Science Fiction · Flawed Protagonists

9 hand-picked science fiction and flawed protagonists books curated by NextBookAfter.

Science FictionFlawed Protagonists
Cover of A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe

A Big Ship at the Edge of the Universe

You chased Nova's Cyborg Katin through singing stars and mythic feuds, craving space opera that thinks as hard as it burns. Alex White hurls you into a galaxy where magic is currency, treasure hunts breed vendettas, and every heist carries the weight of class warfare—all wrapped in prose that never mistakes velocity for shallowness.

Cover of A Memory Called Empire

A Memory Called Empire

You survived Golden Son's blood-soaked political knifework—now experience rebellion through espionage, where every diplomatic exchange could trigger an empire's collapse. A Memory Called Empire delivers that same relentless tension through psychological warfare, court intrigue dense enough to suffocate in, and a protagonist torn between identity and empire just as Darrow was split between Red and Gold.

Cover of Ancillary Justice

Ancillary Justice

If cloning, body-swapping, and malleable selfhood made The Ophiuchi Hotline irresistible, Ancillary Justice splinters consciousness across thousands of bodies in a sprawling, bureaucratic empire that feels authentically treacherous. Breq's fragmented revenge narrative channels Lilo's flawed cunning through moral gray zones, gender-fluid worlds, and cosmic puzzles that honor Varley's intellectual rebellion—no lectures, just warp-speed speculation where identity becomes the ultimate playground.

Cover of Gateway

Gateway

Orbitsville gave you infinite living space and that brain-melting sense of cosmic scale—Gateway delivers the same jaw-dropping wonder through ancient alien tech no one understands, but swaps optimistic escape for a grittier gamble. Flawed prospectors risk oblivion chasing interstellar riches, societal implications cut deep, and the prose stays lean and merciless. Golden-age rigor meets psychological realism, zero heroes required.

Cover of Ninefox Gambit

Ninefox Gambit

You survived the Ring Gate's reality-warping brutality and Clarissa's blood-soaked redemption—now weaponize ideology itself. Ninefox Gambit delivers the same intricate factional warfare, morally compromised protagonists, and high-stakes space combat you craved, but replaces protomolecule dread with mathematical heresies that warp spacetime through sheer conviction. Every tactical choice drags flawed soldiers deeper into the kind of ethical vertigo that made Abaddon's Gate impossible to put down.

Cover of QualityLand

QualityLand

If 'The Space Merchants' hooked you with its savage takedown of unchecked capitalism and manipulative ad empires, 'QualityLand' amps up that cynicism for the AI age, exposing how algorithms exploit our every desire. Fans raved about the flawed anti-heroes awakening to societal absurdities without preachiness—here, it's all that plus prescient tech satire that hits eerily close to home. Share if you're ready for dark humor that indicts corporate overreach with intellectual bite.

Cover of Revelation Space

Revelation Space

Leviathan Wakes captivated with its raw blend of plausible science, flawed protagonists like Holden and Miller, and escalating crises from personal obsessions to protomolecule horrors. Revelation Space amps up that intensity with relativistic brutality, ancient alien threats, and factional wars echoing Belt-Earth divides. If you thrive on intellectual thrills grounded in ethical ambiguity and unforgiving space, this is the follow-up that will shatter your expectations.

Cover of Roadside Picnic

Roadside Picnic

Rogue Moon broke you with men shattering against alien puzzles they'll never solve. Roadside Picnic doubles down—desperate stalkers crawling through a Zone that doesn't care if they live, die, or understand, where ambition is just another word for self-destruction. Same unforgiving cosmos, new flavor of despair.

Cover of The Gone-Away World

The Gone-Away World

Going Postal nailed that perfect balance: razor-sharp satire on corporate greed wrapped in genuine heart for society's underdogs. You loved Moist von Lipwig because he redeemed himself through cunning, not sermons—a trickster who outsmarted the system while Pratchett's wordplay and footnotes rewarded every reread. That blend of irreverent humor with hopeful humanism, where progress triumphs despite bureaucratic absurdity, is exactly why this next book will feel like coming home.