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.

  • xorollo@leminal.space
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    4 minutes ago

    Just today, I finished the Revenant Gun from the Machineries of Empire series by Yoon Ha Lee. I love the quote from his bio – it’s apt. “Yoon’s hobbies include composing music, art, and destroying the reader.”

    This was a series you have to submit to the ride. The world is weird, but you will pick up on what is going on as you go. In this way, it reminds me very much of Dune, and of trying to understand the language in the HBO show Deadwood (an audio version of submitting to the weird language). When I read Dune, I ended up spending almost as much time talking about passages on forums as I did actually reading. This book doesn’t have as much written about it – I suppose because it is newer – but I would love a reading group for this series.

    I spent the early part of the year and most of last year reading the Wheel of Time Series. I started the Hundred Thousand Kingdoms by N.K. Jamison, but didn’t finish before my library check-out expired – and it hasn’t become available again.

  • Philharmonic3@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Murderbot Diaries was my top this year by far. Probably top series since I first read hitchhikers guide to the galaxy. It’s so fun and well paced and the audiobook is well made.

  • MrsDoyle@sh.itjust.works
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    6 days 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.

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    7 days 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.

    • AFK BRB Chocolate@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 days ago

      Okay, I finished We Are Legion (Bobiverse book one). It was fun, and I’ll probably read the next. Nothing especially deep, but amusing. A few things bugged me a little:

      Minor spoilers
      • They spent all that time and energy trying to figure out how to feed the people on earth while they built ships, then put them in stasis for a multi-year trip. Why didn’t they start by building the stasis chambers and not having to worry about feeding them?
      • He has a rationale for life in the galaxy being compatible with earth life, but it doesn’t explain why the animals are so similar (e.g., birds with feathers). That’s not super unusual, but it seemed odd that the first intelligent beings they found were psychologically so human. Strains credibility.
      • I liked all the different story threads as we follow the different Bobs, but the sacrifice was that we didn’t go very deep into any of them and the ending felt kind of abrupt.
      • Gwaer@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        Some of the later books might be more your speed if you like sticking with a single Bob. I personally didn’t care for those ones.

        I assume the reason things look like other things is cause we have a tendency to describe new things as similar to other things even when they aren’t. Plus there’s probably some scientific evidence behind form and function. See https://www.google.com/search?hl=en-us&q=carcinization&spell=1

        I’m very keen on where the story is going as it stands right now. But I’m impatient for more books. And inevitably will be disappointed in the end I’m sure. Most of the time these situations lead to philosophical cop outs.

  • reddig33@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    Been enjoying the “murderbot” series by Martha Wells. The audiobook versions narrated by Kevin Free are particularly well done. He’s a good narrator.

    They’re supposedly making a TV series out of it. Not sure how that’s going to work since a lot of the action takes place inside the bot’s brain. They’ve also cast Alexander Skarsgård which seems like a misstep already.

    • AFK BRB Chocolate@lemmy.worldOP
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      8 days ago

      I’ve only listened to a handful of audiobooks. I have a short work commute, and there’s rarely a time when I want to engage with a story that I can’t just read it, which I prefer. But I looked him up and he sure has done a lot of them, so he’s clearly popular.

    • seaQueue@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      Murderbot is a really fun read, I picked the series up a year or two ago and thoroughly enjoyed it

  • Gwaer@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    The bobiverse books ended up being what I enjoyed most in 2024. Really looking forward to more of those.

  • ghostsinthephotograph@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    To Sleep In A Sea Of Stars - one of the most action-packed books I’ve read, even with a few lengthy “hibernation” space travel sections. Felt like an entire trilogy happening in a single book. Seems prime for a movie treatment, but would also be next to impossible to do in a single movie without completely butchering.

  • benignintervention@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    I worked through both the Sprawl trilogy and the Three Body Problem trilogy and they were both fantastic. Almost ruined the rest of my reading for weeks after that. The Three Body Problem and The Dark Forest might be the most original science fiction since Neuromancer

    • elephantium@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      If you liked the Three Body Problem, might I recommend The Killing Star by Pellegrino, Charles R? It’s another slant on some similar themes.

    • MentalEdge
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      8 days ago

      While Cixian Liu coined the words “dark forest” to describe this particular solution to the fermi paradox, he did not invent it.

      Having also read the series, I find myself always having to mention that while the books do some of the best exploration of more complex sci-fi concepts, they are WEIRD about gender.

      The whole thing with men becoming “feminized” by an age of peace, reeks. The author goes out of his way to equate competence, decisiveness and conviction with the male gender, and tries to very akwardly make the point that without strife, these things become unnecessary, and even abhorred. To the point that “masculinity” as a social construct disappears from society. Then replaced entirely by “femininity” which the author VERY explicitly equates with “beauty”, naivete, indecision and weakness.

      As if women choose to be with men only out of necessity, and if given a easy life and therefore the choice, they would pair off with other women. Which is effectively what happens because according to the author such a society would pressure men into becoming indistinguishable from women in order to remain appealing.

      If I had to boil the trilogy down to a message about gender, it would be “men are ugly but useful, women are beautiful but useless”. That’s not exactly progressive…

      A major female characters entire character is that she is the “perfect” woman, and she is literally given as payment to the main-character, by the government. And no-one in the story bats an eye at this! Including the woman herself!

      I kept expecting her to be disingenuous. You know, because she was literally treated like an object, given as a prize. But then it time-skips to her having the dudes kid! So apparently shes’s fine with it?

      Execept then when the government says so, she’s perfectly down with up and leaving the guy, this time to force him into action by withholding her. Again she’s a mere plot device, treated like a thing that can not only be given, by also taken. She barely exists as anything more than the concept “perfect woman”. But you can’t just have a human character without there being a person in there. Yet Liu goes ahead anyway.

      The subtext about gender in the writing isn’t subtle, and it really fucking bothered me when reading the series. I tuned out a lot when listening to the audiobooks.

      The sci-fi concepts are some of the best! Only one example is the way the books explained FTL travel, and it is some of the most compelling I’ve seen!

      But I really can’t imagine recommending the series without a disclaimer about it containing some of the most sexist writing I’ve ever come across.

      • benignintervention@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        Interesting take. I read her part as more of a discourse on power disparity. The man had all the power in the world and used it to find his idea of the perfect woman. I don’t remember it digging too deeply into her character or even at all into her motivations, but from the power dynamic it wouldn’t have mattered to him anyway. I read it more as uncomfortable subservience to male domineering. The plot in this arc was driven by his fantasy, and his fantasy alone.

        Also, Haldeman did the same gender changes with The Forever War as an exaggeration of his return from Vietnam. I saw the gender arc as more of a “hard times make soft men, soft men make hard times” thing and an exploration of complacency and opulence. But I see your point, there could be other ways to make a similar point

        • MentalEdge
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          8 days ago

          The plot in this arc was driven by his fantasy, and his fantasy alone.

          Her appearance and then disappearance was engineered by the government. Because they wanted him to save a world he didn’t feel like fighting for. Both times.

          Ok fine. The government can find a perfect woman, who also loves him for real.

          It cannot then just take her back. You can’t tell me she’s fine with just up and leaving the love of HER life, cuz some government dude said so.

          She is treated like a non-person, by the author. Not just the people in the story. The personality that would have to exist in her head for her to be the way she was in the story, is not possible.

          Maybe it works for people who are less intuitive about people, but psychologically she’s a gaping plot hole. The same way physics or math errors can be.

          • benignintervention@lemmy.world
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            8 days ago

            I fundamentally disagree here. Her choices are to stay where she is in whatever kind of life that is and know her species is doomed, or sleep until he secures her child’s future. Those are heavy stakes and the world in the story could support either decision. I’m certainly not in the position to guess what a parent would do with that choice.

            However, I do agree that the author did not give her enough agency for us to know how this decision happened. It definitely could have been explored more. The greater tragedy is that her husband treats her like a non-person, like she’s his imagination incarnate, and that is never explored in any detail.

            • MentalEdge
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              8 days ago

              Why would she not stick around for that? Why is her first way to drive her partner to fulfill a wish of hers what should be a last resort in any sane relationship?

              And by hibernating into the future, she is taking the child towards the danger, not away from it.

              Why is saving the world his (and hers) responsibility at all? There is no guarantee he’ll succeed. In fact the earth IS destroyed in the end.

              If the decision was hers, it’s pretty objectively the wrong one. Even moreso within the framework of what is known about her. She doesn’t make sense.

              • benignintervention@lemmy.world
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                8 days ago

                I was never comfortable with that relationship. She was essentially coerced into it because the global government gave him the power to do anything he wanted as long as he said it would help protect humanity. I’m honestly surprised she stayed that long at all. We also only see her through her husband’s perspective, which leaves an awful lot about the relationship unsaid and likely misinterpreted.

                I think we’re just going to disagree on this point, but I do see your point with the other examples earlier

        • MentalEdge
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          8 days ago

          Maybe if you could see each plot device in isolation, you might be able to excuse the stuff. But the sexism is an ever-present background noise in the whole series.

          The plot doesn’t put a woman in charge except when it wants bad things to happen. Contacting trisolaris. Surrendering to trisolaris.

          It doesn’t have a single woman charachter that isn’t a caricature of personhood. Even the female perspective lead is written like her head is empty, and she’s making decisions based on essentially nothing. Stuff just happens to her. And the one decision she makes, dooms earth.

          The story literally makes a point of the fact that even a woman from hard times, is always the wrong person to put in charge. And that what is needed is a man, and a “real one”, at that. (The other candidates)

          The whole damn series ends on a man absolving the woman that doomed earth by explaining that her being a woman isn’t her fault. That she was elected because she was “fairest of them all” by a humanity that was “at its fairest”. As if beauty and femininity goes hand in hand with weakness and incompetence.

          As if humanity’s beauty comes at the expense of its drive for survival.

          I found the sci-fi cool as hell, but as far is can tell, the message of the story is outright disgusting.

          It tries to uplift women as the “fairer half” of man. And completely infantilizes them as it does so.

          As if beauty and strength, sensitivity and intelligence, innocence and ferocity, etc. are different mutually exclusive sides of the coin that is humanity. And as if man and woman can only ever represent one or the other.

          I kept hoping for a plot point or charachter that would break that mold. There were so, so many chances.

          It doesn’t happen.

          • benignintervention@lemmy.world
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            8 days ago

            I can see that. I might have to go through the series again and see how I notice it now.

            But in the context of the story the first woman was abused by a draconian regime and hated humanity. And the second woman didn’t really have a choice. Humanity was doomed either way, from the trisolarans or any other sufficiently advanced species, and she chose to stop fighting. In the end, it was all the same and the absolution she receives is to address her guilt about a lose-lose situation.

            Also how do I tag spoilers? I’ll go back and edit

            • MentalEdge
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              8 days ago

              And the second woman didn’t really have a choice

              That’s something the books suffer from in general. Stuff happens in very convenient sequence with very little agency for the reader to live through.

              She was the only woman considered, and only due to popular demand. The other candidates were all men, from an age when “real” ones existed.

              They were chosen specifically due to being suitable for the task at hand, she was not.

              The button needed to be pressed. She didn’t do it. According to the story, no person from the age of peace would have either, nor would ANY woman, because apparently no female candidates aside from her were even considered.

              Eventually, a man somewhere else, presses it for her.

              That in isolation these plot points can be excused, doesn’t change the fact that every aspect of a fictional story is deliberate to at least some extent. The series consistently makes events and the people who are in them men and women, depending on what needs to be felt, said, or done.

              When women do stuff, things go wrong. Men then step in to fix it, until a woman ruins things further. It happens several times in the series.

              And when you combine that with what characters say to each about what humanity and its genders represent, I don’t approve.

              Characters don’t just say stuff. That’s especially deliberate, and from the author. She could have come to terms with her guilt entirely on her own, without a man, or another person at all. And she could have come to terms with it through some completely different logic, that didn’t need to make it about her gender.

              The author barely lets her think for herself to begin with. In fairly harsh contrast to the male perspective characters.

    • AFK BRB Chocolate@lemmy.worldOP
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      8 days ago

      I know I’m an outlier, but I didn’t really care for The Three Body Problem. Characters did too many things that just didn’t seem like likely responses, and some of the premise felt unrealistic to me. But I know I’m in the minority.

      The Sprawl trilogy is great. I read it when it was out originally, and reread Neuromancer more recently. Oh, but if you’re ever tempted, don’t listen to the Neuromancer audiobook narrated by Gibson. Wonderful writer, atrocious reader.

      • ikidd@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        I don’t get the TBP fanboi-ism, it reads like it was written by a teenager that’s never encountered SF before. It’s certainly not in the same class as Neuromancer, for crying out loud.

        • AFK BRB Chocolate@lemmy.worldOP
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          7 days ago

          I’m sure there’s an odd element caused by the fact that it was translated from Chinese (which involved tweaks for a western audience), but it certainly didn’t come close to living up to the hype for me.

          • ikidd@lemmy.world
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            7 days ago

            I know what you mean about not living up to the hype; I read all that Hugo fanfare and thought, I’ll just buy the whole series. I got one and a half books in and thought to myself, what a waste of money, I can’t make myself finish this book, let alone the series.

            I remember reading a thread a few years back on reddit that someone who was a native speaker said it was even worse in the original Chinese.

  • valek879@sh.itjust.works
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    7 days ago

    Just working my way through a reread of the expanse since it’s been a few years and the…final? book has been released. I definitely enjoyed the first 4 books more than 5 and 6. But book 7 is back up to snuff!

    It’s Fantasy but I need to mention that I’ve been devouring The Stormlight Archive by Brandon Sanderson! These books might just be my all time favorites for fantasy!

    • AFK BRB Chocolate@lemmy.worldOP
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      8 days ago

      I started reading The Expanse series (including the short stories) after watching the series. I got through The Churn, which is the short story after book 3, and haven’t read further. I didn’t decide not to read more, but every time I go to pick the next book from my list, I don’t feel motivated to read the next Expanse book. They’ve all been good - not sure what the issue is for me.

      Have you read The Mistborn series and, if so, do you think it or Stormlight Archive is the better starting place for Sanderson?

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        Just did Mistborn. Dropped out at the 4th book. Just couldn’t care about the characters any longer. Too bad, everyone else loves it.

        • AFK BRB Chocolate@lemmy.worldOP
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          8 days ago

          What did you think of the first book or two? It’s not unusual for the latter books of a series to be weaker or less engaging - I’m happy with any one book that I like.

      • vladmech@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        I’d recommend starting with Mistborn, it’s a bit less all at once in your face and a great read regardless. Plus all his Cosmere books are interconnected to a degree, with Stormlight being the most by far, and I’d say you’ll get a bit more out of it having read some of the other Cosmere stuff.

        All that to say though, Stormlight’s fantastic and if you just want to yolo in you’ll get it fine!

      • valek879@sh.itjust.works
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        7 days ago

        I read Mistborn and loved it, my partner finished it a week or two later and then we both struggled to get into the second book. Vin, the main character treats a creature that is in her thrall with extreme prejudice. While it certainly fits the character it was such a change of tone that it threw both of us right out of the series. Mix in a whole new world of politics and coalition building and the story plods. I dropped the Mistborn series like 7 or 8 chapters into The Well of Ascension.

        I’ll come back to it in audiobook form.

        Speaking of audiobooks, I’ve listened to all of The Stormlight Archive. Audiobooks have one major advantage to actually reading the words, it is easier to multitask. If the story is boring I’m less likely to notice while preparing dinner. With Stormlight however I listened to the books 12 hours a day. The voice actors are Kate Reading and Michael Kramer, they only work on books they like. They also did all of Wheel of Time together.

        Anyway, what I’m trying to say here is that I frequently sat down and just listened to the story throughout the day because I am so engrossed in the world and the lives of Kaladin, Syl, Shalan, and others. It’s a storytelling medium that lends itself to multitasking and I frequently stopped to just listen.

        I think it’s hard to go wrong with a starting point in the Cosmere. The magic system in Mistborn is really interesting and the world is dark and gritty like chewing charcoal; Unpleasant not offensive. The Stormlight Archive is bold and wide ranging with concepts, ideas, and exploration of pain, trauma, and metal health. I recently read Tress and the Emerald Sea, a light-hearted romp about a girl who lives on a desolate rock in the middle of an ocean and wants to stay there.

        Just jump in, the worst thing that can happen is you find it’s not to your taste. When that happens it’s all good and I find some other masterpiece to chew on. It happens for me with videogames all the time. Elden Ring is not for me. :)

      • Serinus@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        Stormlight just feels… bland. I say it’s a great read if you’re stuck in an airport. Otherwise there are better, popular series to read. Namely, The Expanse and the Silo series. Patrick Rothfuss is also great, but like George RR Martin, he’ll never finish the last book.

        • valek879@sh.itjust.works
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          7 days ago

          I dropped ASOIAF in the middle of the third book. It probably had something to do with knowing it’d never be finished, but I just felt bored. It was all so high stakes and meaningless, not for me.

          The writing in The Expanse is grating, it’s all he said, she said, he said, they said, he said, said said said said said said said said said said said. If I hadn’t been listening to it while at work I’d have bailed in the first book. If you can get past that the series has great world building and I love Avarsarsla.

          Rothfuss is indeed great but I can’t recommend it to anyone knowing we’re only getting two nights of the three promised.

          Silo is actually on my list.

          I’ve also been rereading the Honorverse by David Weber. I love it still but it gets to be a slog and the story is feels like it’s the same everytime. I want to get past book 6 or 7 but never have.

          I can’t say enough good things about the Stormlight Archive.

          But then again I also enjoyed the hell out of Brent Weeks’ Lightbringer series which seemed to be mostly disliked on the whole. I read it before the 4th and 5th books were released so I’m not sure where it goes and need to get back to it some day.

          Speaking of Weeks, the Night Angel Trilogy is bomb. It’s no literary masterpiece but it’s a dark and gritty world that sets your expectations and fulfills them over and over again. The story is cliche and I like it. The characters are fun to follow as they navigate the plot points I can see coming from books away.

          • Serinus@lemmy.world
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            7 days ago

            The Expanse definitely has a bad start. They’re terrible at introducing characters, despite their attempts to do so. But everything after that is great.

    • reddig33@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Expanse books are great. I’m still pissed Amazon hasn’t made the final books into series seasons.

      Sadly, I wasn’t impressed with the current SA Corey novel that starts a new non-Expanse series. It was extremely dull.

      • valek879@sh.itjust.works
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        7 days ago

        Honestly I’m sure I’ll find it similar but it’s the last book, I’ve just got to try! I’ve set the series down for a break and a change of pace whole I read the latest Stormlight book, Wind and Truth. It’s a good break.

      • valek879@sh.itjust.works
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        7 days ago

        Don’t force it! I think if you read books solely because other people say it’s good then you’re doing it wrong! :)

        If you were interested in the Cosmere but wanted something light…much lighter. Then try Tress and the Emerald Sea. The narrator breaks the 4th wall a bit and speaks directly to you but if that isn’t an immediate deal breaker the story is light-hearted and adventurous. It follows a girl, Tress, as she leaves home to save her beau.

        • Breezy@lemmy.world
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          7 days 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.

  • elbowgrease@lemm.ee
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    8 days ago

    the Culture series by Iain Banks sucked me in completely! it starts with Consider Phlebas for anyone looking to jump in.

  • quaff@lemmy.ca
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    8 days ago

    Children of Time and its sequels are top notch, especially if you love animals and commentary on societal roles. It’s in my top Sci-Fi.

    If you enjoyed Children of Time, definitely check out “A Memory Called Empire” by Arkady Martine. It’s a Sci-Fi political mystery with lots of fun word play. Aside from some really cool tech, the book really tackles what it means to be “Other” and how colonialism effects one’s idea of self. Some really cool ideas in this book. Easily my top Sci-Fi read this year.

    • AFK BRB Chocolate@lemmy.worldOP
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      8 days ago

      I read the Martine book and its sequel last year - I agree, they’re great.

      I almost put one of the Children of Time sequels on the list, but wanted to keep it to five and had the others I wanted to mention.

      • quaff@lemmy.ca
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        8 days ago

        Children of Ruin was my favourite. The slight horror tones of some of the story really got me! And also… 🐙

        • moncharleskey@lemmy.zip
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          8 days ago

          My problem with Children of Ruin is that aside from the horror vibe, which was really fresh, the rest of the story felt like a rehash of the first book.

          • quaff@lemmy.ca
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            8 days ago

            Minor spoilers… but it was fun seeing how a contemporary to Kern uplifted a different species, and more deliberately. Which adds to the universe rather than just have it be… Kern is God kind of thing. And seeing a species that was more emotion based was pretty great too. Different types of intelligences… not to mention the completely alien Nodan species.