On 2024-06-03, Michael F. Stemper <
[email protected]> wrote:
On 02/06/2024 10.55, Paul S Person wrote:
On Sat, 1 Jun 2024 14:58:38 -0500, "Michael F. Stemper"
<[email protected]> wrote:
On 31/05/2024 16.28, Ted Nolan <tednolan> wrote:
In article <v3dc4d$2cmed$[email protected]>,
Lynn McGuire <[email protected]> wrote:
“Top 10 Space Opera Books and Series”
I would swap The Foundation Series and The Vorkosigan series.
I would say that Foundation is *not* Space Opera. In fact it makes some >>>> fun of Space Opera.
_Triplanetary_ definitely is, but how can you be aware of Doc Smith and >>>> leave a) the Lensman series proper & b) the Skylark series off of a
Space Opera list?
100% agreed. I'm not too convinced that _Hyperion_ (or the four-novel series
that it kicks off) or the Culture qualify as Space Opera, either. I briefly >>> perused the page and some of its links, but was unable to find what they >>> were using as a definition of "space opera".
I think I've mostly regarded "space opera" as a formation based on
"horse opera". FWIW. YMMV.
I have no doubt about that being the etymology of the term. But, it's hardly a definition. And I was wondering specifically about the definition used by the folks setting up the poll; the definition that viewed Hyperion and Foundation as "space opera".
My guess is that the pollsters had no criteria, and this poll was really "what science fiction do you like?" With serious sampling issues.
Wikipedia has a nice article on "space opera"; a very major focus of
it is how the definition has changed over the years, and how many
different definitions of it there are.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_opera
I pretty definitely agree with the older definitions more than how
it is apparently currently used.
I agree that I don't consider either _Hyperion_ or _Foundation_ to be
space opera. But I think both of them are closer than novels like
_Dune_ and _Ender's Game_ that were considered space opera the first time
this group tried a top 10 space opera list.
My personal entry for a top 10 space opera would include Cook's
_The Dragon Never Sleeps_ (a strong Favorite of mine). I like the suggestion of William's Praxis series, but it doesn't quite reach top 10 for me.
I also like Westerfeld's _The Risen Empire_ duology.
Chris
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