Andorion, on 25 February 2014 - 01:53 PM, said:
I am hoping to get suggestions on four types of books:
You're in luck... we do that here.
Hard.
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1. Where some scientists/organizations are creating some secret organism in a lab/have discovered some previously unknown thing somewhere and it breaks out and wreaks havoc. Classic example: Michael Crichton's Jurassic Park.
2. Where some monstrous creature/mutation/previously extinct creature arrives and starts killing people/destroying stuff example: Jaws.
More in the nature of scientists discover rather than create, but on both points let me point you at Fahy's FRAGMENT and PANDEMONIUM, and Alten's MEG series.
Characters and plots, not so much, but great nasty beasties.
Fahy focuses on what happens when a closed ecosystem goes wild for a few million years, while Alten's MEG is exactly what it says on the label... Jurassic Sharks.
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3. This is totally different from the other two; large scale space navy battles, humans vs aliens, humans vs other human factions, preferably with faster than light travel. I really like large-scale space navy with multiple POVS including commanding officers. Example David Weber's Honor Harrington series.
I'm on bk 5 of RM Meluch's TOUR OF THE MERRIMACK and loving it. A bit less military than Weber, but better characters and some great space shootouts.
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4. Where a scientific expedition finds mysterious alien life/artifact on another planet/space/space station/ or even near earth and have to figure it out.
I can't outreco the upthread for Reynolds. He's the master of that sort of thing.
In a more action/thriller vein you may enjoy Patrick Lee's BREACH trilo - THE BREACH, GHOST COUNTRY and DEEP SKY. It's faily light on the science part, doesn't try to explain how things work very much, but uses the sf elements to great effect for the action and occasional mindfuckery.