It’s about the end of the year, and I know there will all sorts of lists of the best books published this year, so this is a different question: regardless of when published, which SF books that you personally read this year did you enjoy the most. I’m also asking which you enjoyed instead of which you thought were the best, so feel free to include fluff without shame.

I’ll go first. Of the 60+ books I read this year, here are the ones I liked most. No significant spoilers, not in any order.

Children of Time, Adrian Tchaikovsky
  • A project to uplift monkeys on a terraformed world, at the peak of human civilization, is sabotaged by people who don’t think humans should play god. There follows a human civil war that nearly destroys civilization. A couple thousand years later, an ark ship of human remnants leaving an uninhabitable earth is heading towards that terraformed planet. This is a great book, with lots to say on intelligence, the nature of people, and both the fragility and heartiness of life.
Kiln People, David Brin
  • Set a couple hundred years in the future, technology is ubiquitous that lets people make a living clay duplicate of themselves that has their memory and thoughts to the point they were created, lasts about a day, and whose memories can be reintegrated with the real person if desired. The duplicates are property, have no rights, and are used to do almost all work and to take any risks without risking the humans. A private detective and some of his duplicates gets pulled into an increasingly complex plot that could reshape society. This is a thoroughly enjoyable book, with lots of twists, and an interesting narrative as we follow copies who may or may not reintegrate with our detective.
Sleeping Giants, Sylvain Neuvel
  • A little girl falls down a deep hole in the woods and lands on a gigantic, glowing, metal hand that’s thousands of years old. This is a wonderful alien artifact story with some interesting twists. I really enjoyed this book. Not exactly hard SF, but checks a lot of the boxes for me, including the wonder of discovery.
The Peripheral, William Gibson
  • A computer server links the late 2020s to a time 70 years later, allowing communication and telepresence between the two times. A young woman in the earlier time witnesses a murder in the later time and gets sucked into a battle between powerful people in both times. This is a great book; I think I could have recognized it as Gibson’s writing even if I hadn’t known it in advance. Very interesting premise, engaging characters, and fun without feeling like fluff.
The Left Hand of Darkness, Ursula K. Le Guin
  • A coalition of human planets has sent the first envoy to an icy world where the people are gender neutral and sterile most of the time, but once a month become male or female (essentially randomly) and fertile. This is a classic, written in 1969, and my second reading - the first being in the late 80s. Le Guin creates an amazingly rich world, even with its harsh, frozen landscape. The characters grow to understand how gender impacts their cultures, and the biases they didn’t know they had. It’s also aged remarkably well for an SF book written 55 years ago. There’s nothing about it that feels outdated.

A couple notes:

  • If I hadn’t stuck to my own “enjoyed” constraint, the list might have looked different. For instance, Perdido Street Station, by Meiville, is a really great book, but there’s so much misery and sadness that it’s hard to say I “enjoyed” it.

  • I hesitated to put The Left Hand Of Darkness on the list, simply because Le Guin is so widely recognized as a great master, and the book one of her greatest, that it seemed unfair. In the end, it seemed unfair to exclude it for such an artificial reason.

  • @[email protected]
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    106 months ago

    The most memorable reads from this year were:

    The Broken Earth trilogy by N. K. Jemisin. While at first, the setting appears to be a fairly standard fantasy, there is a sci-fi depth to the world, its climate, cataclysms, history, and orogeny (“magic power” of the world).

    And, if you are a fan of heavy-handed dystopian satire, Venomous Lumpsucker by Ned Beauman. It takes place in a not-too-distant future where a somewhat-apathetic researcher and a corporate scammer are trying to find the last living Venomous Lumpsucker, a highly intelligent fish species. There is climate change, corporate greed, half-baked international agreements, hackers, horrible AI, and, of course, delusional megalomaniac billionaires.

  • Magicalus
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    86 months ago

    The Trigger by Arthur C Clarke was my inyroduction to sci fi, and I picked it up in Augustish. Now I’m on an Asimov binge.

    • AFK BRB ChocolateOP
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      16 months ago

      Oh, so many amazing books. Loved the Robot series, loved the Foundation series.

      • @[email protected]
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        36 months ago

        I watched the first episode, but it didn’t hit like the book. I didn’t really care for it. The book was very good though.

        • @[email protected]
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          26 months ago

          I thought the show was a great companion to the books. I would watch in tandem while reading switching up where i was a bit further ahead in the book. Of course i didnt realize the show was cramming different stories from multiple books all together. It also gave me a better look at the characters and it helped get to know them in a way by comparing tv and book characters. Very good series! Ive read up to book 8 in the past few months.

    • @[email protected]
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      56 months ago

      Oh boy, you’re in for a treat if you’re just entering The Expanse for the first time. Enjoy!

    • AFK BRB ChocolateOP
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      26 months ago

      Machineries of Empires series sounds interesting.

      Thanks for the interesting post.

    • AFK BRB ChocolateOP
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      16 months ago

      As mentioned elsewhere in this thread, I haven’t read any Sanderson yet, and will likely try Mistborn soon. Never read Hamilton.

  • Davel23
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    26 months ago

    In case you’re not aware, there is a sequel to The Peripheral called Agency. I didn’t think it was quite as good as the first, but still a good read. There is a planned third book in the series as well.

    • WatDabney
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      36 months ago

      Mmm…

      I thought that The Peripheral was the best book Gibson’s written since at least Idoru, and I was very impressed and pleased.

      But I think that Agency is quite possibly the worst book he’s ever written.

      • AFK BRB ChocolateOP
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        16 months ago

        Oh, I’m kind of surprised. I didn’t like Agency as well as The Peripheral, but mostly because I felt like a lot of the interesting ground was already covered in the earlier book.

        The one I was most disappointed in that I’ve read recently is Spook Country, the second Blue Ant book. It just struck me as hardly at all SF, though the story was fine.

        • WatDabney
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          26 months ago

          It’s been too long since I read it to clearly remember the details, but yeah - I thought it was awful.

          I most remember being disappointed that it deliberately and inexplicably sidelined Flynne, since her character was easily one of the best parts of The Peripheral. I have no idea what the point of that was - it seemed just as if Gibson somehow resented the fact that she was a memorable character and didn’t want her to take over the story. Verity, by contrast, was a very weak character, and I remember thinking that it was ironic that she seemed to have no real agency of her own, and instead was just pulled along by the plot.

          I can’t really pinpoint anything beyond that though - as I say, I don’t really remember the details - just my reaction.

          Spook Country, to me, was just drab. It was like Gibson laid out the basic plot, which was pretty much just a standard political thriller, then filled in the blanks with whatever bits of technology and pop culture had his attention at the moment. It worked fine as a novel, but had nothing new to say really.

          That entire trilogy was pretty poor IMO, and was a large part of the reason that I was so impressed by The Peripheral.

          And thinking about it in that light, it’s possible that my negative reaction to Agency was driven at least in part by the contrast to The Peripheral - that Spook Country (and more likely Pattern Recognition) were at least as bad, but at the time I read them, my expectations for Gibson were so low that they didn’t have the same impact.

          • AFK BRB ChocolateOP
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            16 months ago

            He seems to like exploring different things in the same universe with mostly different characters. The only consistent character in Blue Ant is Bigend. So I wasn’t surprised by the different set of characters in Agency - there was actually more overlapping in that one - but I agree that Flynn was the most interesting in The Peripheral.

  • MrsDoyle
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    36 months ago

    Translation State by Ann Leckie, and Fall, or Dodge in Hell, by Neal Stephenson.

    I loved them both: the Leckie because the cultures of her characters are so varied and interesting; and Fall despite me not being into computer games at all. It’s fascinating though, having a main character become digital and see how that would play out.

  • mesa
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    6 months ago

    These two series:

    • Dungeon Crawler Karl.
    • The Wandering inn.

    I have a preference.

    • mesa
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      36 months ago

      Oh I also forgot, The nature of predators. I like the idea of humans as the weird aliens.

  • @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    I read the Endymion half of the Hyperion Cantos this year I think the whole series is tied for my favorite Sci Fi series, right next to the Expanse books.

    1- Hyperion Cantos by Dan Simmons

    1- Expanse series by James S A Corey

    3- Bobiverse by Dennis Taylor

    Honorable mentions: Fatherland by Robert Harris; Consider Phelbas by Iain M Banks

    • AFK BRB ChocolateOP
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      16 months ago

      The Hyperion series is great. I read Consider Phlebas this year as well, and I’m glad someone warned be that it’s one of the weaker of the series. I liked the next in the series better.

  • @[email protected]
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    36 months ago

    Travis Starnes: Imperium

    A six novel long story about a space pilot testing a new drive - and ending up in an alternative version of Rome.

  • @[email protected]
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    6 months ago
    • Riverworld saga by Philip José Farmer - cool take on using historical figures in a Sci-Fi setting.
    • Bobiverse by Dennis E. Taylor - Programmers In Spaaace! A good collection of books that makes you think a bit, funny enough I think Dennis read the Riverworld books.
    • Revelation space series (book 1 and 2) by Alastair Reynolds - a bio engineering space travel transhumanism Sci-Fi
    • @[email protected]
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      46 months ago

      I would recommend Chasm City by Reynolds if you liked the Revelation Space books. I don’t think its considered part of the series but its set in the same universe.

    • AFK BRB ChocolateOP
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      46 months ago

      I’ve been thinking about rereading those. I read them all in the late 80s and really enjoyed them. I’ve read so much since then, I wonder what I’d think now.

        • @[email protected]
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          26 months ago

          I’ve just read Dune, Messiah, and I’m part way through children of dune. Wow, they are much better than the movies. So many themes were dropped to make it more palatable, and I have no idea how they are going to do the storyline from messiah in the third movie.