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Quick recomendations for Paperbacks

Harry Turtledove would be a good place to start if you haven't read him. If not exactly science fiction it all mostly follows the military bent of your listed reading before. I'd recommend his Colonization series, his new juveniles aren't bad, and his Videssos series' (which are fantasy, sort of, but not really) could occupy you for many hours.

If you've never read Dan Simmon's Hyperion series, at least the first two books, you should. I even like some of Simmon's other work, like Carrion Comfort, but a lot of it is horror and I'm always a little wary of recommending horror.

I also like Steven Gould, as an author that doesn't seem to be very popular, and John Scalzi's Old Man's War should be out in paperback by now too. For absolute, possibly out of print page-turners, I might look for books by Steve Perry set in the universe he created himself and including The Man Who Never Missed. If you can find them in used book stores they'd likely be pretty cheap, lightweight, and you'll be able read them and toss them aside in a day or so. These authors should either have very few books on the shelf or be found in used book stores.

SM Stirling and Eric Flint are usually capable of writing books that don't suck, or at least don't suck until the very end of the series. Everything by Jack McDevitt has been recommended to me and is on my reading list (which seems similar to yours), but I haven't had the time. John Ringo occasionally makes me want to hit him with a heavy piece of wood across the back of the neck and shoulders, but he's got a lot of books in paperback and even as much as he annoys me he's a proficient writer.

I've got no clue if they're out in paperback, but CJ Cherryh's Foreigner series is excellent. All of her books are excellent, in fact, so I heartily recommend them.
 

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You might try

William Goldman's "The Princess Bride; Good Parts Version".

They've got a new version in paperback at my local store (includes Chapter 1 of Buttercup's Baby).
 

A series I loved: Sten (Sten Series) (Paperback)by Chris Bunch, Allan Cole.

Another:The Man Who Never Missed (Mass Market Paperback) by Steve Perry.

One more: Moreau Omnibus (Paperback) by S. Andrew Swann. Three books in one for $8.
 

Tetsubo said:
Another:The Man Who Never Missed (Mass Market Paperback) by Steve Perry.
I'm glad at least one other person has read them. It's hard to argue that Mr. Perry has a great track record, some of his novels look absolutely awful, but TMWNM and its associated novels are just...neat.
 

Have to agree,

Steve Perry's Matador novels (The Man who Never Missed, Matadora, The Machievelli Interfase, Omega Cage, The 97th Step, The Albino Knife, Black Steel and Brother Death) are great popcorn fiction. He's just released a new one in the same universe called The Musashi Flex.

I'd also recommend Peter Hamilton's The Night's Dawn trilogy (The Reality Dysfunction, Neutronium Alchemist, The Naked God). Fallen Dragon and Pandora's Star are also good. Word of warning, Hamilton likes Deus ex Machina endings. Otherwise they are fantsatic reads.

William C. Deitz's Legion of the Damned novels are a fun read if you like cyborg military SF.

Anything by Julie Czerneda is good (Trade Pact Universe, Web Shifters) but not sure how prevelant her stuff is in the US as she's a Canadian writer.

If you like David Weber than you may want to look at Walter John William's Dread Empire's Fall series. Not quite Honor Harrington worthy but still a good read.

Other suggestions:

Newton's Wake - Ken Macleod
Slant - Greg Bear
A Deepness in the Sky - Vernor Vinge (Titanium Hard SF)
Diamond Age - Neal Stephenson
The Takeshi Kovacs Novels (Altered Carbon, Broken Angels, Woken Furies) - Richard Morgan
Ringworld - Larry Niven
More Than Human - Theodore Sturgeon
The Flinx novels and Humanx novels - Alan Dean Foster
The Better Part of Valor and Valor's Choice - Tanya Huff

And if you really want to melt your brain, anything by Greg Egan.

Jack

who's run out of books to read, dammit.
 

If you're going for Neal Stephenson, then I think you have to start with Snow Crash. Although it is not fantasy, it's more cyberpunk-lite. And very funny, in some ways.

Diamond Age was okay, but not nearly as compelling. Cryptonomicon is interesting, cross-cutting between a couple eras of the modern age (WWII / present). I haven't read any of Stephenson's other stuff.
 

I'd recommend any of the "Expendables" novels by James Alan Gardner:
Expendable
Commitment Hour
Vigilant
Trapped
Hunted
Ascending
Radiant
You should read Expendable first, but after that it really shouldn't matter a whole lot which order you read them in.

Johnathan
 

Ed_Laprade said:
If you want a good fantasy, Elizabeth Moon's 'The Deed of Paksenarrion' is excellent. Based on a homebrew D&D campaign world, more or less. Originally three books (Sheepfarmer's Daughter, Divided Allegiance and Oath of Gold), it's also out in omnibus. But I don't know if the omnibus is in paperback or not.

I did see the all in one in paperback, but it's a trade sized paperback.
 

Into the Woods

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