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I've been going through the Foundation series lately, and I have to say Isaac Asimov is becoming my favourite writer really fast.The foundation series is set well into the future where the whole galaxy is populated by humans and called the Galactic Empire. A scientist Hari Seldon has foreseen the fall of the Empire as it was in the later stages of decay and developed psychohistory to help humanity form another empire in 1 millenia after the fall instead of 30,000 years of chaos. Psychohistory uses the law of mass action, it can predict the future, but only on a large scale; it is error-prone on a small scale. It works on the principle that the behaviour of a mass of people is predictable if the quantity of this mass is very large (equal to the population of the galaxy which has a population of around a quadrillion).The series guides you through about 500 years of progress full of twists and turns.
Perelandra by C.S. Lewis. It's profound and well written; I don't think I'll ever get tired of reading and rereading it.
I would just like to point out that besides like 4 people nobody bothered to actually write anything informative about their favourite novels. Some of them being moderators.
Quote from: jrgp on September 30, 2010, 03:36:50 pmOnly anime shows I've felt any interest in over the years are Pokemon (original TV series) and various hentai.so clearly jgrp is a goddamn anime connoisseur. his opinion might as well be law here.
Only anime shows I've felt any interest in over the years are Pokemon (original TV series) and various hentai.
Best Admin: jrgp, he's like the forum mom and a pet dog rolled into one.
Gravity's Rainbow (Pynchon) (uuugh, reads like an acid trip, but minus the excitement)
Quote from: JayBee on January 05, 2009, 02:08:26 pmGravity's Rainbow (Pynchon) (uuugh, reads like an acid trip, but minus the excitement)I was recommended this. Is it good?