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    • The Great Dune Trilogy Frank Herbert.
    • The Foundation Trilogy (Foundation, #1-3) Isaac Asimov.
    • The Ultimate Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, #1-5) Douglas Adams.
    • The Ender Quartet Box Set (The Ender Quintet, #1-4) Orson Scott Card.
    • Zones of Thought Series. By Vernor Vinge. Years into the future humans are no longer the only creatures living in a universe where one's mind's potential is solely determined by its location in space.
    • Sprawl Trilogy. By William Gibson. The Sprawl Trilogy consist of 3 books following the adventures of a data-thief who goes by the name of Case.
    • The Dune Chronicles. By Frank Herbert. The Dune Chronicles is a 8 book science fiction series dream. Set on a desert plant known as Arrakis, Paul Atreides – a boy who would later be called Muad'Dib – has his mind set on bring the family's dream to reality.
    • The Heechee Saga. By Frederik Pohl. Gateway is what started it all. it opened on all the wealth of the Universe and unleashed horrors unimaginable to most.
  1. Aug 18, 2021 · These past 10 years have brought seismic change to science fiction and fantasy (sometimes literally, in the case of N.K. Jemisin's Broken Earth series), and we wanted to celebrate the...

  2. Jun 15, 2024 · If you are looking to bury maybe even years into a new Science Fiction saga, make sure to check this list for ones that are worth your time.

  3. Instead, the list stands as a broad cross-section of science fiction literature, including both timeless classics and notable contemporary works, intended to offer readers a comprehensive and inspiring exploration of the genre.

  4. Nov 22, 2021 · Cyberpunk, space operas, dystopias – we've pulled together some of the WIRED team's favourite science fiction novels. Some are eerily plausible, others are wild trips of the imagination, but...

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  6. Dec 31, 2014 · 1. A Space Odyssey series. by Arthur C. Clarke. The 2001: A Space Odyssey screenplay was written by Clarke and filmmaker Stanley Kubrick jointly, based on the seed idea in Clarke’s story “The Sentinel,” where an alien civilization has left an object on the Moon to alert them (the aliens) to mankind’s attainment of space travel.

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