My mother-in-law owns a used book store and has asked me what authors she should look for at sales to stock her Sci-Fi and Fantasy shelves. I've got my list of partials but I wanted to ask a community of readers what they thought.
Right now she has a single shelf for Sci-Fi/Fantasy. It's full now, includes some of the "main titles" for the genre.
Bear in mind that we're in a small town in Western New York - we get about three or four months where tourists pass through to see the Falls and boaters dock for a night or three. I don't know what kind of impact that has on the style or kind of books to get but it does bear mentioning.
For myself, I'm partial to the series... Honor Harrington by David Weber, Bolo by Keith Laumer, Hammer's Slammers by David Drake. I just finished Sheepfarmer's Daughter by Elizabeth Moon and have asked them to order the series for me. It drives me batty to find a book that looks good but is book 3/8... I hunt for book 1 so I don't get my head on backwards.
So, if you were to stock one or two shelves of a bookstore with your favorite authors, both Science Fiction and Fantasy... maybe even Horror... who whould you pick?
Science Fiction
Allen Steele's Books. Specifically the 'Near Space' loose series because they're very, very hard science fiction completely driven by character.
-Orbital Decay-Orbital construction jocks uncover something very nasty in an NSA module on the ISS.
-Clarke County, Space-The first functional O'Neill colony falls victim to a series ofmurders and only the sherriff, along with his spirit guide, has a hope of saving them.
-Lunar Decay-Magnificent novel about the moon declaring independence.
-Labyrinth of Night-One of the best something wibbly and alien on Mars novels ever.
Also highly recommend Coyote, Coyote RIsing, Coyote Frontier and Spindrift, a very, very bleak series about the first human colony and his two short story anthologies.
-The short stories of Arthur C Clarke.
-The short stories of Ray Bradbury.
-The Time Traveller's Wife-Which I'm reading at the moment and is peeling the back o my damn head off.
-Starship Troopers-There's hitting and gigantic bugs and most people have seen the movie. It's huge fun and crucially, it's not in Heinlein's completely bloody loopy phase.
-The entire John Wyndham back catalogue. Because there's very little, for me, more fun than quiet, English apocalypses.
-The Hitch-Hiker's Guide series. Total crossover appeal.
-Jumper by Stephen Gould-Excellent and again crossover YA novel.
FANTASY
-Looking for Jake by China Mieville-Totally, UTTERLY superb collection of stories.
-Anything by Phillip Pullman. The Sally Lockhart novels are good Young Adults and the Dark Materials series have major crossover appeal even months after the movie.
-The Lies of Locke Lamora-Have heard nothing but good about this from people I trust.