Science Fiction
Related: About this forumAbout re-read a book by a favorite author I don't remember the later portions of....
Author David Brin of the amazing both personable, and galactic spanning Uplift series; also wrote The Postman.
I liked Costner's Postman movie. Brin said he got the spirit of it right.
Serms he only covered the first part?
One can like, love, or feel meh, etc even with a favorite author's particular book.
So I'm so curious as to why I don't remember the rest. I can say writing this I do have some bits of memory of the text of the first part as he wrote it vs the movie.
Anyway, I just renewed my library card after a lapse a few weeks ago. It dawned on me after just returning an (my first) audio book, bc they didn't seem to have the ebook; oh, I should see if they have The Postman. And they did!
Reading to commence tonight. 👍

Pluvious
(5,074 posts)I read and enjoyed many of his works, and like yourself, the details of Postman have faded over time.
I vaguely recall the movie being a bit of a let down, as it's hard to really capture the magic and depth of original works.
The Kiln People and The Practice Effect were very entertaining and imho quite creative.
The last book I read of his was Existence (2012)
It was very ambitious, rich in many creative and interesting subplots.
Apple's AI describes it..
Plot Summary
The Discovery: In a near future set around 2050, Gerald Livingston, an orbital garbage collector, finds an unknown crystalline object amidst space debris.
The Artifact: This artifact turns out to be an alien emissary probe containing digitized representatives of various alien species, offering humanity an invitation to join a galactic community.
Humanity's Reaction: News of the discovery creates global chaos, with reactions ranging from fear and selfishness to hope and insatiable curiosity.
The Rival Artifact: Simultaneously, in China, Peng Xiang Bin, a scavenger, discovers an intact alien capsule that seems to hold a different, possibly rival, message.
The Crystal Plague: It is revealed that these crystals are a form of technological virus, and humanity must learn to navigate a potentially hostile universe to avoid the "crystal plague".
Exploring the Past: The story also involves exploring the fate of other civilizations by finding destroyed robot emissaries in the asteroid belt, which were victims of ancient wars and the crystal plague.
Themes
First Contact: Existence offers a realistic depiction of how human society would respond to the discovery of alien life.
Humanity's Future: The novel grapples with the question of whether civilizations can survive the challenges of the universe and avoid making fatal mistakes.
Technology vs. Humanity: It explores the societal and individual impacts of advanced technologies like AI and virtual reality on human existence.
electric_blue68
(23,983 posts)I liked the movie. Keeping to the postman/mail delivery part of the story, along with the Holnists ( 🤔 think Proud Boys like, possibly) which continues on, but mixed in with 3 major other plot lines would have been way too for a single movie. A ?mini-series might have worked.
The extra interesting discovery for me was remembering a sort of transcendental scene all this years. I only got one detail right, but that memory was a reason I wanted to re-read it. It was a very satisfying scene, and also surprisingly it happened way later in the story.
I loved the fictional part of the book - Existence. the crystals; what a wild invention. The asteroid belt discoveries were quite amazing!
Never read The Kiln People and The Practice Effect.
I re-read books, as well as new ones. My copy of Existence got messed up. Going to see if it's an ebook. Might rebuy it at some point.
Pluvious
(5,074 posts)I'm considering re-reading TPM again, it's been a long time heh
The Practice Effect was a light story, just kinda fun playing with a unique idea
The Kiln People was a mind trip, taking a very trippy idea, and building a story around it, I highly recommend reading it