I have read a TON of contemporary SciFi authors. I really enjoy
Stuff I like
Iain M. Banks
I liked the Martha Wells Murderbot books.
I loved We Are Legion, We Are Bob and have read all the books by him.
I like Alastair Reynolds. I liked the Poseidon’s Children trilogy better than Revalation Space Series (but I liked that too).
I really like G. S. Jennsen - even though she’s cheesy. I think I like her because of her progressive attitude and powerful female characters.
I like Charles Stross, but I didn’t like Accelerando. I like his other books a lot.
I liked A Memory Called Empire and A Desolation Called Peace by Arkady Martine.
I like Corey Doctorow, sometimes. Walkaway was good.
I like Daniel Suarez, most of the time for similar reasons.
I REALLY liked the Nexus series by Ramez Naam.
I liked the Red Rising books by Pierce Brown and I’ve really been enjoying the Sollan Empire books by Christopher Ruocchio, which I think are similar and even better.
I like Adrian Tchaikovsky and really liked The Final Architecture books and Doorways to Eden.(I didn’t get that into Children of Time though).
I usually like Neil Stephenson. (The Fall or Dodge In Hell is quite a tedious book).
I’ve liked everything I’ve read by Verner Vinge.
I liked Hyperion like everybody else. Unlike everybody else, I think I liked the Endymion books even better.
I read some Ken MacLeod (the first Corporation Wars book) and it was fine… but I haven’t felt like going back.
I REALLY enjoy John Scalzi, though I found the Old Man’s War books started to get stale after a while. It’s high calorie, low nutrition brain candy, but I know that going in and it passes the time.
I really liked Derek Kunsken’s Quantum Magician books. And started reading his prequel series, set on Venus, and I couldn’t really get into it.
I enjoy Space Race books like Erik Flint / Ryk Spoor’s Boundary series, Saturn Run by John Sanford and Delta V by Daniel Suarez.
I love the Expanse.
I find Kim Stanley Robinson hit or miss. I really enjoyed the Mars books and The Years of Rice and Salt was fun (though a little tedious). 2312 drags and drags and nothing happens and Aurora is the same AND also sad.
I liked Permanence by Karl Schroeder. It could have used a little more… conflict? I had this same problem with Becky Chambers. The characters are all too well intentioned and the dramatic tension suffered a little.
I read all the Star Kingdom books by Lindsay Buroker. I thought they were a super fun adventure that just kept delivering from the beginning of the series to the end, even if it was clearly aimed at a more YA demographic.
I REALLY liked Velocity Weapon and the sequels by Megan O’Keefe. I found her Steam Punk series much less impressive. I’ve been meaning to try her galactic empire series, but I haven’t quite been in the mood to start it.
I read Sue Burke’s Semiosis Duology. I wasn’t expecting to like it but I really did! The physical science aspects were a little softer than I would have liked, but the biological science was really cool, as was the anarcho-pacifist political philosophy.
I read Yoon Ha Lee’s Ninefox Gambit and the sequels. I thought they were really fun, I wish they’d explored Calendrical technology more.
I thought the Neo G books by KB Wagers (A Pale Light in the Black and sequels) were good. Her characters are great. But again, very light on the sciences and technology. I’m in the mood for something harder. Also, not realistic that the champion hand to hand fighter in the entire Earth space military is a 110 pound woman, but I just pretended she’s cyber enhanced.
I just finished the Wormwood trilogy (Rosewater and sequels) by Tade Thomson. They were great.
Stuff I Don’t Like
Orson Scott Card did not age well, unlike Timothy Zahn, who’s gotten a lot more progressive in his story telling in the last two decades.
I don’t like Niel Asher. His in your face Libertarianism and conservative ideology annoys me, which is too bad because other than that he’s a good story teller.
I find Peter F. Hamilton hit or miss for the same reason. But I really liked Pandora’s Star.
I find AG Riddle hit or miss. I like his thought experiments, but he doesn’t really care if his stories / characters are logically consistent. Ramez Naam and Daniel Suarez do what Riddle does but WAAAY better.
I didn’t like Blindsight. I know, this makes me some kind of heretic. I just didn’t find the idea of such a dysfunctional crew being entrusted with such an important mission believable.
I couldn’t get into Ann Leckie. I WANTED to like it, but I just didn’t find her writing very engaging. I’ve put the physical book down once AND turned the audio book off on a road trip.
I did not like Tamsyn Muir.
I did not like the Three Body Problem, although I see the appeal and it’s nice to read something by a non western author. I found the pro Chinese politics a little too heavy handed.
I cannot get into Greg Egan. I find his writing style way too obtuse. Reading is Egan is like having a PHD in mathematics and a PHD in quantum physics, then going to Burning Man and doing 16 hits of acid.
I finally got around to trying The Long Way To A Small Angry Planet and I could NOT get into it. I agree with reviewers who complain nothing interesting ever happens.
People keep recommending Mary Robinette Kowal, but something about the alternate history just doesn’t grab me.
People keep recommending Ted Chiang. But I don’t want short stories (Murderbot somehow managed to be an exception). The longer the better.
People have recommended the Last Watch by J. S. Dewes, but others have told me things about the book that makes me think I won’t like it. Standing guard at the edge of the universe makes zero sense, I think by proposing it’s possible you lost me. Edge of the galaxy… Maybe, with 10 septillion robotic war ships. But edge of the universe? I think I’m out. If you know something I don’t about this book, feel free to say so.
The Futurological Congress by Stanisław Lem
Solaris! Summa Technologiae!!
Andy Weir
I’m half way through the Martian from like a year and a half ago. I forgot it’s in my Audible. I could restart it. If I don’t finish something, there’s usually a reason and I don’t often go back. But I don’t remember why I switched away.
Project Hail Mary is really good
*Project Hail Mary is better!
Thank you for this list, I just finished the sun symbol audiobooks by Scott Sigler (loved Ray Porter’s narration) and was looking for more suggestions.
Can I just say thank fuck I found someone else who doesn’t like three body problem.
It’s not just the heavy handed politics. It’s literally everything about the book. Narrative devices used are absolutely garbage. Oh there’s a video game for some reason, and people LARP as Newton and Qin Shih Huang down to their exact personalities. Why the fuck?
In the second book there’s an entire section dedicated to the protag’s fantasies. A woman should have at most a Bachelor’s so she’s smart but not smart enough (paraphrased). What the fuck? And don’t get me started on the suicide bomb strat that immediately saw the Muslims and Japanese roped in.
The characters are incredibly dull. They just do one thing, but they don’t even do that well. Oh here’s Mr. Army guy; personality: army salute-y pragmatic unfeeling. The only character that has an added dimension would be Da Shi the policeman, but adding one more dimension to a point simply results in a plane.
People claim he had innovative ideas for sci-fi. They do realise that the Dark Forest Hypothesis was proposed by someone other than cixin, right?
This turned out to be a rant – could you tell I hate-read this book cause it pissed me off to no end?
Yeah, maybe not talking about more of what happened during the Cultural Revolution? I thought he did a good job, portraying the awfulness without getting off-topic. Or the reader may have been expecting something less banal? I’ve read propaganda works with a strong bend against a country’s before, like Heart of Darkness, or in a more light-hearted manner, Catch-22. I’d be curious what the OP felt was too pro-china, as it was something that went completely by my radar.
I thought Liu Cixin portrayed the US quite favourably in the second book, I was pleasantly surprised. Really took a ‘equal but different’ approach to other cultures I feel.
Trisolarians suck though, except for that one cool one.
I’m with you, I thought it came off as decidedly anti-China. I was actually surprised they got away with it!
Yeah reading what happened (outside of the book) the same vibes are there. It really made me think the endorsement on the cover from obama was genuine lol
Roger Zelazny - Book Of Amber Liu Cixin - Dark Forest trilogy David Weber - Honor series David Drake, lots of good series to choose from Timothy Zahn - again heaps of series
Zelazny - Read it in high school, remember liking it.
Cixin Liu - He’s up there on my list as someone I didn’t like.
Webber - Read a bunch of the Honorverse books two decades ago, same time I was reading Bujold and Cherryh and McCaffery.
Zahn - I’ve read literally everything Zahn has ever written, pleased to see him changing with the times (I mentioned this above).
Right now, I’m interested in things written a bit more recently.
Bobiverse - I’ve just consumed these non stop worth the read. Expeditionary force - its 15 books !
For something outside your comfort zone but we’ll worh it Dunfeon Crawler Carl
Bobiverse - It’s up there on my list. I’ve also read Taylor’s other work.
Expeditionary Force - I started it… it would make a better Amazon Prime / Netflix series than book series.
Dungeon Crawler Carl - WTF?! Lol, how did I not know this exists! OMG! Hahaha… amazing. Maybe this is it.
If you end up liking Dungeon Crawler Carl, I’d also recommend the Completionist Chronicles by Dakota Krout, the first book is Ritualist. Based on what I know of DCC, they are both fairly silly LitRPGS.
I’ve been doing LitRPG (the realityTV of fantasy) for a while now, if you’re into it:
Just started Battle Mage Farmer, less stats and more proper fantasy story, not as meta. But engaging, and a unique way to cap MC overpowering.
He Who Fights With Monsters, on the sillier side but it has a lot of heart and 80s movie references.
Primal Hunter, about at textbook LitRPG as it comes, but I like most of the characters, I guess. Slow build, I think it’s on book 10 and nowhere near Max level.
Fifth Era Apocalypse. Most likely to stem directly from a DnD campaign rather than SNES JRPG.
System Universe. Most OP protagonist, it has a very popcorny Fast and Furious just go with it style.
Mayor of Noobtown, I think it was my first, and still lots of fun.
Kingmaker. My most recent, not as good as the rest but it’s still early. Has time to find it’s way.
Nope. Ascend Online, more mmoLitRPG, and also reminds me that I dabbled in more haremy LitRPG stuff before, mostly stuff by Harmon Cooper. Kinda feel dirty about those.
Some that might not have been mentioned:
Will Wight the Cradle series. Kinda silly but definitely fun.
Julian May the Pleiocene Saga. One of my favorites. Written in the 90s so… Not current but still good.
Mark Lawrence - enjoying most of his books. The Impossible Times trilogy is certainly fun.
Richard Morgan used to be one of my favorites until Netflix ruined the Takeshi Kovacs books.
Again with the older authors: Philip K. Dick (everything). Vonnegut (most, but not the last few books) Gene Wolfe books of the new sun cycle, 12 books if you consider the books of the long sun/short sun. Kinda surreal but hypnotic and addicting. Strugatsky, Roadside Picnic. A classic. Ursula K. Leguin, most of her titles - not as easily read -as there is an emotional level that needs to be absorbed. The Books of Earthsea and the Dispossessed are absolute master level writing.
Richard Morgan used to be one of my favorites until Netflix ruined the Takeshi Kovacs books.
They really, really did. As someone who loved the books, I found the show unwatchable, which bummed out a couple of my friends who hadn’t read the books and were super excited to share this “great new cyberpunk show” with me.
Seveneves was great if you haven’t read that yet.
Agreed, it’s great. :)
Warhammer 40k has a huge sci-fi universe. Lore has been building since the 80s with hundreds of books. I enjoy them, but I’m not particularly well read.
Have you heard of S.H. Jucha’s Silver Ships series? I’ve recently started it and am enjoying it. It’s not hard sci-fi but it’s close enough to make things feel accessible without much suspension of disbelief.
I have not heard of this! Thank you.
Sure! I hope you find it enjoyable!
Some suggestions
- Saturn Returns by Sean Williams
- the Uplift universe by David Brin (Sundiver, Uplift war, Uplift trilogy etc)
- Existence by David Brin
- Helix and Helix Wars by Eric Brown
- the Shoal Sequence by Gary Gibson
A lot of sci Fi fans also get on well with Terry Pratchett. The audio books are really good, although I prefer Stephen Briggs who did the 2nd half to Nigel Planer. You can’t go wrong with Going Postal, it doesn’t rely on much from the earlier books, or Men at Arms if you wanted an earlier book in the discworld series.
If you wanted to stick to sci-fi, The Stars my Destination is one of my favorites, it’s a modern count of Monte Cristo. Speaker for the dead is also one of my favorites, the sequel to enders game.
I didn’t see Pratchett on the list, even if you have been through the Diskworld before, the re-reads often reveal things you missed.
I’m not as well read as you, so have no idea if that actually matches your taste.
Another (older though) lesser known series is the Dragonriders of Pern. Great if you like to follow a lot of characters (in their own mini series) that interact over an 80 year main series. Starts as fantasy, becomes sci-fi (With dragons!)
Just to second Diskworld books. They’re fun and the world itself is very enjoyable. I did find that some books weren’t as good as others l, the earlier witches ones felt like they dragged at times but the watch and anything with the Patrician or Moist was just utter gold!
Hitchhiker’s Guide (free audio) maybe?
https://archive.org/details/hhgttg-ab/001±+Hitchhikers+Guide+To+The+Galaxy+Pt+01+Of+66.mp3
Have you read the uplift universe books by David Brin?
Classics, but I did read them a long time ago. No idea how they hold up.