I’d be interested in getting into Soviet SciFi literature. Does anyone have recommendations for me?

  • Elon_Musk [none/use name]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    57 months ago

    I have a polar opposite suggestion. Delta V is a story about humanity mining asteroids for the express purpose of continuing to grow the economy because they have essentially exhausted all growth on earth.

    • @redtea
      link
      37 months ago

      That really is you, Musk 🥰

  • @PolandIsAStateOfMind
    link
    5
    edit-2
    7 months ago

    Sergey Snegov wrote a pretty good space opera trilogy “Humans as Gods”.

    Strugatsky brothers (just don’t read anything written solely by Boris after Arkady died, it’s pretty clear who was the brain and who was the pen in the duo).

    Kir Bulychev wrote absolute shitton of books and stories.

    There’s also polish ones, of course the giant Stanisław Lem, and less famous Janusz Zajdel (though i have mixed feeling about Zajdel, a lot of his stories were interpreted as anticommunist after 1989). Hidden gems are Krzysztof Boruń and Andrzej Trepka - their books are probably not translated to english and pretty forgotten in Poland since they wrote the real socialist sci-fi.

  • starkillerfish (she)
    link
    English
    47 months ago

    Anything by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky. Roadside picnic is quite popular (because of the film), Beetle in the anthill is also an interesting one.

  • @davel
    link
    English
    1
    edit-2
    7 months ago

    You will usually find some of Stanislaw Lem’s works in bookstores with large scifi sections. Even non-scifi readers have usually heard of Solaris.

    • @ComradeSalad
      link
      57 months ago

      Lem would be Polish work though, not Soviet.

      • @davel
        link
        English
        17 months ago

        Good point; I was conflating everything behind the Iron Curtain as Soviet.