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Whats this Sci-Fi book? - Please help

Started by Batman's Superior Cousin, 27 August, 2009, 02:13:49 PM

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Batman's Superior Cousin

It's about Humanity's first contact with an alien race. They discover that the aliens genetic structure forces them into overpopulation (the only way to stop it is through a continuous cycle of civil wars). The aliens declare war on the humans. In the end, the humans manage to end the war by (I think) altering the aliens genetic structure. I think the book was released in the 50's or 60's.
I can't help but feel that Godpleton's avatar/icon gets more appropriate everyday... - TordelBack
Texts from Last Night

Zarjazzer

#1
Is it The Mote in gods Eye by Larry Niven? (written in 1974 )

]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mote_in_God%27s_Eye]
The Justice department has a good re-education programme-it's called five to ten in the cubes.

Batman's Superior Cousin

I can't help but feel that Godpleton's avatar/icon gets more appropriate everyday... - TordelBack
Texts from Last Night

Kerrin

Great book! The much later follow up, "The Moat Around Murcheson's Eye", not so good. In fact, duff. But the original? Superb.

TordelBack

#4
QuoteThe much later follow up, "The Moat Around Murcheson's Eye", not so good. In fact, duff. But the original? Superb.

S'right.  The scenes in the Motie museum, and the bit with the spacesuit, are some of my favourite SF moments.  I'd opine that anyone who enjoyed this would also enjoy the arachnoform antics of Vernor Vinge's A Deepness in the Sky, the prequel-in-a-not-crap-way to the mind-blowing A Fire Upon the Deep.

 Actually scratch that:  anyone with the faintest whiff of a liking for SF should love anything that Vinge has written.  He's just plain super.

I, Cosh

Quote from: TordelBack on 27 August, 2009, 07:36:53 PM
QuoteThe much later follow up, "The Moat Around Murcheson's Eye", not so good. In fact, duff. But the original? Superb.

S'right.  The scenes in the Motie museum, and the bit with the spacesuit, are some of my favourite SF moments.  I'd opine that anyone who enjoyed this would also enjoy the arachnoform antics of Vernor Vinge's A Deepness in the Sky, the prequel-in-a-not-crap-way to the mind-blowing A Fire Upon the Deep.

Actually scratch that:  anyone with the faintest whiff of a liking for SF should love anything that Vinge has written.  He's just plain super.
I remember really liking The Peace War, but the sequel wasn't too hot. Will need to give some of his newer stuff a go.
We never really die.