Science Fiction · Societal Collapse

9 hand-picked science fiction and societal collapse books curated by NextBookAfter.

Science FictionSocietal Collapse
Cover of American War

American War

Prophet Song gripped you with its breathless portrayal of Ireland's authoritarian slide, validating your fears of nationalism and civil liberties erosion through a mother's desperate fight. Now, American War echoes that raw emotional core in a fractured America ravaged by climate catastrophe and civil war, tracing radicalization's intimate toll with poetic, pitiless prose. If Lynch's haunting rhythm left you hungry for more atmospheric dread and intellectual depth, this is the unflinching catharsis you've been seeking.

Cover of Earth Abides

Earth Abides

Stephen King's The Stand gripped you with its sprawling apocalyptic nightmare, where a superflu wipes out civilization and exposes raw human fragility through an ensemble of flawed survivors battling moral chaos. Earth Abides echoes that primal fear but strips away the supernatural, plunging you into a world reclaimed by nature where ordinary people grapple with entropy, loneliness, and the weight of rebuilding—or letting humanity fade. It's the haunting, introspective follow-up for fans hooked on high-stakes resilience amid utter ruin.

Cover of Lucifer's Hammer

Lucifer's Hammer

If Alas, Babylon's nuclear fallout taught you to trust scrappy neighbors over broken institutions, you're ready for another brutally honest survival epic. When civilization shatters, watch everyday Americans—not fantasy heroes—face the same impossible choices about who lives, who leads, and what morality means when every safety net vanishes.

Cover of Lucifer's Hammer

Lucifer's Hammer

If Timescape's tachyon physics and ecological collapse got under your skin, Lucifer's Hammer turns comet trajectory math into civilization-ending dread. Niven and Pournelle deliver the same academic feuds, interdisciplinary chaos, and Golden Age rigor—but this time, the scientists aren't trying to save the world with time travel. They're watching it burn and doing the brutal calculus of who survives.

Cover of One Second After

One Second After

The Death of Grass hooked you with its unflinching look at civilization crumbling under resource scarcity, where everyman heroes turn ruthless to protect their own in a world of moral ambiguity and tribal loyalty. Dive into One Second After for that same cynical realism, as an EMP strike shatters America, forcing a history professor to lead through savage scarcity and violent clashes. It's the raw, Darwinian thrill that validates your darkest fears about human nature and societal fragility.

Cover of Riddley Walker

Riddley Walker

Earth Abides captivated you with its slow, deliberate unraveling of civilization—nature's patient reclamation, knowledge bleeding away, no heroic saviors. You craved the meditative realism, the flawed everyman navigating tribalism, the unflinching honesty about humanity's fragile grip on progress. That hunger for contemplative collapse fiction deserves to be fed.

Cover of The Death of Grass

The Death of Grass

You fell for The Day of the Triffids because its understated British catastrophe creeps in through everyday disruptions, turning ordinary folks into pragmatic survivors amid ethical chaos. That intellectual thrill of plausible collapse, blending horror with humanism and subtle social critique, hooked you hard—now imagine a follow-up like The Death of Grass that escalates the nightmare with a virus starving civilization, forcing unthinkable moral compromises. It's the raw, unromanticized resilience you crave, probing hubris and hope without the gore.

Cover of The Fifth Season

The Fifth Season

For fans of Butler's resilient heroine forging hope amid collapse, this Hugo-winning epic offers a world shattered by geological cataclysms, where oppressed individuals with extraordinary powers challenge systemic injustice and rebuild society through grit and visionary defiance.

Cover of The Gone World

The Gone World

If Spin's cosmic membrane left you pondering humanity's fragile legacy amid indifferent stars, you'll devour The Gone World's fractured timelines and quantum horrors that echo that same philosophical depth. Wilson's elegant blend of hard sci-fi and intimate character arcs hooked you with slow-burn revelations—Sweterlitsch ramps it up with apocalyptic visions and moral ambiguity that crush with emotional authenticity. Share if you're craving more speculative wonders that probe the human condition without holding back.