Top 100 Sci Fi-Fantasy
Top 100 Sci Fi-Fantasy
Top 100 Sci Fi-Fantasy
by J.R.R. Tolkien
Tolkien's seminal three-volume epic chronicles the War of the Ring, in which Frodo the hobbit and his companions set out to destroy
the evil Ring of Power and restore peace to Middle-earth. The beloved trilogy still casts a long shadow, having established some of the
most familiar and enduring tropes in fantasy literature.Literary Award Winner
by Douglas Adams
In the first, hilarious volume of Adams' Hitchhiker's series, reluctant galactic traveler Arthur Dent gets swept up in some literally
Earth-shattering events involving aliens, sperm whales, a depressed robot, mice who are more than they seem, and some really,
really bad poetry.
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Ender's Game
Young Andrew "Ender" Wiggin, bred to be a genius, is drafted to Battle School where he trains to lead the century-long fight against
the alien Buggers.
by Frank Herbert
Follows the adventures of Paul Atreides, the son of a betrayed duke given up for dead on a treacherous desert planet and adopted by
its fierce, nomadic people, who help him unravel his most unexpected destiny.
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As the Seven Kingdoms face a generation-long winter, the royal Stark family confronts the poisonous plots of the rival Lannisters, the
emergence of the Neverborn demons, the arrival of barbarian hordes, and other threats.
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1984
A Novel
by George Orwell
Portrays life in a future time when a totalitarian government watches over all citizens and directs all activities.
Fahrenheit 451
by Ray Bradbury
A totalitarian regime has ordered all books to be destroyed, but one of the book burners suddenly realizes their merit, in a chilling
novel of a frightening near-future world.
by Isaac Asimov
A band of psychologists, under the leadership of psychohistorian Hari Seldon, plant a colony to encourage art, science, and
technology in the declining Galactic Empire and to preserve the accumulated knowledge of humankind.
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by Aldous Huxley
Huxley's classic prophetic novel describes the socialized horrors of a futuristic utopia devoid of individual freedom.
American Gods
by Neil Gaiman
On the plane home to attend the funerals of his wife and best friend, Shadow, an ex-con, encounters an enigmatic stranger who
seems to know a lot about him. When Shadow accepts the stranger's job offer, he finds himself plunged into a perilous game with the
highest of stakes: the soul of America itself.
by William Goldman
This tale of a handsome farm boy who, aided by a drunken swordsman and a gentle giant, rescues a beautiful princess named
Buttercup comes with a slyly humorous, metafictional edge: Goldman claims to have merely abridged an earlier text by one "S.
Morgenstern" (actually a pseudonym) and peppers his text with clever commentary.
by Robert Jordan
At 13 volumes and counting, this sweeping some would say sprawling richly imagined epic chronicles the struggle between
servants of the Dark One and those of the champion of light known as the Dragon Reborn.
Animal Farm
by George Orwell
Farm animals overthrow their human owners and set up their own deeply (and familiarly) flawed government. Orwell's mordant satire
of totalitarianism is still a mainstay of ninth-grade reading lists.
Neuromancer
by William Gibson
Gibson's groundbreaking debut novel follows Case, a burned-out computer whiz, who is asked to steal a security code that is locked in
the most heavily guarded databank in the solar system. A seminal work in the genre that would come to be known as cyberpunk.
Watchmen
As former members of a disbanded group of superheroes called the Crimebusters start turning up dead, the remaining members of
the group try to discover the identity of the murderer before they, too, are killed. A graphic novel.
I, Robot
by Isaac Asimov
Isaac Asimov changed our perception of robots forever when he formulated the laws governing their behavior. In I, Robot, Asimov
chronicles the development of the robot through a series of interlinked stories: from its primitive origins in the present to its ultimate
perfection in the not-so-distant future a future in which humanity itself may be rendered obsolete.
by Robert A. Heinlein
Valentine Michael Smith, born and raised on Mars, arrives on Earth stunning Western culture with his superhuman abilities.
by Patrick Rothfuss
This suspenseful coming-of-age story folllows Kvothe as he recounts his transformation from a magically gifted young man into the
most notorious wizard, musician, thief and assassin in his world.
Slaughterhouse-Five
by Kurt Vonnegut
Billy Pilgrim returns home from World War II only to be kidnapped by aliens from the planet Tralfamadore, who teach him that time is
an eternal present.
Frankenstein
Mary Shelley's chilling portrait of a scientist obsessed with creating life (whose eventual success comes at too great a cost) was
among the first works of science fiction ever produced. Its potent allegorical power, compelling ethical and philosophical themes, and
its sheer creepiness have ensured it remains one of the most enduring and influential as well.
by Philip K. Dick
Dick's trippy novel tells of sophisticated off-world androids who turn against their creators, slip back to a post-apocalyptic Earth, and
must be hunted down by bounty hunter Rick Deckard. The book inspired albeit very loosely the 1982 Ridley Scott film Blade
Runner.
by Margaret Atwood
A chilling look at the near future presents the story of Offred, a Handmaid in the Republic of Gilead, once the United States, an
oppressive world where women are no longer allowed to read and are valued only as long as they are viable for reproduction.
by Stephen King
Roland, the world's last gunslinger, tracks an enigmatic Man in Black toward a forbidding dark tower, fighting forces both mortal and
other worldly on his quest.
by Arthur C. Clarke
Two astronauts find their journey into space and their very lives jeopardized by the jealousy of an extraordinary computer named
HAL.
The Stand
by Stephen King
A monumentally devastating plague leaves only a few survivors who, while experiencing dreams of a battle between good and evil,
move toward an actual confrontation as they migrate to Boulder, Colo.
Snow Crash
by Neal Stephenson
Weaving contemporary imagery with Sumerian myths, Stephenson's third novel revolves around a mysterious "pseudo-narcotic"
Snow Crash that is capable of affecting people both within and without the alternate-reality Internet called the "Metaverse."
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by Ray Bradbury
The tranquillity of Mars is disrupted by the earthmen who have come to conquer space, colonize the planet, and escape a doomed
Earth.
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Cat's Cradle
by Kurt Vonnegut
A young writer decides to interview the children of a scientist primarily responsible for the creation of the atomic bomb.
by Neil Gaiman
Gaiman originally told his tale of Morpheus, the Dream King, whose interactions with mortals rarely end well, and whose fractious
extended family includes the personifications of Death, Despair, Desire and Destiny, in a 75-issue comic book series over several
years; the hugely influential series is now collected in ten trade volumes.
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A Clockwork Orange
by Anthony Burgess
Burgess created his own youth slang for this acid satire of contemporary culture which follows young Alex as he makes his merry way
through a dystopia of drugs, sex and ruthless violence, only to be chosen for a psychological experiment meant to mend his ways.
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Starship Troopers
by Robert A. Heinlein
In one of Robert A. Heinlein's most controversial novels, a recruit of the future goes through the toughest boot camp in the universe
and into battle with the Terran Mobile Infantry against humankind's most frightening enemy.
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Watership Down
by Richard Adams
An allegorical tale of survival about a band of wild rabbits who leave their ancestral home to build a more humane society chronicles
their adventures as they search for a safe place to establish a new warren where they can live in peace.
Dragonflight
by Anne McCaffrey
At a time when the number of Dragonriders has fallen too low for safety and only one Weyr trains the creatures and their riders, the
Red Star approaches Pern, threatening the planet with disaster.
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by Robert A. Heinlein
A one-armed computer technician, a radical blond bombshell, an aging academic and a sentient all-knowing computer lead the lunar
population in a revolution against Earth's colonial rule.
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Miller's 1959 novel follows the Monks of the Order of St. Leibowitz as they attempt to preserve the remnants of civilization after a
nuclear war.
by H.G. Wells
Wells' classic 1895 story of an unassuming British inventor who creates a device that sends him hurtling into the far future A.D.
802,701, to be precise where subterranean Morlocks prey upon the childlike Eloi.
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by Jules Verne
Professor Arronax and his two companions, trapped aboard a fantastic submarine as prisoners of the deranged Captain Nemo, come
face to face with exotic ocean creatures and strange sights hidden from the world above.
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by Daniel Keyes
When brain surgery makes a mouse into a genius, dull-witted Charlie Gordon wonders if it might also work for him.
by H.G. Wells
With advanced machines of destruction, aliens from another planet swoop down on planet Earth and begin their conquest, in the
classic sci-fi work by the author of The Time Machine.
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by Roger Zelazny
Zelazny's tales of Corwin, prince of the "true world" of Amber (of which our Earth is merely a shadow) and his son Merlin, a magicuser/computer hacker, have spanned several decades. Amid the eternal struggle between Order and Chaos, Zelazny delights in
tossing in allusions to Shakespeare, the Tarot and quantum mechanics.
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The Belgariad
by David Eddings
Edding's five-volume epic fantasy follows young farmboy Garion as he is drawn into a quest for a stolen mystical orb, and the rich
world of prophecy and power that surrounds it.
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Retells the legend of King Arthur as perceived by the women central to the tale, from the zealous Morgaine, sworn to uphold her
goddess at any cost, to the devout Gwenhwyfar, pledged to the king but drawn to another.
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Mistborn Trilogy
by Brandon Sanderson
In a world where special magic users called Allomancers can employ metals to enhance their physical and mental abilities, a young
thief discovers her destiny and sets out to overthrow the Lord Ruler.
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Ringworld
by Larry Niven
Niven's hugely influential 1970 novel of an outer space expedition to a mysterious object a vast artificial world in the shape of a ring
that goes horribly wrong.
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by Ursula K. Le Guin
While on a mission to the planet Gethen a world whose inhabitants can change their gender earthling Genly Ai is sent by leaders
of the nation of Orgoreyn to a concentration camp. The exiled prime minister of the nation of Karhide tries to rescue him.
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The Silmarillion
by J.R.R. Tolkien
These creation myths of Tolkien's Middle-earth, for those who found The Lord of the Rings too breezy and slight: In the author's
characteristic Beowulfian prose, he recounts the legends of the world's beginnings, the downfall of its gods and men, and the events
that changed the face of Middle-earth forever.
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by T.H. White
Describes King Arthur's life from his childhood to the coronation, creation of the Round Table, and search for the Holy Grail.
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Neverwhere
by Neil Gaiman
Gaiman's wry, darkly whimsical tale of an average young businessman who stops to help a girl bleeding on a London sidewalk and
finds himself pulled into a bizarre subterranean world.
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Childhood's End
by Arthur C. Clarke
The author questions the survival of mankind in this science-fiction tale about Overlords from outer space who dominate the world.
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Contact
by Carl Sagan
In 1999, a multinational team of astronauts ventures deep into outer space, where they come face to face with an advanced alien
civilization.
by Dan Simmons
Seven pilgrims undertake a voyage to the world of Hyperion dominated by a fearsome and mysterious creature called the Shrike
where they hope to learn the secret that will save humanity.
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Stardust
by Neil Gaiman
In the quiet English hamlet of Wall, Tristran Thorn embarks on a remarkable journey through the world of Faerie to recover a fallen
star for his lover, the hauntingly beautiful Victoria Forester.
Cryptonomicon
by Neal Stephenson
More than 50 years after Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse and Sergeant Bobby Shaftoe are assigned to Detachment 2702, a secret
cryptographic mission, their grandchildren Randy and Amy join forces to create a "data haven" in the South Pacific, only to
uncover a massive conspiracy with roots in Detachment 2702.
World War Z
by Max Brooks
An account of the decade-long conflict between humankind and hordes of the predatory undead is told from the perspective of
dozens of survivors soldiers, politicians, civilians and others who describe in their own words the epic human battle for survival.
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by Peter S. Beagle
Recounts the quest of the last unicorn, who leaves the protection of the enchanted forest to search for her own kind, and who is
joined by Schmedrick the Magician and Molly Grue in her search.
by Joe Haldeman
Drafted into the ranks of Earth's interstellar warriors, private William Mandella finds his fight against the Taurans secondary to the
side-effects of faster-than-light space travel, which affects the rate at which he ages.
Small Gods
A Novel of Discworld
by Terry Pratchett
Brutha, a simple man leading a quiet life tending his garden, finds his life irrevocably changed when his god, speaking to him through
a tortoise, sends him on a mission of peace.
by Stephen R. Donaldson
In this first trilogy, reclusive, guilt-ridden writer Thomas Covenant finds himself transported to a magical realm where he is hailed as a
hero who wields powerful magic and where he finds his leprosy miraculously cured. Ultimately, he must defeat the malevolent Lord
Foul to save the Land and his own sanity.
In a human colony on one of a series of planets connected by wormholes, a young man who suffers from a series of physical
disabilities (the result of an assassination attempt on his royal parents) grows up to become a powerful military leader.
Going Postal
A Novel of Discworld
by Terry Pratchett
Sentenced to death for forgery and swindling, Moist von Lipwig accepts an offer of a pardon in exchange for revamping an ancient
post office, but his efforts are thwarted by tons of undelivered mail, an 18,000-year-old ghost postman, his shoe-wielding new
girlfriend, and murderous characters who want the post office shut down.
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by Terry Goodkind
Young Richard Cypher gradually embraces his destiny as the Seeker of Truth, and sets out to stop the evil that others would unleash.
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The Road
by Cormac McCarthy
In a novel set in an indefinite, futuristic, post-apocalyptic world, a father and his young son make their way through the ruins of a
devastated American landscape, struggling to survive and preserve the last remnants of their own humanity.
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by Susanna Clarke
In nineteenth century England, all is going well for rich, reclusive Mr Norrell, who has regained some of the power of England's
magicians from the past, until a rival magician, Jonathan Strange, appears and becomes Mr Norrell's pupil.
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I Am Legend
by Richard Matheson
A lone human survivor in a world that is overrun by vampires, Robert Neville leads a desperate life in which he must barricade himself
in his home every night and hunt down the starving undead by day.
by Raymond E. Feist
Evil entities have opened a rift in the fabric of space-time, plunging the world of Medkemia into peril. As the battle between Order and
Chaos threatens to engulf everything, reluctant wizard Pug is the only hope of a thousand worlds.
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by Terry Brooks
Over the course of three novels, several generations of the Ohmsford family find themselves retrieving magical artifacts in the
desperate hope to fight evil.
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Howard's original set of interlinked stories featuring his muscle-bound warrior represents a classic kind of sword-and-sorcery fantasy
adventure in all its pulpy, richly imaginative glory.
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by Robin Hobb
An wily assassin plies his trade while his uncle the Prince confronts attackers who are turning people into emotionless, zombie-like
"Forged ones."
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by Audrey Niffenegger
Passionately in love, Clare and Henry vow to hold onto each other and their marriage as they struggle with the effects of ChronoDisplacement Disorder, a condition that casts Henry involuntarily into the world of time travel.
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by Brandon Sanderson
Introduces the world of Roshar through the experiences of a war-weary royal compelled by visions, a high-born youth condemned to
military slavery, and a woman who is desperate to save her impoverished house.
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by Jules Verne
Follows Professor Lidenbrock, his nephew Axel and their guide Hans as they venture deep into a volcanic crater in Iceland on a
journey that leads them to the center of the earth and to incredible and horrifying discoveries.
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by R. A. Salvatore
Drizzt Do'Urden, a Dark Elf, finds adventure, peril and awesome magical power as he confronts the underground civilization of the evil
and treacherous matriarchal race of Drow elves.
by John Scalzi
Enlisting in the Army on his 75th birthday, John Perry joins an interstellar war between Earth and alien enemies who would stake
claims on the few existing inhabitable planets, unaware that the conflict involves much more than he understands.
by Neal Stephenson
The story of an engineer who creates a device to raise a girl capable of thinking for herself reveals what happens when a young girl of
the poor underclass obtains the device.Literary Award Winner
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by Arthur C. Clarke
During the 22nd century, a space probe's investigation of a mysterious, cylindrical asteroid brings man into contact with an extragalactic civilization.
by Jacqueline Carey
Sold into indentured servitude at the exotic Night Court as a child, Phedre faces a difficult choice between honor and duty as she
deals with a world of glittering luxury, conspiracy, sacrifice, and betrayal. Two subsequent trilogies chronicle the adventures of her
adopted son and her distant descendant.
The Dispossessed
An Ambiguous Utopia
by Ursula K. Le Guin
Unwilling to accept that his anarchist world must be separated from the rest of the civilized universe, Shevek, a brilliant physicist,
risks his life by traveling to the utopian mother planet of Urras.
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by Ray Bradbury
When the carnival comes to town, two boys unearth the terrifying and horrible secrets that lurk within Cooger & Dark's Pandemonium
Shadow Show and learn the consequences of wishes, as a sinister and evil force is at work in Green Town, Ill.
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Wicked
by Gregory Maguire
Set in an Oz where a morose Wizard battles suicidal thoughts, the story of the green-skinned Elphaba, otherwise known as the Wicked
Witch of the West, profiles her as an animal-rights activist striving to avenge her dear sister's death.
by Steven Erikson
Erickson's densely plotted series jumps around in time to chronicle the vicissitudes of the sprawling Malazan Empire, a place of
shifting alliances, mysterious mage guilds, assassin gods and military uprisings.
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by Jasper Fforde
In a world where you can actually get lost (literally) in literature, Thursday Next, a notorious Special Operative in literary detection,
races against time to stop the world's Third Most Wanted criminal from kidnapping characters, including Jane Eyre, from works of
literature, forcing her to dive into the pages of a novel to stop literary homicide, in a wildly imaginative, mesmerizing thriller.
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by Iain Banks
A science-fiction series by the author of the Wasp Factory features a symbiotic human and machine society that is engaged in a
galaxy-wide battle to the death between the Idrians, who fight for their faith, and the Culture, which defends its right to exist.
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by Mary Stewart
Stewart's first chapter in her five-volume take on the Arthurian legend is told from the point of view of young Merlin, who reluctantly
engineers the birth of Arthur.
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Anathem
by Neal Stephenson
Raz, who has lived in a monastery since childhood, away from the violent upheavals of the outside world, becomes one of a group of
formerly cloistered scholars who are appointed by a higher power to avert an impending disaster.
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by Jim Butcher
In the land of Alera, where people bond with the furies elementals of earth, air, fire, water, and metal young Tavi struggles to
cope with his lack of magical talent, until his homeland erupts into conflict between rebels and loyalists and Tavi discovers that he
holds the key to his realm's survival.
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by Gene Wolfe
In the distant future, after the sun has cooled and dimmed, the disgraced torturer Sevarian recounts his hard-fought rise to absolute
power.
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by Timothy Zahn
Five years after the fall of the Empire, a dying part of the Empire all the more dangerous near death has just discovered something
that could bring it back, the last of the Emperor's warlords, Admiral Thrawn.
by Diana Gabaldon
Hurtled back through time more than 200 hundred years to Scotland in 1743, Claire Randall finds herself in the midst of a world torn
apart by violence, pestilence and revolution, and haunted by her feelings for a young soldier.
by Michael Moorcock
Elric of Melnibone, an albino prince, travels in the Ship Which Sails Over Land and Sea to the city of Dhoz-Kam, through the Shade
Gate to the Pulsing Cavern where the magic swords Stormbringer and Mournblade await him.
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by Ray Bradbury
Eighteen science fiction stories deal with love, madness and death on Mars, Venus and in space.
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Sunshine
by Robin McKinley
All hope for stopping the vampiric elite from controlling Earth depends on human SOFs (Special Other Forces) and the success of their
attempt to recruit Sunshine, the daughter of legendary sorcerer Onyx Blaise.
by Vernor Vinge
Set in a far-future where space has been portioned into "regions of thought," a human expedition to an ancient data archive
unleashes the Blight, a superintelligent entity capable of destroying thousands of worlds.
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by Isaac Asimov
Fearing a violent confrontation between Earthmen and Spacers, Detective Baley and his new partner, a robot, investigate the murder
of a Spacetown scientist
On a mission to provide Mars with an Earth-like atmosphere, John Boone, Maya Toitovna, Frank Chalmers and Arkady Bogdanov meet
stiff resistance from those who will fight to the death to prevent Mars from being changed.
Lucifer's Hammer
As the great Hamner-Brown comet, dubbed Lucifer's Hammer by the press, approaches Earth, various business executives, politicians,
criminals, journalists and scientists await the impending cataclysm and its general and personal effects with decidedly differing
feelings
Doomsday Book
by Connie Willis
Stranded in the 14th century a time of superstition and fear time traveler Kivrin becomes an unlikely angel of hope during
history's darkest hour and awaits rescue by her comrades.Literary Award Winner
by China Mieville
In the squalid, Gothic city of New Crobuzon, a mysterious half-human, half-bird stranger comes to Isaac, a gifted but eccentric
scientist, with a request to help him fly, but Isaac's obsessive experiments and attempts to grant the request unleash a terrifying dark
force on the entire city.
by Piers Anthony
In Anthony's pun-besotted magical realm (which is shaped a lot like Florida), every human is born with a unique magical ability, which
they use navigate a landscape full of dragons, goblins, harpies, centaurs and all manner of eldritch creatures.
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