Science Fiction · Literary Sci-Fi

5 hand-picked science fiction and literary sci-fi books curated by NextBookAfter.

Science FictionLiterary Sci-Fi
Cover of Engine Summer

Engine Summer

You devoured Riddley Walker's savage dialect and post-nuclear ruins, craving that unfiltered dive into humanity's superstitious underbelly and cyclical doom. Engine Summer picks up that crooked path, weaving enigmatic quests through forgotten lore with flawed survivors stumbling sans redemption. It's the experimental allegory fix for intellectual misfits mocking progress and embracing primal grit.

Cover of Good Morning, Midnight

Good Morning, Midnight

If Greybeard's sterile Britain broke you in the best way, this is your next obsession. Two aging astronomers—one stranded at the pole, one adrift in space—bear witness to civilization's exhale with the same unflinching literary ruthlessness, zero false hope, and prose that turns human obsolescence into devastating art. For readers done with youth-obsessed apocalypse and hungry for existential dread laced with quiet grace.

Cover of Sea of Tranquility

Sea of Tranquility

If you felt A Requiem for Fallen Stars in your bones—that cosmic despair validating your own quiet failures—Sea of Tranquility carries the same unflinching weight across centuries. Mandel refuses consolation, tracing broken dreams through speculative poetry that turns time itself into a symbol of inevitable entropy. This is for readers who need their cynicism witnessed, not fixed.

Cover of The Employees

The Employees

Ripe didn't just capture millennial burnout—it made that black hole of depression feel like the only honest thing in Silicon Valley's glossy nightmare. For readers who found catharsis in Cassie's refusal to pretend ambition isn't hollow, who craved prose that cuts through Instagram-filtered success stories to expose the void beneath, there's a spaceship waiting where the work is just as dehumanizing and the isolation cuts even deeper.

Cover of The Vanished Birds

The Vanished Birds

If Time War destroyed you with its poetic longing between rivals, The Vanished Birds offers that same emotional devastation—but stretched across decades by the cruelest physics. Jimenez builds forbidden intimacy through time dilation itself, where every reunion costs years, and found families form through silence, wit, and survival against corporate empires. It's speculative fiction for readers who want their hearts wrecked by language, not explosions.