It's about the end of the year, and I know there will all sorts of lists of the best books published this year, so this is a different question: regardless of when published, which SF books that you personally read this year did you enjoy the most. I'm also asking which you enjoyed instead of which you thought were the best, so feel free to include fluff without shame.
I'll go first. Of the 60+ books I read this year, here are the ones I liked most. No significant spoilers, not in any order.
Children of Time, Adrian Tchaikovsky
A project to uplift monkeys on a terraformed world, at the peak of human civilization, is sabotaged by people who don't think humans should play god. There follows a human civil war that nearly destroys civilization. A couple thousand years later, an ark ship of human remnants leaving an uninhabitable earth is heading towards that terraformed planet. This is a great book, with lots to say on intelligence, the nature of people, and both the fragility and heartiness of life.
Kiln People, David Brin
Set a couple hundred years in the future, technology is ubiquitous that lets people make a living clay duplicate of themselves that has their memory and thoughts to the point they were created, lasts about a day, and whose memories can be reintegrated with the real person if desired. The duplicates are property, have no rights, and are used to do almost all work and to take any risks without risking the humans. A private detective and some of his duplicates gets pulled into an increasingly complex plot that could reshape society. This is a thoroughly enjoyable book, with lots of twists, and an interesting narrative as we follow copies who may or may not reintegrate with our detective.
Sleeping Giants, Sylvain Neuvel
A little girl falls down a deep hole in the woods and lands on a gigantic, glowing, metal hand that's thousands of years old. This is a wonderful alien artifact story with some interesting twists. I really enjoyed this book. Not exactly hard SF, but checks a lot of the boxes for me, including the wonder of discovery.
The Peripheral, William Gibson
A computer server links the late 2020s to a time 70 years later, allowing communication and telepresence between the two times. A young woman in the earlier time witnesses a murder in the later time and gets sucked into a battle between powerful people in both times. This is a great book; I think I could have recognized it as Gibson's writing even if I hadn't known it in advance. Very interesting premise, engaging characters, and fun without feeling like fluff.
The Left Hand of Darkness, Ursula K. Le Guin
A coalition of human planets has sent the first envoy to an icy world where the people are gender neutral and sterile most of the time, but once a month become male or female (essentially randomly) and fertile. This is a classic, written in 1969, and my second reading - the first being in the late 80s. Le Guin creates an amazingly rich world, even with its harsh, frozen landscape. The characters grow to understand how gender impacts their cultures, and the biases they didn't know they had. It's also aged remarkably well for an SF book written 55 years ago. There's nothing about it that feels outdated.
A couple notes:
If I hadn't stuck to my own "enjoyed" constraint, the list might have looked different. For instance, Perdido Street Station, by Meiville, is a really great book, but there's so much misery and sadness that it's hard to say I "enjoyed" it.
I hesitated to put The Left Hand Of Darkness on the list, simply because Le Guin is so widely recognized as a great master, and the book one of her greatest, that it seemed unfair. In the end, it seemed unfair to exclude it for such an artificial reason.
Been enjoying the “murderbot” series by Martha Wells. The audiobook versions narrated by Kevin Free are particularly well done. He’s a good narrator.
They’re supposedly making a TV series out of it. Not sure how that’s going to work since a lot of the action takes place inside the bot’s brain. They’ve also cast Alexander Skarsgård which seems like a misstep already.
To Sleep In A Sea Of Stars - one of the most action-packed books I've read, even with a few lengthy "hibernation" space travel sections. Felt like an entire trilogy happening in a single book. Seems prime for a movie treatment, but would also be next to impossible to do in a single movie without completely butchering.
I worked through both the Sprawl trilogy and the Three Body Problem trilogy and they were both fantastic. Almost ruined the rest of my reading for weeks after that. The Three Body Problem and The Dark Forest might be the most original science fiction since Neuromancer
Just working my way through a reread of the expanse since it's been a few years and the...final? book has been released. I definitely enjoyed the first 4 books more than 5 and 6. But book 7 is back up to snuff!
It's Fantasy but I need to mention that I've been devouring The Stormlight Archive by Brandon Sanderson! These books might just be my all time favorites for fantasy!
The Broken Earth trilogy by N. K. Jemisin. While at first, the setting appears to be a fairly standard fantasy, there is a sci-fi depth to the world, its climate, cataclysms, history, and orogeny ("magic power" of the world).
And, if you are a fan of heavy-handed dystopian satire, Venomous Lumpsucker by Ned Beauman. It takes place in a not-too-distant future where a somewhat-apathetic researcher and a corporate scammer are trying to find the last living Venomous Lumpsucker, a highly intelligent fish species. There is climate change, corporate greed, half-baked international agreements, hackers, horrible AI, and, of course, delusional megalomaniac billionaires.
Children of Time and its sequels are top notch, especially if you love animals and commentary on societal roles. It’s in my top Sci-Fi.
If you enjoyed Children of Time, definitely check out “A Memory Called Empire” by Arkady Martine. It’s a Sci-Fi political mystery with lots of fun word play. Aside from some really cool tech, the book really tackles what it means to be “Other” and how colonialism effects one’s idea of self. Some really cool ideas in this book. Easily my top Sci-Fi read this year.
Definitely the Bobiverse books. Engineer in the 21st century dies, but paid to have himself cryogenically frozen. 200 years in the future, Christian fundamentalist seized control of the government and made it illegal to revive people like him. The world is on the brink of nuclear apocolypse so they used new technology to upload his consciousness into a spaceship computer to search the galaxy for a habitat planet for humanity. Spaceship has auto-factories onboard that let him replicate more ships and digital clones of himself. It has some serious parts, but it is written in a lighthearted manner with some technical explanation for future technology.
I've been working my way through Alastair Reynolds works.
Finished up the newest books in the Revelation Space series, (big recommendation, very cool universe).
Done with that, I went through the Revenger trilogy. Smaller in scope than Revelation Space, but a very fun read.
Set in a far-flung future where humanity has disassembled most planetary bodies in order to construct thousands of space-borne habitats. Planetoids with singularities to generate gravity. Ringworlds. etc.
And then even further into future, where several consecutive ages of civilization have sparked and died within these habitats.
It's the only series I've come across that depicts fairly accurate solar sailing as a mode of space travel, too.
Murderbot Diaries was my top this year by far. Probably top series since I first read hitchhikers guide to the galaxy. It's so fun and well paced and the audiobook is well made.
I read the Endymion half of the Hyperion Cantos this year I think the whole series is tied for my favorite Sci Fi series, right next to the Expanse books.
1- Hyperion Cantos by Dan Simmons
1- Expanse series by James S A Corey
3- Bobiverse by Dennis Taylor
Honorable mentions:
Fatherland by Robert Harris;
Consider Phelbas by Iain M Banks
I read The Left Hand of Darkness this year as my first foray into Ursula K Le Guin and I loved it! I had to read The Dispossessed right after and loved that even more.
Children of Time is probably the only book I've read in two or three years, and it was phenomenal. I'd love to read the sequels next, it's just so hard to get my brain in the right headspace to read!
I loved all the exploration of (arguably) non-human perspectives and cultures and all the friction from the virus. And that ending was pretty wild, I sorta saw some of it coming but not like quite like that
Gateway: For some late payoff, hard sci-fi content, I like Frederik Pohl quite a lot. His stuff is between classic and contemporary, and balances technology with sophisticated plot and characters. I greatly enjoyed reading his Gateway series this year, could be one of my favorites.
Mass Effect: I was pleasantly surprised with Mass Effect: Andromeda Annihilation. I moderately enjoyed the Mass Effect video game series, and thought this companion novel could tank, but it was actually a really fun read, with great characters and immersion. The plot is orthogonal to the main plot points of the video games, rather than extensions of them, which I thought gave it breathing room for novel ideas.
The long Earth, the first book of the... Long Earth series, a collaboration between Stephen Baxter and the late Terry Pratchett.
Unlike Good Omens, Pratchett's writing feels less present but still a great book. I just finished the second book of the series, The Long War, and in a couple weeks I'll start the third one. Can't wait to see what happens!
Riverworld saga by Philip José Farmer - cool take on using historical figures in a Sci-Fi setting.
Bobiverse by Dennis E. Taylor - Programmers In Spaaace! A good collection of books that makes you think a bit, funny enough I think Dennis read the Riverworld books.
Revelation space series (book 1 and 2) by Alastair Reynolds - a bio engineering space travel transhumanism Sci-Fi
Probably the one that grabbed me the most was Made Things by Adrian Tchaikovsky. I read Children of Time years ago, but bounced off of Children of Ruin and hadn't read anything else by him. But reading Made Things on a whim this past year set me off on a Tchaikovsky binge that took up much of the rest of the year. I especially liked The Final Architecture books.
The book that I enjoyed the most just in and of itself though was probably Early Riser by Jasper Fforde. It's a fascinating concept, and more straightforwardly written than most of Fforde's books (I like his writing, but he has a regrettable tendency toward style over substance that was refreshingly absent from this one).
I read (listened to) some in the series Expeditionary Force by Craig Alanson. It's a space opera, action/comedy. I love the whole series and I've listened to it multiple times already.
Others have already mentioned but I've also greatly enjoyed Bobiverse and would probably listen to it again this coming year.
Translation State by Ann Leckie, and Fall, or Dodge in Hell, by Neal Stephenson.
I loved them both: the Leckie because the cultures of her characters are so varied and interesting; and Fall despite me not being into computer games at all. It's fascinating though, having a main character become digital and see how that would play out.
I've read a few, but the one that I'd most likely recommend is The Luminous Dead by Caitlin Starling. It's a beautiful tale of grief and closure over the course of a month long solo splunking expedition on an alien planet in a futuristic supersuit. It was so good all the way through!
Ohh, first foray into Tchaikovsky? I would love to hear how you fare with more of his books. Specially the third one in that series.
This was my year of easy books, wanted to reach 100 so I read a lot of easy to digest books.
Old man war, from John scalzi
Good page turners, fun universe feel good story. Would recommend light read.
The science is fun and is integral to the story so it checks a lot of the sci-fi urges.
The interdependency from John Scalzi was also a forgettable but fun Sunday read. The ftl system of a space society is facing issues and the have to work around it.
Murder bot diaries was recommended a ton, I woul add myself to the list of recommenders.
I did my reading of Philip k dick stories this year and I can't recommend them enough. His novels are a different subject, but the short stories you see how the influence all of sci Fi. I'd you read a lot, you have to read his short stories.
Just to add to Gison's "The Peripheral" - it's the first in his new "Jackpot Trilogy" with second book "The Agency" being equally, if not more awesome.
Also, Peripheral got adapted to a TV show (one season so far) pretty successfully.
Skyward Quadrilogy. A new YA Sci-Fi from Brandon Sanderson. Some similar world elements to final architecture actually, but in a pretty interesting divergence. Really great ship combat pulled off as eloquently as sword play in Stormlight.
Reckoners Series. Another genre departure for Brandon Sanderson, and also in one I don't typically pursue (cape stuff). But I think it really worked, and Sanderson's talent for hard magic systems fit well with the superpowers concept in the books.
Ten Thousand Doors of January.
I also feel compelled to mention giving up with Peter F. Hamilton. I've read lots of the Commonwealth ones years ago, but struggle with the self-insert, male wish fulfillment that all of his characters seem to suffer from. I tried one last time with The Night's Dawn trilogy, but dropped it halfway through the second book. I was mostly along for the ride with the novel spiritual elements, and I also liked the Biomechanical / Ship AI technology. But the characters were all just pretty meh and I had a hard time caring. Also, the Al Capone thing was pretty strange lol.
I fell more down the “fantasy” side of things this year. Looking back at my library account I see I devoured the “Odd Thomas” series, one of my all time favorites, yet holds tended to expire for excellent scinfi authors like William Gibson and Ursula K Leguin.
I’m really hit by inconvenience here. I need new ideas available on Kindle without a lengthy wait. There was one book where I was 52nd in queue: there’s no way to hold my interest that long
Lots of great suggestions in the comments, but one I didn't see that I've REALLY been enjoying is the Infinity Series by Jeremy Robinson. As a fan of Science Fiction I absolutely love this series because each book is a sub-genre of SF. I'm currently on the 8th book (out of 13) and when I started this series I told myself that I was only going to read the first book, and would then decide if I wanted to continue. Then when I finished it, I picked up the second book and said that I was just going to read a few chapters and see how I like it. Now when I finish one there's no question what I'm reading next.
This year I've also enjoyed Dungeon Crawler Carl... though I'd put it more in the Fantasy realm than SciFi... but Kaiju: Battlefield Surgeon by Matt Dinniman is a nice SciFi book that has a lot of the same feel as DCC as far as world building goes, but does lack on the character development.
In case you're not aware, there is a sequel to The Peripheral called Agency. I didn't think it was quite as good as the first, but still a good read. There is a planned third book in the series as well.