Sunday, May 26, 2019

Have you read the best Sci-Fi of 2018?

2018 was a banner year for science fiction, check out some of the best titles the genre has to offer, all available from the Glenview Public Library:



"Morrow’s debut is ambitious and insightful, raising questions about memory, trauma, and humanity. The novel is at its best when it presents Elsie at her most human, forcing the real ones around her to reckon with what her personhood means for theirs."—Publishers Weekly




“…[A] powerful post-apocalyptic masterpiece and the one dystopian novel you really need to read this year.”—Bustle





Semiosis by Sue Burke
“In Semiosis, Sue Burke blends science with adventure and fascinating characters, as a human colony desperately seeks to join the ecosystem of an alien world.” ―David Brin, author of Earth and Existence

Severance by Ling Ma
"How do you fit a zombie novel inside an immigrant story inside a coming-of-age tale? Ling Ma . . . accomplished this feat in her gripping and original turducken of a novel . . . Fascinating." ―Trine Tsouderos, The Chicago Tribune
The Calculating Stars by Mary Robinette Kowal
“In The Calculating Stars, Mary Robinette Kowal imagines an alternate history of spaceflight that reminds me of everything I loved about Hidden Figures.”—Cady Coleman, Astronaut


Black Star Renegades by Michael Moreci
"A propulsive space opera that is also an unapologetic love letter to Star Wars. . . . Impossible not to love . . . . From intergalactic space battles to blaster fights to rogue robots and various hives of scum and villainy, this shiny space opera is bound to be a pleasure for fans of all stripes." —Kirkus Reviews


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