Favorite Science Fiction

List of the Month
April 2026 (see all)
Description
Strange new worlds. Futures bleak or wondrous. Inventions marvelous and terrible. Science fiction speaks to our curiosity and sense of wonder, and to our quest to discover more and push the boundaries of science and technology. Our April 2026 List of the Month is devoted to our Favorite Science Fiction. Each member may add ten titles, and is encouraged to add notes explaining their choices.
1
50,362 members
803 reviews
½ 4.3
50 Members
jjwilson61, baaic, pgmcc, craso, ReshiBec, jeanh12, manque, kleo, laketa, marc.slingerland, Cecrow, ghostshirt, indregard, CarltonC, chibitika, nessreader, cameronl, Heather39, sturlington, igorken, Spiffyhink, chokai, vwinsloe, Jarandel, al.vick, Bookwomble, missizicks, Verkruissen, Hope_H, stephanieann1983, msjudy, denalong, Pargia, BaileyC, thy42, RV_Athenaeum, ManWithAnAgenda, ChrisG1, Cotton213, slimikin, feanor451, suzemazice, rkosarko, thurstonhsreads, JakobHobbs, BigEnk, patch5, Krishsoni, Frank_Thomas, hym31496
Explanations
pgmcc: Dune was an amazing political story told in space. It is like Lampedusa's "The Leopard" imagined in space. It has the same lessons and observations of life and political upheaval.
CarltonC: For me, the most wondrous alien world building story. First read in the 1970’s and reread with equal joy about ten years ago.
vwinsloe: A cautionary tale, not a road map.
suzemazice: Dune was my very first science fiction novel I read. In college, a seatmate had it and said she was taking a class. I read it and was hooked. My favorite part is when Paul is being tested and the mantra he recites… “I must not fear. Fear is the mind killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see it’s path. Where the fear has gone, there will be nothing. Only I will remain.”
3
43,810 members
802 reviews
4.2
39 Members
baaic, se71, ghilbrae, beyondthefourthwall, ReshiBec, yoyogod, Avron, Othemts, wester, NorthernStar, midnightblues, CarltonC, cameronl, kevinashley, birder4106, Pathug50, igorken, pperez333, aterry97, BonnieJune54, Maddz, missizicks, JackMello, timetunnel, SF_fan_mae, Jim.Shine, elorin, thy42, RV_Athenaeum, Boand, spencerjperry, slimikin, JonathonL88, JeftiDastl, Albert_Terego, armckibbin, Maxine.Hartley.476, HarlequinHavok, Krishsoni
Explanations
CarltonC: By the time I read in 1980 I had read enough SF for this to really hit the spot: funny and quotable.
igorken: Humour is hard. Adams makes it look easy.
Maddz: Witty take on various SF tropes.
Boand: My most favourite and enjoyable Sci-Fi book ever! Also a laugh a minute, and hugely memorable
4
18,832 members
454 reviews
4.1
35 Members
Aquila, karenb, aprille, hipdeep, Euryale, arethusarose, Stevil2001, pitjrw, Karlstar, manque, lizzy50usa, CarltonC, kevinashley, Heather39, Pathug50, sturlington, Spiffyhink, aterry97, Jarandel, JackMello, rhondak101book, timetunnel, msjudy, SandraArdnas, ManWithAnAgenda, gaius.octavius, Charon07, CamilleGuezennec, gamesbook, ngoomie, uenvs, WiseBadger, armckibbin, Maxine.Hartley.476, RomanaWho
Explanations
Aquila: Really hard to choose between this and The Dispossessed, but I love and read this more.
CarltonC: When I read this was so far beyond anything that I had thought about before, it was a whole alien world.
5
22,701 members
1,377 reviews
½ 4.3
6
45,453 members
1,123 reviews
½ 4.3
28 Members
timspalding, gilroy, cpg, craso, se71, Karlstar, raidergirl3, PortiaLong, saskia17, marc.slingerland, cbl_tn, chibitika, merrystar, perennialreader, aterry97, al.vick, Verkruissen, rhondak101book, stephanieann1983, elorin, RV_Athenaeum, jhereg, LibraryNBC, cindra-cat, gamesbook, JakobHobbs, patch5, Albert_Terego
Explanations
gilroy: Interstellar war, starships, space stations, extraterrestrials. What isn't science fiction about this to warrant a downvote?
7
7,565 members
88 reviews
½ 4.3
24 Members
Karlstar, Avron, midnightblues, Cecrow, CarltonC, cameronl, Pathug50, dfmorgan, AnnieMod, pperez333, aterry97, IrishSue, al.vick, JackMello, Darth-Heather, spencerjperry, ChrisG1, skid0612, jhereg, feanor451, JakobHobbs, JeftiDastl, patch5, Maxine.Hartley.476
Explanations
al.vick: I think I like the robot series better, but they are all in the same universe/series
8
12,467 members
551 reviews
½ 4.3
9
50,894 members
813 reviews
3.8
23 Members
aprille, baaic, TeresaInTexas, TheDivineOomba, weebaby, Othemts, jlshall, sturlington, BonnieJune54, Tess_W, rhondak101book, timetunnel, treegardner, Andrew_Orange, ManWithAnAgenda, Brandy1411, Red-Hawk, itstheblob, CamilleGuezennec, ZephCraven, ltfl_udeneuchatel, mistressofmuses, JakobHobbs
Explanations
rhondak101book: I have taught this book many times. Each time I teach it, I always find something new, or I am surprised how much I am enjoying re-reading it.
11
63,114 members
1,140 reviews
4
21 Members
wyvernfriend, gilroy, hipdeep, clamairy, arethusarose, pitjrw, marc.slingerland, jlshall, CarltonC, cbl_tn, Pathug50, dfmorgan, perennialreader, Tess_W, missizicks, Hope_H, SF_fan_mae, msjudy, Pargia, mistressofmuses, Maxine.Hartley.476
Explanations
gilroy: To the modern reader, I imagine this feels like a contemporary fiction or even nonfiction, but it is clearly a science fiction piece, even if it isn't starships and explosions. Not sure why the downvote.
hipdeep: Bradbury predicts wall-size TVs, sleeping in your AirPods, and personalized adaptive feeds of content, all well before they happened. Plus there's fire-shooting robots. Clearly sci-fi.
12
45,384 members
1,038 reviews
4
19 Members
hipdeep, TeresaInTexas, jjmcgaffey, EerierIdyllMeme, knerd.knitter, weebaby, mzonderm, Othemts, saskia17, marc.slingerland, Hope_H, treegardner, Andrew_Orange, gaius.octavius, Red-Hawk, itstheblob, ltfl_udeneuchatel, Maxine.Hartley.476, battelle
Explanations
weebaby: This book is absolutely foundational to the scope of my thinking; how everything in the universe is connected. I had a recurring dream as a child of the planets coming down to me in my backyard and singing to me because of this book.
13
48,224 members
1,233 reviews
4.1
14
12,842 members
310 reviews
4.2
17 Members
Quaisior, Euryale, paradoxosalpha, arethusarose, Stevil2001, indregard, CarltonC, Heather39, JackMello, timetunnel, ManWithAnAgenda, ChrisG1, skid0612, uenvs, Another_Bibliomane, BigEnk, wrenphelpslib
Explanations
paradoxosalpha: Worth ten times its weight in socio-political theory.
CarltonC: Made me think about politics.
16
21,892 members
434 reviews
4.1
18 Members
wyvernfriend, hipdeep, baaic, knerd.knitter, weebaby, PortiaLong, mavinger, vwinsloe, eclbates, msemmag, dtowell, slimikin, gamesbook, rkosarko, mistressofmuses, ivoryt, patch5, battelle
Explanations
weebaby: I was just thinking last night how EXCELLENT this book is!
18
13,743 members
306 reviews
4.2
15 Members
pgmcc, anglemark, Stevil2001, Karlstar, laketa, midnightblues, Spiffyhink, pperez333, Jarandel, Verkruissen, Neil_Luvs_Books, ChrisG1, gamesbook, JeftiDastl, battelle
Explanations
Neil_Luvs_Books: A series of stories explaining why each character has chosen to pilgrimage to the Shrike - a kind of death cult around a being sheathed in blades. What the stories have in common and why they have been brought together is the mystery that binds this well written story together.
20
14,587 members
874 reviews
4.1
17 Members
ablachly, TheDivineOomba, pitjrw, laketa, marc.slingerland, CarltonC, cbl_tn, Heather39, Spiffyhink, missizicks, Verkruissen, timetunnel, Brandy1411, mageestarr, Charon07, ZephCraven, ltfl_udeneuchatel
Explanations
CarltonC: An inspired post-apocalyptic novel, not without its horror, but well written and engaging.
21
7,156 members
224 reviews
4.1
15 Members
anglemark, Euryale, r.orrison, midnightblues, Cecrow, kevinashley, RBeffa, AnnieMod, igorken, pperez333, vwinsloe, CamilleGuezennec, gamesbook, Another_Bibliomane, MolecularBio
Explanations
kevinashley: So many of Iain M. Banks works are worth inclusion on this list but this is the only one (so far) I've wanted to re-read. Space Opera with a side helping of whimsical ship names.
igorken: Iain M. Banks' space opera is among the best out there.
22
8,747 members
397 reviews
4.1
24
13,224 members
341 reviews
3.9
15 Members
aprille, pitjrw, CarltonC, kevinashley, Spiffyhink, Maddz, Jarandel, rhondak101book, Hope_H, Darth-Heather, BaileyC, ManWithAnAgenda, gaius.octavius, rkosarko, JeftiDastl
Explanations
Maddz: One of the few post-apocalypse novels I can tolerate.
25
12,089 members
182 reviews
3.8
14 Members
paradoxosalpha, kleo, wester, jlshall, dfmorgan, perennialreader, gypsysmom, Hope_H, Darth-Heather, elorin, Pargia, skid0612, jhereg, patch5
Explanations
paradoxosalpha: Martian romance, Cabellian comedy, and Thelemic tragedy; a touchstone for gnosis.
gypsysmom: Published when I had read all of Heinlein's juvenile books and ushered me into the world of adult sf.
26
21,433 members
358 reviews
½ 3.7
13 Members
Stevil2001, yoyogod, jlshall, cameronl, sturlington, BonnieJune54, chokai, themulhern, Boand, feanor451, itstheblob, JakobHobbs, BigEnk
Explanations
themulhern: I think this is probably Wells's best science fiction work, and it is funny, in a grim way.
27
26,674 members
1,015 reviews
3.8
28
25,919 members
417 reviews
3.9
13 Members
hipdeep, amberwitch, manque, igorken, pperez333, vwinsloe, gypsysmom, Pargia, coffeewithastraw, gamesbook, rkosarko, BigEnk, patch5
Explanations
igorken: The quintessential cyberpunk novel.
gypsysmom: Still holds up even though it's over 40 years old
29
8,398 members
239 reviews
4
12 Members
tardis, clamairy, bnielsen, wester, jlshall, featherbear, tommi180744, DalkeithLibrary, Boand, spencerjperry, Tosta, JonathonL88
Explanations
featherbear: In the country of the blind! Feudalism! Monsters! The dark side of Richard Powers's The Overstory!
30
9,186 members
316 reviews
4.2
11 Members
Euryale, knerd.knitter, PortiaLong, elenchus, Heather39, Jarandel, themulhern, Darth-Heather, coffeewithastraw, feanor451, battelle
Explanations
elenchus: Anathem and Excession make for an interesting pair: different approaches to the same discussion.
themulhern: Stephenson peaked with this book. There is everything he always writes about, arranged in the best possible way.
31
9,375 members
207 reviews
3.8
11 Members
aprille, marc.slingerland, Cecrow, nessreader, RBeffa, AnnieMod, igorken, pperez333, al.vick, vladms, Maxine.Hartley.476
Explanations
igorken: Probably not for everybody, but certainly top 10 for me.
32
22,141 members
1,385 reviews
4
33
18,566 members
363 reviews
4
34
46,563 members
1,682 reviews
4.1
35
7,164 members
394 reviews
4
11 Members
anglemark, craso, pitjrw, cbl_tn, oceancat, Watry, rhondak101book, Jim.Shine, Pargia, skid0612, battelle
Explanations
rhondak101book: I really like Miéville's writing, and I think this is his best book.
36
76,372 members
3,638 reviews
½ 4.3
37
665 members
19 reviews
3.8
11 Members
wyvernfriend, tardis, jjmcgaffey, lizzy50usa, elenchus, nessreader, kevinashley, dfmorgan, AnnieMod, elorin, battelle
Explanations
tardis: This is definitely science fiction and one of my favourites from way back. Don't know why it was thumbed down.
elenchus: I can see no rational reason for excluding this title from this list, but as there is no formal way to contest the downvote, I'm including on my list to counter the unjustified thumb despite not yet having read the work myself. (It is on my wishlist.)
kevinashley: Hospital station (and others in the same series) isn't deep but it is entertaining and easy reading with a touch of humour.
AnnieMod: No idea what the down thumb is for but this is definitely SF. And one of my favorites when I was just starting with the genre. :)
38
7,378 members
324 reviews
3.9
39
22,113 members
530 reviews
4
40
7,246 members
424 reviews
4
41
18,761 members
577 reviews
3.9
10 Members
baaic, EerierIdyllMeme, gypsysmom, missizicks, Verkruissen, gaius.octavius, coffeewithastraw, Charon07, mistressofmuses, WiseBadger
Explanations
gypsysmom: Atwood can write in any genre but this sf book really shows her chops.
43
11,333 members
212 reviews
4
10 Members
pgmcc, Euryale, yoyogod, midnightblues, jlshall, al.vick, Bookwomble, vladms, pnppl, feanor451
Explanations
pgmcc: This was totally cohesive story told in a balanced and realistic fashion. My favourite part was the ending where it stated "The Ramans do everything in threes". The subsequent books were a disappointment. Rama II was simply the same again. The following two books were pointless exercises in attempted sociological discussion, but proved too off course to be worth following.
pnppl: Not my fav of his but he nails keeping the Ramans mysterious while still giving us tidbits, feels oddly realistic
44
5,340 members
142 reviews
3.9
10 Members
craso, Pathug50, paulmdh, waltzmn, ahef1963, missizicks, discarded, DalkeithLibrary, WendyRobyn, spencerjperry
Explanations
waltzmn: For the neurodiverse, this is truly a great book about failure to fit in and its costs. Had the standalone novel not been listed by someone else, I would recommend getting the book as part of Anthony Boucher’s “A Treasury of Great Science Fiction,” which also contains Theodore Sturgeon’s though-provoking “The [Widget], the [Wadget], and Boff” and Alfred Bester’s much-loved “The Stars My Destination.”
45
3,762 members
111 reviews
4.2
8 Members
knerd.knitter, midnightblues, Darth-Heather, RV_Athenaeum, ManWithAnAgenda, Brandy1411, Tosta, Cotton213
Explanations
midnightblues: Clever, engaging, fast-paced, way more complex than you might credit at first, and it gets better the further in you get. The most fresh and inventive series I've seen in a long while.
46
7,766 members
189 reviews
3.9
47
5,395 members
192 reviews
3.9
48
18,572 members
438 reviews
4.1
49
3,921 members
162 reviews
4
7 Members
Aquila, ablachly, Stevil2001, vwinsloe, msemmag, mistressofmuses, WiseBadger
Explanations
Aquila: Empire and what it takes not to be subsumed.
50
3,341 members
78 reviews
½ 4.4
8 Members
wyvernfriend, Quaisior, baaic, ReshiBec, saskia17, merrystar, jpalfrey, elorin
Explanations
jpalfrey: A story of love, politics, and comedy
51
9,687 members
414 reviews
4.1
52
49,155 members
775 reviews
4.1
53
4,441 members
78 reviews
4.2
8 Members
timspalding, paradoxosalpha, TheDivineOomba, Karlstar, PortiaLong, Maddz, pnppl, gaius.octavius
Explanations
paradoxosalpha: The best of Vinge's Zones of Thought books.
Maddz: We aren't as intelligent as we think!
54
4,167 members
227 reviews
4.2
55
3,704 members
169 reviews
3.9
7 Members
Aquila, anglemark, Spiffyhink, Jarandel, Jim.Shine, pnppl, ivoryt
Explanations
Aquila: Mind blowing (didn't help that my ebook reader gave me the sections out of order)
pnppl: Hard sf with vampires
56
3,559 members
82 reviews
½ 4.4
7 Members
tardis, Quaisior, jjmcgaffey, InfoQuest, nessreader, gaius.octavius, gamesbook
Explanations
tardis: Any of the Vorkosigan books could be on my list, but Memory is the one I re-read most often.
57
7,341 members
319 reviews
4.1
58
474 members
3 reviews
½ 4.4
59
1,889 members
99 reviews
4.1
7 Members
karenb, ablachly, Othemts, Bookwomble, gaius.octavius, ZephCraven, WiseBadger
Explanations
karenb: Such a delightful book, doing several things and succeeding at all of them.
60
6,427 members
272 reviews
4.2
8 Members
anglemark, beyondthefourthwall, ReshiBec, indregard, AnnieMod, pperez333, pnppl, coffeewithastraw
Explanations
pnppl: The greatest short story author alive
61
10,182 members
118 reviews
3.8
62
1,089 members
20 reviews
3.8
7 Members
gilroy, tardis, Quaisior, jjmcgaffey, NorthernStar, saskia17, Maddz
Explanations
Maddz: Decent mil-SF that reads as SF rather than a far-future human military.
63
5,707 members
125 reviews
4
6 Members
waltzmn, vladms, jhereg, rkosarko, ivoryt, JeftiDastl
Explanations
waltzmn: The only one of my ten choices that veers a little away from hard SF, but, like “The Snow Queen,” it partakes of the medieval romance, with right finally prevailing after defeat after defeat.
64
8,755 members
167 reviews
4
6 Members
jeanh12, prosfilaes, Readermom68, waltzmn, Jim.Shine, cindra-cat
Explanations
waltzmn: The first Lije Baley novel, and the best; still one of the greatest SF/detective stories, and the first full-length Positronic Robot novel. Far better than its sequels, and a pioneering work; there weren’t many early mystery SF stories. It eventually tied in with the “Foundation” series, too. Is it better than the other prototype SF/mystery, Hal Clement’s “Needle”? Glad I don’t have to decide.
cindra-cat: Lije and Daneel are the perfect duo.
65
12,411 members
524 reviews
3.8
6 Members
EerierIdyllMeme, manque, IrishSue, JackMello, Nonconformisto, feanor451
Explanations
EerierIdyllMeme: Hardcore sci fi with serious social and political discussions.
66
750 members
11 reviews
4.2
67
5,132 members
123 reviews
4
6 Members
Karlstar, midnightblues, amanda4242, elenchus, pnppl, ivoryt
Explanations
Karlstar: The Culture novels are scifi at its best and Excession is one of Banks' best.
elenchus: Anathem and Excession make for an interesting pair: different approaches to the same discussion.
pnppl: The ultimate Culture novel. Pure ship mind fanservice and introduces a novel term for civilizational encounters to boot
68
1,619 members
39 reviews
3.9
69
3,765 members
49 reviews
3.9
70
21,604 members
180 reviews
½ 4.4
71
15,134 members
247 reviews
4
6 Members
sturlington, Spiffyhink, IrishSue, chokai, gypsysmom, Boand
Explanations
gypsysmom: I still get nightmares about HAL
72
11,489 members
211 reviews
4.1
73
6,039 members
163 reviews
3.8
74
10,359 members
151 reviews
4
75
2,862 members
81 reviews
½ 4.3
5 Members
amberwitch, lizzy50usa, NorthernStar, merrystar, slimikin
Explanations
slimikin: (representing the entire Vorkosigan Saga)
76
5,817 members
474 reviews
3.8
77
4,450 members
68 reviews
3.9
5 Members
jjwilson61, merrystar, featherbear, MaryMeg, rkosarko
Explanations
featherbear: pioneering animal sentience SF as space opera
78
5,430 members
211 reviews
4.2
79
17,281 members
241 reviews
4
80
24,038 members
368 reviews
4
5 Members
Morganadrache, Aug3Zimm, Brandy1411, cindra-cat, thurstonhsreads
Explanations
cindra-cat: Just so cool.
81
9,887 members
453 reviews
4
82
19,578 members
717 reviews
4.1
5 Members
aprille, igorken, IrishSue, rhondak101book, Boand
Explanations
rhondak101book: This is probably not my favorite David Mitchell, but it is probably his best book.
83
10,632 members
405 reviews
4.2
84
7,738 members
227 reviews
4
5 Members
craso, BonnieJune54, missizicks, SandraArdnas, pnppl
Explanations
pnppl: UKLG does PKD, lovely
85
8,888 members
441 reviews
½ 3.7
86
2,503 members
164 reviews
4.1
4 Members
casvelyn, cbl_tn, gypsysmom, Brandy1411
Explanations
gypsysmom: I could have picked any book by Connie Willis but this one combines sf and historical fiction so well.
87
3,709 members
116 reviews
3.9
88
4 Members
karenb, elenchus, Maddz, armckibbin
Explanations
karenb: Brilliant and funny, starts with the history and goes into alternate histories
Maddz: One of the funniest web comics I've ever read.
89
3,579 members
41 reviews
3.8
90
4,717 members
181 reviews
½ 3.6
91
3,029 members
28 reviews
½ 4.5
92
856 members
24 reviews
4
4 Members
wyvernfriend, tardis, jjmcgaffey, lizzy50usa
Explanations
jjmcgaffey: And the entire Liaden Universe - magnificent drama of manners and spaceships. And assassins, and psychic powers, and...
93
1,432 members
11 reviews
3.9
94
2,544 members
154 reviews
3.9
95
38,782 members
1,509 reviews
4.1
96
3,498 members
223 reviews
3.9
97
61,292 members
866 reviews
3.9
4 Members
PortiaLong, marc.slingerland, Aug3Zimm, cindra-cat
Explanations
cindra-cat: Having neat science gadgets didn't really make life better or different from what we have. Societies are still made of people.
98
42,070 members
1,313 reviews
4.1
99
876 members
22 reviews
4.1