What’s a piece of SF that you just couldn’t get into, even though you feel like you should?

I tried to watch Babylon 5, for instance, and just couldn’t connect to it. I know it’s popular and people love it, but it never hooked me.

Another is The Three Body Problem. I tried reading it after a friend’s glowing recommendation, but I couldn’t get past the first chapter. I even tried reading it in another language in case it was the translation I couldn’t connect with, but the same thing happened.

Both are things I feel like I should like, but just don’t.

    • I agree with this one too. I watched the first episode years ago and simply never carried on to the second. Then a year or so later people told me it was amazing so I persevered to the end of the first season, then drifted off again. Then I later picked it up again, then dropped it, then picked it up again - and think I’m now early in the third season, but again haven’t actually watched an episode in about a year.

      I keep trying because people who have similar taste to me tell me I will like it, but I just keep finding it a bit lukewarm - I’ll finish watching an episode once I’ve started, but I almost always have to force myself to carry on to the next episode. It seems to have all the components of a good sci-fi political thriller / space opera, but those components feel like they’re assembled so coldly that some magic is missing.

      I haven’t tried the books so maybe they succeed where the show hasn’t yet for me.

    • This was my first thought. The TV adaptation at least. I’ve watch the first few episodes a few times and never feel the draw to keep going. Just kind of forget I started.

    • The original Foundation is a product of its time. It is amazing when read in the context of the 1950s, but tricky today. Try Caves of Steel to further the I Robot read. Asimov built an entire future history spanning 10s of thousands of years.

    •  sethw   ( @sethw@kbin.social ) 
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      Foundation is probably the best harder scifi going right now, just the idea of the clone kings dawn dusk and day is worth it let alone the prime radiant and foundation itself.

      Raised by wolves is a good one in a similar style, but it got cancelled before it was able to answer the bigger questions of the world building which is frustrating

          • hey I watched the tv show last night thanks to your accidental recommendation and it’s great!! I was under the mistaken impression that s1 and 2 were all out and s3 was being released so now i’m devastated but I’ll binge s2 as soon as this season is finished and then wait for more haha

            • Funny people are saying the book is so hard to like, I have to assume the show is only as good as it is because it has the depth of the source material to draw from! Also when you’re done with foundation do Raised by Wolves for a similar vibe, and for a very different vibe the best new series of 2017: Blood Drive. It’s not directly comparable to foundation, but I tell everyone to watch it anyway. give it at least until the Suck Bus episode!

      • Raised by Wolves was pretty bizarre. I loved the first season, up until the weird flying worm thing, and second season just seemed off-the-rails batshit insane. haha

        I was definitely intending to watch season 3, though I didn’t really understand what was going on. I’m not completely surprised it was canceled.

    • This is me. And speaking as someone who tends to love his writing otherwise. It took me several tries to get through Foundation and once I finally finished it I was left with zero desire to read any other books in that series.

    • Anything by Matt Groening is always the same. He’s always trying to make fun of TV tropes and subvert them but at the same time he’s stuck with the restrictions of commercial, ad-compatible mainstream TV.

  • Something about the Stargate franchise has simply never appealed to me. I saw the original movie as a kid and enjoyed it, with a distinct memory of the “Rainbow Road” travel effect feeling pretty intense because I was sitting closer to the screen than usual. It was fun, if a bit slight.

    I’ve seen a bits and pieces of the shows here and there, and nothing about them is drawing me in. I might like them, but I just have zero desire to dive in. Seems like low-budget camp with a learning curve.

    Honorable mention to The Orville, which I do like quite a bit, but I find the unadulterated love for it baffling; it’s a deeply flawed show that makes up for a lot with sheer heart and some decent scripts from the Star Trek slush pile.

    • The Orville is just Star Trek fan show with sex and poop jokes (and one that doesn’t take itself serioisly, sometimes to a fault). It’s enjoyable but it just doesn’t try to be anything more than “funny Trek”. Fun, but too derivative.

  • @stopthatgirl7 I’ve started Dune numerous times. I get further each time, but I’m still not very far along. I think there’s a tone change between the opening of the book and the move to Arrakis. Paul’s mother has just met with the “house mother” in my latest attempt. I’ll get there. Eventually.

    • Dune is one of my favorite series, but I can totally see why it would be jarring. Unfortunately there are a couple of major tonal shifts throughout the series. Heck… there’s a couple just in the first book. It is definitely a very dense read. Lots going on and a lot of moving parts to track. There’s even a glossary in the back to keep track of it with maps heh.

      It’s a really interesting universe. Herbert was really into philosophy and lead a really interesting life (his biography written by his son is an interesting read as well). It doesn’t get any less dense and layered unfortunately, if that is what is keeping you out of it.

      The Sci-fi mini-series was good and hit most of the major points pretty well, if you just can’t deal with the books themselves. It might bring you back with some renewed interest. The new movies are interesting as a fan, but don’t really tell the story fully, IMHO.

      • i did love dune, enjoyed the variety and dynamics; but i struggled with all the follow ups i think it just became more style, complexity and politics and there was not enough story left to drag me through it.
        (cf. War and Peace)

        • I really enjoy the philosophical and psychological study of humanity through sci-fi, so I enjoyed that thread through the whole series. I’ve read far too much of it lol. But I totally get it when people have to tap out… it’s a dense series of books.

          I have the same reaction to Lord of the Rings. I love the story, but I can’t slog through reading the books. The peter jackson films were a god send for me.

  • I’m not sure if I’ve given it enough of a try, but I wanted to get into the Culture series and started with Consider Phlebas. After three (four?) chapters I changed it out for a different book; I considered “The Player of Games” instead, but the plot didn’t sound exciting.

    Not sure if I should give it a second chance or not. After those chapters I just didn’t really care what happened next, nor did I care much for the main character.
    I switched to Project Hail Mary and love it.

    • Banks is my favourite sci fi author, but I to struggled with Consider Phlebas. Consider reading Player of Games. The culture books can be read as stand alone books without missing to much. I think Banks found his stride with Player of Games.

      • Some years ago I finished Consider Phlebas and was left so depressed by the entire thing that I never picked up another Culture book. Same experience with Alastair Reynolds’s Revelation Space. Maybe there is just a subgenre of SF that I shouldn’t read.

    • I think Use of Weapons is the best Culture novel so I’d recommend giving it a shot. Having said that, i just loved Consider Phlebas pretty much from page one. Banks always had trouble writing compelling plots. The main attraction to me is the imaginative scope of the worlds he created.

    • The Player of Games is a far easier book to start with - partly because so much of it takes place away from the Culture. I originally did the same as you and started with Consider Phlebas, failed, switched to Player of Games and loved it, then went back and read Consider Phlebas and enjoyed it too. Then I read Use of Weapons which is phenomenal.

    • I don’t think Crusade clicked for anyone. Hence Crusade getting cancelled midway through its first season.

      To be honest, all of the ‘post-B5’ B5 has been difficult. JMS apparently literally thought up the gist of the five season plot (which ended up being condensed into seasons 1-4 of the show as they were unsure if they would get cancelled - hence so much happening in s4) while he was in the shower, and it was one of the best sci-fi stories ever told. But it’s seemed clear to me that everything he’s done since B5 s4 has not reached anything like the same levels.

      He told a great story, and he created a great universe, but I think he doesn’t really know how to tell other great stories in that universe.

  • Dhalgen. I know some people absolutely love this book but to me it was just a directionless ramble from one random sci-fi plot to the next with little-to-no resolution to any of them.

    And come on one-shoe-guy: When somebody offers you a new pair of shoes, put the damn things on instead of saying you’re good and continuing to hobble around half shod / half barefoot.

    • Same here. I feel the same way about a lot of New Wave SF from that era. I like J.G. Ballard because he’s such a strong writer that he can pull off that sort of plotless “experimental” stuff, but the rest of them don’t do it for me. Why would I want to read an SF writer trying to write like William S. Burroughs when I can just read William S. Burroughs?

  • I agree about the Three Body Problem, I read it but I don’t know what I read. Could be the translation but man it really bounced off.

    But I couldn’t read VanderMeer, that thing that was really popular, like his version of the Zone from Stalker. Couldn’t believe all the hype, felt like gaslighting. Maybe I’ll try it again, who knows

    • I don’t think you’re alone on the Southern Reach books by Vandermeer. I did read them, but holy moly it was a slog towards the end. It’s a trippy slow psychological descent. Without any concrete aspects for the reader to hang their hat on, it’s exceedingly difficult (for me at least) to get a picture of what’s going on, what’s really happening. I think they’re well written, but they are not really my thing.

  • I read The Three Body Problem, but it wasn’t engaging enough to read the sequels. I’m not into sci-fi adjacent films like Pacific Rim and superhero or comic book movies. In general, I have a strong preference for sci-fi books over movies and TV shows because books can go places that visual media can’t.