Nomad of the Time Streamsβ β β β―ͺβ
Michael Moorcock A 19th-century British soldier in India is flung into three wildly different future wars, forcing him to reexamine the world he thought he was building.
Parable of the Sowerβ β β β β
Octavia Butler Hard to put down. And hard to pick up again. Itβs certainly not a fun book, but itβs extremely engaging, despite the bleakness of the slow-apocalypse setting and story.
Ready Player One (Book)β β β ββ
Ernest Cline Back when I read it, the nostalgia and scavenger hunt were enough for me. Now, not so much.
Ready Player One (Movie)β β β β β
Steven Spielberg Better than I expected, having soured on the book by the time it came out. Not a straight adaptation so much as a rewrite of the same premise thatβs more character-driven and yes, more cinematic. With Spielberg.
Star Wars: Andor - Season Oneβ β β β βA more serious take on Star Wars, with a bit more personal scope showing how oppression grinds people down, and what sacrifices rebellion can require.
The Time Machineβ β β β β
H.G. Wells A bit dry, but it draws you in, and if the plot is simple, itβs enough to wrap around some thought-provoking speculation about the future of humanity - and a critique of industrial society.
The Time Shipsβ β β β―ͺβ
Stephen Baxter A sequel to H.G. Wellsβ The Time Machine that drastically expands the scope across multiple timelines, from the dawn of time to the far future seen in the original. Now with Dyson spheres, nanobots, and a seemingly endless war that can only be stopped in the past.