Authors you wish would/could write another book

Carl Sagan’s another one.

I’ve noticed that too. It’s certainly a Hitch-Hiker’s Guide book and it’s very entertaining and enjoyable, but it’s not quite the same in a way I’m having trouble putting my finger on.

Which is, ironically, very true to the spirit of the franchise…

I would have liked to read more fiction from Sagan. I know a lot of people are dismissive of Contact, but I like it quite a bit.

I liked Contact, both the book and the film.

Sir Patrick Leigh Fermor DSO OBE.

He’s 94 so, if he is going to finish the trilogy of travel books of which *A Time of Gifts *and Between the Woods and the Water made up the first two volumes, then had had better get a move on.

It was nine years between the first two and twenty-three years have passed since then.

If you have not read them you are in for a treat. He walked from 1933 to 1935 across pre-war Europe from the Hook of Holland to Constantinople at an 18 year old. He left us at the Iron Gates on the Danube on the border of Serbia and Roumania.

I just know it’s not going to happen now. Bastard.

Unfortunately all true. Heinlein’s last really good book was The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress in 1966. The last twenty years of his writing career went off track.
I can even remember when Friday came out in 1982 and a lot of reviewers were essentially saying “this isn’t as bad as his other recent stuff.”

I miss two good pseudonymous thriller writers who both died in 2005: A. J. Quinnell and Trevanian.

John D MacDonald.
I miss Travis McGee and Meyer.

I’ll mostly agree. When The Number of the Beast came out, it was the first one of his that I read “new”, and I was severely disappointed. I, too, felt some relief when Friday came out, because it waasn’t as bad. And I liked Job and The Cat Who Walks THrough Walls, but not as much as his earlier stuff.
But I have to disagree about the last good book being in 1966. I thought Expanded Universe in 1979-80 was really good. I’d already read The Worlds of Robert Heinlein, which it’'s purportedly an “update” of. It goes far beyond that, and a surprising amount is new stuff, not reprint.

I always said that Friday had the outlines of half a dozen excellent novels in it - but none of them went anywhere. I’d love to have seen more of the California Confederacy - “a pure democracy run wild”, or hear more about why the supermen (from Gulf) left the planet, or how the Pope became the Pope in Exile.

I suspect he didn’t think he had enough time left to finish them, so he crammed them all into one omnibus novel.

Whoever those “self-styled supermen” were, they couldn’t have been the nightmare version of Mensa that features in Gulf – because it is made clear near the end of the book that Friday’s Boss, who deeply disapproves of the “supermen” (he’ll pay for Friday to relocate anywhere else but their planet), is Hartley “Kettle Belly” Baldwin from Gulf.

I would’ve liked to know more about the Chicago Imperium, and why they called it that, and why Friday considered it the best place to park her funds.

Aldous Huxley.

I believe it’s actually Tristan Egolf, who wrote Lord of the Barnyard, one of my favorites. He committed suicide a few years ago after submitting the manuscript for his third book, Kornwolf. He was also arrested in the Smoketown Six episode, protesting George Bush in a nude pyramid of people. That’s who I came to mention, along with John Kennedy Toole and David Foster Wallace. Living author: David James Duncan.