missing piece to restoring Coventry Cathedral. A fellow time traveller throws a spanner in the works, necessitating a timely trip to the Victorian era to set things right. Madcap mayhem.

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