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Posted by jxmorris12 3/31/2025

The Egg (2009)(www.galactanet.com)
227 points | 91 commentspage 2
xutopia 3/31/2025|
I can't recommend this author enough. Project Hail Mary and The Martian are amazing works of science fiction. Project Hail Mary is actually amazing as an audiobook.
jpm_sd 3/31/2025||
I enjoyed The Martian (novel and movie) but I didn't care for Artemis or Project Hail Mary. I thought the characters and dialogue were fairly weak, even though the underlying ideas were clever. Also I thought that "main character amnesia" was a frustrating plot device (in PHM).

Overall, his authorial voice reminds me a lot of YouTube hosts? Perhaps that's just the cultural moment we're in.

nartho 3/31/2025|||
His stories are always extremely clever and he has an insane sense of rythm. But I hate his style, it reads like a giant Reddit post. My wife asked why I kept complaining about this book I couldn't put down.
bodine30 3/31/2025||||
I had similar feelings for PHM, but it was hard to put a finger on why. I enjoyed it well enough to make it to the end, but I think I have a limited appetite for his "authorial voice". I read it directly after The Bone Clocks and remember thinking I missed David Mitchell's "voice" and wishing there were a way to experience books through another author's voice. Outside the copyright concerns, this could be an interesting use case for AI, a cover band for literature. It's definitely the only way we'll ever get Wes Anderson Star Wars
psadauskas 3/31/2025|||
I like his concepts, and his stories, but agree about the characters. Every single one of them talks like a snarky sarcastic white dude. All the side characters in The Martian, the teenage girl in Artemis, and the rock alien in Project Hail Mary, all speak in the same voice, that of a jokey middle-aged dad.
jjcm 3/31/2025|||
Some other recommendations depending on what you liked about The Egg/Project Hail Mary/The Martian:

If you liked explorative / conceptual Sci Fi, more for the thought exercise than anything else:

- Exhalation by Ted Chiang. A collection of scifi short stories that are quite thought provoking. Some sprinklings of religion in some of them.

- The Illustrated Man by Ray Bradbury. A classic, also a short story collection. Golden age scifi.

- Project Hieroglyph. A collection of authors that partnered with Phd students to write short stories based on their research papers. Great concept with great stories.

If you liked Andy Weir's focus on engineering/building:

- Bobiverse series by Dennis E. Taylor. A man uploads himself into a Von Neummann probe and replicates himself to play Factorio among the stars.

- Destiny's Crucible by Olan Thorensen. MC gets sent to an alternate earth in a technological past, and attempts to re-introduce modern technology and build industry.

heymijo 3/31/2025|||
I went into Project Hail Mary knowing nothing beyond it was from the author of The Martian. It may have been the most enjoyable reading experience I've ever had.
natebc 3/31/2025||
I'm in the back third of Project Hail Mary now. Same. I went into it blind and it's great. I did have to take a break in the very beginning just because dealing with my own existential crisis was enough that I didn't need a fictional one ... lol?

Artemis was good too.

nerdzoid 3/31/2025||
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pests 3/31/2025||
Then why are you in this thread
Dragonai 3/31/2025||
I will never fail to be amused by people here and on Reddit who spend their calories diving into discussions about things they don't like to tell people they don't like them.
ghaff 3/31/2025||
If they actually take the time to write a thoughtful critique, that's one thing. But just saying they don't like something really doesn't add to the discussion.
malshe 3/31/2025|||
You are absolutely correct, Mary is amazing as an audiobook. Loved both his books.
maxhille 3/31/2025|||
Funny coincidence - I just finished the Project Hail Mary audiobook this morning and loved it.

Any recommendations for the next audiobook?

dmcc365 3/31/2025||
Mickey7 is pretty good if you enjoyed Project Hail Mary. Alternatively, the Murderbot series.
chrismatheson 3/31/2025|||
I can 2nd the murderbot series.

Also there bobiverse series is great IMHO

dmayle 3/31/2025||||
On the vein of similar books, in the late 80s, early 90's a read a science fiction anthology that had more or less the same exact story as Mickey7.

Humans discover a place (I think on Mars), built by Aliens, but it's a deathtrap. So they send someone in to navigate the deathtrap using a clone, and a sort of remote control (something like Avatar).

Each time the clone dies, the person piloting it survives, but has gained the memory of what went wrong, and can try again (kind of like Edge of Tomorrow).

The point of the story is the very end, when the pilot makes it fully through the space.

Has anoyone every heard of this storay and know the name/author? (Bonus points of you know the anthology as well)

dmayle 3/31/2025||
I answered my own question! It's called Rogue Moon (1960) by Algis Budry, and was in the anthology The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume Two
tstrimple 3/31/2025||||
The main thing keeping me from the murderbot series is the value prop. They are incredibly short which doesn’t play as well with a credit based purchasing system. For seven credits I get a little over 20 hours of content. Project Hail Mary is 16 hours for one credit.
thoughtpalette 3/31/2025|||
Just finished Mickey7, lot's of fun. I gotta see the movie now.

LOVE the Murderbot series, highly recommend.

Chiyote 3/31/2025||
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PufPufPuf 4/1/2025||
18 years ago you wrote an essay which shares the general premise with this short story: https://charmonium.com/infinite-reincarnation/

What exactly do you mean by "plagiarizing" here? Sharing the basic idea?

Chiyote3 4/1/2025||
[dead]
voidUpdate 3/31/2025||
I read this some time ago and really enjoyed it, and personally, it does align somewhat with how I feel about the world. I don't treat it like a bible or anything, but the concept of, at some point, being the consciousness inside of everyone, past and future, does make a certain amount of sense to me
disdi 4/2/2025||
I think the story presents a thought-provoking concept about life, death, and reincarnation. The idea that all humans are essentially different incarnations of the same soul, experiencing every perspective across time to mature into something greater, is both mind-bending and oddly comforting. It’s a clever twist on the meaning of existence, blending philosophy with a cosmic narrative.
jpm_sd 3/31/2025||
(2009)

See also:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Egg_(Weir_short_story)

Chiyote 3/31/2025|
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pkilgore 3/31/2025||
Pleasant way to start today thanks for submitting.
p2detar 3/31/2025||
Back then what I liked about this story was the fact that a single "soul" experiences itself across infinite timelines.

What I found interesting though was the temporal like experience presented from the pov of God. It doesn't seem like the God in the story is omnipotent.

zidad 3/31/2025||
Love it! I liked his other short stories as well: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/35502775-the-egg-and-oth...
0xbadc0de5 3/31/2025||
Feels vaguely reminiscent of Scott Adams' "God's Debris" which was also making the rounds in the 00's. Essentially just interesting thought experiments playing with the "what if" idea of a higher power.
geor9e 3/31/2025||
Is there any website of more science fiction extra-short stories that are this short? I know sci-fi might not be the preferred term for stories that are this philosophical or borderline religious, but I don't know a better term.
gambiting 3/31/2025||
"The Machine Stops" is one that is always in my memory - not quite as short as this, but very short nonetheless. And impressive given that it was written in 1909:

https://www.cs.ucdavis.edu/~koehl/Teaching/ECS188/PDF_files/...

skiman10 3/31/2025|||
You might enjoy some of qntm's work[0].

Maybe start with this short ("I Don't Know, Timmy, Being God Is a Big Responsibility")[1] since it is similar to The Egg in my opinion.

[0] https://qntm.org/fiction [1] https://qntm.org/responsibilit

ghaff 3/31/2025||
I don't know of a website. But I bet there are published collections out there though I don't have one.
fogbeak 3/31/2025|
Reading this on 4chan in high school is what got me into science fiction. Brings back memories! Very happy that Andy Weir got his due with The Martian.
Chiyote 3/31/2025|
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