I was discussing this with Cam: what are the good (or at least halfway interesting) science fiction epics? By which I mean long, somewhat mythic stories with a sense of history and gravitas. All I could think of was Dune and the Gap series (which I never finished due to Stephen Donaldson reaching my "sympathetic portrayal of rape" limit)
Kind of: The Xeelee Sequence and the Foundation Series and Worthing Saga.
EDIT: I'm rather tired and getting all confused in my definitions, so feel free to ignore my qualifiers and mention anything you think deserves mentioning.
gyges_ring has reminded me of semi-epic books which are painted on a large canvas but aren't very mythic or whatever, more like reading a historical novel set in the future e.g C J Cherryh's Union/Alliance books. I realise this is a very subjective thing, and don't think there's anything wrong with a prosaic tone.
Also: A Fire Upon the Deep (how could I forget?)
And thank heaven for Wikipedia (not all space opera is the sort of epic I'm talking about, mind you). *ponders investigating these authors*
Kind of: The Xeelee Sequence and the Foundation Series and Worthing Saga.
EDIT: I'm rather tired and getting all confused in my definitions, so feel free to ignore my qualifiers and mention anything you think deserves mentioning.
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Also: A Fire Upon the Deep (how could I forget?)
And thank heaven for Wikipedia (not all space opera is the sort of epic I'm talking about, mind you). *ponders investigating these authors*
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All of those Stephen Baxter books that fit together. Which I also didn't like them much.
If it was sci-fi with a sense of history and gravitas, I'd say John M. Harrison's Virconium books. But it's a bit dodgy to call that sci-fi in the sense I think you mean.
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and he's just plain yuk... and boring :P
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Being (still) right in the middle of it, I'd have to say that Johnathon Strange and Mr Norrell seems to fit your criteria as well.
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The Star Fraction tetralogy, Ken McLeod. Or the Engines of Light series, same.
The series that begins with Revelations Space, Alastair Reynolds.
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