Science Fiction · Space Opera · Hard Sci-Fi

7 hand-picked science fiction, space opera, and hard sci-fi books curated by NextBookAfter.

Science FictionSpace OperaHard Sci-Fi
Cover of Chasm City

Chasm City

If The Centauri Device's grimy universe of imperial rot and cynical drifters left you hooked on existential dread, Chasm City by Alastair Reynolds delivers that same punk sneer at failed ideologies in a decaying space habitat. Revel in flawed anti-heroes chasing elusive artifacts amid chaotic adventures that subvert space opera tropes with dark humor and anti-imperial bile. It's the perfect grim chase for misfits scoffing at sci-fi optimism.

Cover of Chasm City

Chasm City

You devoured Woken Furies for Takeshi Kovacs' brutal revenge against corporate scum and religious fanatics in a decaying dystopia. Now, Chasm City ramps up that nihilistic thrill with a hardened anti-hero dismantling interstellar greed and identity-shattering tech. Get ready for high-stakes conspiracies, gore-soaked action, and philosophical cynicism that fuels your anti-authoritarian rage.

Cover of House of Suns

House of Suns

If Look to Windward taught you that the best space opera measures galactic empires against the weight of a single regret, House of Suns will devastate you all over again. Reynolds hands you six million years of wandering immortals—clones haunted by ancient grudges, cosmic hubris, and the melancholy of outliving entire civilizations—then dares you to look away as their sardonic banter cracks under the pressure of extinction-level conspiracies.

Cover of Ninefox Gambit

Ninefox Gambit

For fans of Abaddon's Gate's interstellar politics and high-stakes maneuvers, Ninefox Gambit offers a mind-bending space opera where calendrical warfare and heretical technologies drive factions into brutal confrontations, blending tactical brilliance with existential dread.

Cover of Revelation Space

Revelation Space

If Takeshi Kovacs' unapologetic cynicism got under your skin, Revelation Space serves the same moral vacuum with ancient alien horrors and flawed protagonists who make survival an art form. Corporate betrayal, existential paranoia, and brutal interstellar warfare collide in hard sci-fi world-building so gritty you'll feel the vacuum of space. Zero shiny knights allowed.

Cover of The Mote in God's Eye

The Mote in God's Eye

If Pandora's Star hooked you with its sprawling galactic politics, intricate alien mysteries, and tech-driven hubris, The Mote in God's Eye amps it up with an empire on the brink of first-contact catastrophe. Dive into Niven and Pournelle's world of plausible innovations like Alderson Drives and force fields that ground wild futurism in intellectual rigor, echoing Hamilton's meticulous hard sci-fi. Get ready for tension-building naval battles and shocking revelations that reward your patience with mind-blowing payoffs.

Cover of The Quantum Magician

The Quantum Magician

If Thirteen's raw fury of genetically engineered 'thirteens' battling societal hypocrisy left you hungry for more, The Quantum Magician delivers that same hyper-competent anti-hero vibe in a high-stakes heist across fractured space. Dive into transhuman savagery, corporate betrayals, and moral ambiguity that critiques human rot without pulling punches. It's the cynical, adrenaline-fueled rush for misanthropic thrill-seekers who love unflinching action and provocative themes.