July 2024
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    So I’m having trouble picking my next read. I have read 1984,Brave new world, Animal farm, The road by Cormac McCarthy, a boy and his dog at the end of the world, never let me go by kazuo ishiguro, we by yevgen zamayatin, fahrenheit 451, and on the beach by Nevil Shute (Forgive the spelling errors I’m on mobile and it’s hard to type) which book/s do you recommend I get next? Thank you in advance 🙂

    by sticked200

    16 Comments

    1. Kindred by Octavia Butler. Classic speculative/literary fiction genre crossover seems to be what you gravitate towards and this fits right in there.

    2. ExoticMeatDealer on

      I say spice it up with some magical realism or absurdism. Try 100 Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, The Metamorphosis by Kafka, or Invitation to a Beheading by Nabokov, who would drown me in a river for suggesting he wrote an absurd novel.

    3. Have you read The Giver by Lois Lowry? It is the “intro dystopia.” Before YA and The Hunger Games. Quick and memorable read.

    4. Roadside Picnic by Boris and Arkady Strugatsky

      You already read We, so you might as well read this one.

    5. My favorite dystopian/utopian novel is the sometimes beautiful/sometimes frustrating: The Dispossessed by Ursula K. Le Guin.

      Worth the effort it takes to read it.

    6. If you are ambitious, the epic science fiction poem Aniara by Swedish Nobel laureate Harry Martinson is a fascinating descent into chaos.

      Blurb: ‘The film is set in a dystopian future where climate change ravages Earth, prompting mass migration from Earth to Mars. When one such routine trip veers off course, the passengers of the Aniara struggle to cope with their new lives.’

      You can find an English translation or watch the Swedish film that came out in 2018.

    7. Assuming you want to continue only reading dystopias then…

      the Power by Naomi Alderman

      Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood

      the Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood

      the Drought by JG Ballard

      a Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess

      the Death of Grass by John Christopher

      The Circle by David Eggers

      the Children of Men by PD James

      the Iron Heel by Jack London

      the Book of Dave by Will Self

      the Gate to Women’s Country by Sherri S Tepper

      Cat’s Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut

      the Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham

      but consider expanding your scope with some realistic novels…

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