
Whether it鈥檚 black orbs swallowing people in downtown Seoul, murder on Mars or malevolent pigs, August has got science fiction fans covered. There are new titles from big names such as James S. A. Corey, Josh Malerman and Neal Asher, and an intriguing-sounding short story collection from Mark Haddon (he of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time fame). I will be kicking off my August reading with Janina Matthewson鈥檚 story of the apocalypse experienced from a small island, followed up with Miles Cameron鈥檚 vision of a universe traversed by city-sized 鈥淕reatships鈥. Whatever your favourite genre of sci-fi, there鈥檚 lots to choose from and enjoy.
by Kim Ewhan
This speculative novel opens in downtown Seoul, where a huge black orb suddenly appears and sucks Jeong-su鈥檚 neighbour inside. As it continues to consume people, attempts to stop it fail and it begins to split and multiply, causing global panic. Jeong-su, meanwhile, sets out to find his elderly parents.
by Janina Matthewson
This story of the apocalypse takes place in the small island community of Black Crag, where Sarah wakes one morning to find that the rest of the world appears to have gone silent. No aeroplanes cross the sky and the radios are quiet. When a silent, traumatised ferryman arrives, whispers about what really happened on the mainland begin to divide the villagers. This is being compared to Emily St. John Mandel鈥檚 Station Eleven 鈥 one of my favourite post-apocalyptic novels.
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by Neal Asher
This is a standalone novel set within Asher鈥檚 Owner universe. Earth is governed by a 鈥渞uthless Committee鈥, but when rebel and mutant Ottanger is experimented on by Earth鈥檚 Inspectorate, he discovers he can reach alternate worlds and meets an evolved human from the far future. Can he destroy the Committee鈥檚 regime?
by Sam Wilson
This sounds a lot of fun 鈥 a generation-spanning sci-fi story moving from Mars in 2034, when the first human is born on the Red Planet, to Mars in 2103, now a place of division and fear.
Murder takes place on Mars in Sam Wilson’s new science fiction novel Malp /Alamy
by Josh Malerman
The bestselling author of the terrifying Birdbox sets his latest slice of horror on a farm inhabited by Pearl, a 鈥渟trangely malevolent pig鈥, and her owner Walter Kopple. Walter has always been afraid of Pearl, and as rumours swirl in town, madness begins to grip the locals.
by Miles Cameron
This slice of military science fiction is the sequel to Cameron鈥檚 Artifact Space, which I haven鈥檛 read, but now I want to read them both as they sound tons of fun. They鈥檙e set in a world where Greatships, with city-sized crews, transport goods across space and trade for 鈥渪enoglas鈥 with an alien species. Marca Nbaro has always wanted to serve aboard one of them, and now she is, but something is targeting the ships in the darkness of space.
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New 女生小视频 book club
by Emet North
This debut introduces us to Raffi, a physicist who dreams of parallel universes, and who is falling for a sculptor named Britt in this one. If only Raffi had been brave enough to say hello to Britt when they were children 鈥 but what if they had? The question sees Raffi catapulted across strange alternative universes, yet everything eventually leads them back to Britt.
by Mark Haddon
This is a collection of short stories weaving ancient Greek myth with the modern world to explore genetics, how we treat animals and more. So the Minotaur, for example, becomes a story of maternal love and the patriarchy. I鈥檓 looking forward to this 鈥 Haddon is reliably excellent.
by James S.A. Corey
The bestselling authors of The Expanse series of novels, who write under a joint pen name, have released a new space opera that sees the empire of the Carryx descend on an isolated human world of Anjiin, where the population is slaughtered or abducted as prisoners. Dafyd, a scientist鈥檚 assistant, is captured with his team 鈥 but can his skills help them escape their captors鈥 agenda?
by Al Hess
The punning title sets the scene for this comic story of an alien invasion in the town of Muddy Gap. Pie lover Denver Bryant sees a UFO explode, but they appear to be the only person who cares. As they document the incident and their investigations on their pie blog, the only person who takes them seriously is the handsome new bartender, Ezra.
by Ian Green
Biohackers Charlie and Parker live in a near-future version of London, one where the climate has collapsed. It is a world split into three groups: Greens, who are still trying to save it; Blues, who are out for profit while they can get it; and Blacks, who see no hope. When the pair are hired by Green activists for jobs ranging from robbery to murder, Charlie isn鈥檛 keen, but Parker wants to accept, believing they can still make a difference.
by Ruben Reyes Jr.
This debut short story collection about Central American identity moves from past to future worlds as it explores what we would do if we woke to find our lives were unrecognisable. It is peopled with characters from mango farmers to cyborgs and promises to take on everything from 鈥渕enacing technology鈥 to 鈥渦nchecked bureaucracy鈥.
Timothee Chalamet as Paul Atreides in Dune 2 Courtesy of Warner Bros
by Guy P. Harrison
Not quite science fiction, this last one, but it鈥檚 the kind of thing I love, and so I wanted to mention it in case you do too. It does what it says on the tin, basically 鈥 collects quotes from four centuries鈥 worth of sci-fi, from Isaac Asimov鈥檚 鈥淏etter to make a good future than predict a bad one鈥 (Prelude to Foundation, 1988) to Frank Herbert鈥檚 鈥淗ope clouds observation.鈥澛(Dune, 1965).
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