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Suggest me some books (Sci fi/Fantasy)

Fellow bookworms, I am glad to announce that I am at the last book of Cosmere (Yumi and the Nightmare Painter). And then, I will have finished it all. So this is where I need your help. Recommend me some awesome Sci-fi and Fantasy books that you believe will blow away my mind, like the impact needs to be huge, cannot believe this happened type of stuff. Preferred genre are Sci-fi and Fantasy, but if you know some awesome book from other genre, don't hold back, all suggestions are welcome.

Thank you in advance.

UPDATE: Piranesi is currently on lead and I am almost finished with Yumi, so that is the next on my list. But don't let that stop the recommendations coming. Eventually all of us are going to run out of recommendations ;)

37 comments
  • Of what others have suggested and that I've read: the ones most similar to what you've finished are:

    • The First Law series by Joe Abercrombie
    • The Expanse series by James SA Corey
    • Hyperion (at least the first two books, w/ optional two more) by Dan Simmons

    New recommendations:

    • Dhalgren by Samuel R Delany (content warning)
    • The Baroque Cycle series by Neal Stephenson (Snow Crash and the Diamond Age may both be better starting points for the author, but may fit your other criteria less)
    • The Book of the New Sun series by Gene Wolfe

    Other works that stretch your genre boundary but may evoke the right emotion:

    • Collected Fictions by Jorge Luis Borges
    • If on a Winter's Night a Traveler by Italo Calvino
    • The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco
    • Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell
    • The Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie
    • Lovecraft Country by Matt Ruff
    • Plain Bad Heroines by Emily M Danforth
    • John Dies at the End by David Wong
  • My absolute all time favourite sci-fi book series is John Scalzi's "Old Man's War".

    I can't recommend this book series enough. Kept me up several nights because I couldn't stop reading (and suffered for it at work).

    Scalzi added a lot of humor too and it's brilliant.

  • Blindsight by Peter Watts is fantastic. Someone on Lemmy recommended it and I picked it up, so I'm keeping the line going.

    It's hard science fiction, if you're into that.

  • The Wayfarers series by Becky Chambers is some of the best sci-fi ever written, in my opinion. Deals with high stakes stuff but has such a gorgeous focus on characters and cultures. I could just live in some of the moments in those books.

  • Yumi and the Nightmare Painter

    I liked that one. Some recommendations:

    • Dune. At least 4 first books. I assume you read it already but if some reason not, read it asap, by far my favourite series.
    • If you're not averse to Warhammer 40000 universe, Gaunt's Ghosts series. it's 16 books though.
    • Lois McMaster Bujold, Barrayar series. You will either love or hate Miles.
    • Glen Cook. Everything by Glen Cook
    • Jack Campbell, Lost Fleet series, the spaciest and operiest space opera possible
    • Arkady Martine "A memory called empire"
    • Lloyd Biggle Jr "Monument" - pretty forgotten but great sci-fi classic
    • I thought of reading Dune, but I found out that there is no definite conclusion to the story, and apparently it gets worse over subsequent books. Now I can bear the start to rocky for a brilliant ending, but the reverse I cannot bring myself to... Unanswered unfulfilled stuff will wreck my brain.

      Warhammer is tooooo vast. I like watching YouTube videos on the lore, but thinking of >200 books isn't good for my sanity.

      I will research other ones though. Thank you for recommending.

      • There is a definite ending to the Dune, in books 7 and 8 written by author's son. Some people might say they are worse than originals, and they would be correct, but you are also right about that it gets worse already in the two last books by the original author, that's why i suggested 4 first books, they are also thematically linked and book 4 is a true masterpiece.

        Warhammer lore is too vast, but Gaunt's Ghosts are pretty consistent and you don't need to know basically anything outside the series itself (unlike the Horus Heresy, that i wouldn't recomend, it's not only too long but also simply bad), i certainly didn't when i read first books in the series.

  • I'll recommend some from the lesser known progression fantasy genre:

    • Cradle by Will Wight
    • Mage Errant by John Bierce
    • Mother of Learning by Nobody103 (Domagoj Kurmaić)
    • The Weirkey Chronicles by Sarah Lin
    • Beware of Chicken by CasualFarmer
    • Super Powereds by Drew Hayes
  • What about a mix of scifi and fantasy? The Starship's Mage series by Glynn Stewart is pretty cool.

  • Here are a few I really enjoyed recently

    • Edges by Linda Nagata
    • The Mercy of Gods by James S.A. Corey
    • Wool by Hugh Howey
    • Ordinary Monsters J.M. Miro
    • The Mountain in the Sea by Ray Nayler
  • Presuming you've already read the standards like Discworld, Hitchhiker's Guide, Imagica, etc., I'm gonna pick out The Warden/Necrobane/Advocate by Daniel M. Ford from the pile of little-known authors. I can't guarantee any mind-blowing as the finale is set to be released in a couple of months, but they're enjoyable enough so far.

    • Of all the books you considered standard, I read only hitchhikers (all 5). Tell me more about disc world and Imagica if you can.

      • Imagica is a dark fantasy novel by Clive Barker (known mostly for his horror work). It's been a long time since I've read it, but I think this will check your mind-blowing prerequisite. It made a huge impression on me as a teenager... many many moons ago

        Discworld is a sprawling fantasy series by Terry Pratchett. 40-some books packed with memorable characters and impeccable world-building. It leans heavily into social commentary, humor, and satire. There are endless arguments about which order to read them in — the first few books are the author finding his footing, and many people have a favorite theme/character/arc and find more enjoyment reading them back to back to back. Publication order jumps around a lot between themes, but I find this to be crucial to the world building process. YMMV.

        Sadly Sir Pratchett passed away while writing what became the last book. While reading it I bawled like a very large, hairy baby. Needless to say, I wholeheartedly recommend the series as a whole, while recognizing that some entries fare worse than others. Pratchett is just that good. (Side recommendation, I very much enjoyed Nation as well.)

  • Solaris by Stanislaw Lem. A psychologist is sent to a station in orbit around a planet covered by a sentient ocean to determine if research on it should continue. Lem's work consistently blows my mind, actually--other favorites are His Master's Voice (memoirs of a mathematician working on a project to decipher what might be a message from extraterrestrials) and Peace on Earth (an adventurer returns from a trip to the moon with his brain bisected, and the half that remembers what happened is both unable and unwilling to communicate it).

37 comments