
Image: Penguin Random House Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguroīritish novelist Kazuo Ishiguro is hard to pin down, but who would want to? The stylistic and conceptual gap between his mannered historical novel The Remains of the Day, his dystopian science fiction novel Never Let Me Go, and his melancholy Arthurian fantasy The Buried Giant is vast, and each new Ishiguro novel winds up as a surprise.īut those books all connect around the pain of loss and the pressure of societal expectations around it.

The Last Watch is a thrilling adventure that leans heavily on speculative science and humor, and Dewes’ experience as a cinematographer shows through in her ability to to translate the complex visuals and action onto the page.

With no aid coming, tensions are high as the Sentinels have to figure out how to use their scant resources to not only outrun the encroaching edge of the universe, but figure out a way to stop it from collapsing any further. Rake’s crew of Sentinels is made up of the military’s dregs - criminals, misfits, exiles, and anyone else the government would rather forget about, including a disowned prince.īut when the universe begins collapsing, this band of rogues becomes the last line of defense between humanity’s survival and total annihilation. DewesĪdequin Rake is the commanding officer of the Argus, a run-down ship stationed at the edge of the universe, tasked with watching out for the potential return of humanity’s alien enemy the Viators. Image: Tor/Macmillan The Last Watch (The Divide #1) by J.S. So we’ve also included some of our favorite runners up. In a year with so many incredible choices, it was hard to narrow down the list. But all of them gave us something new to consider. These 20 books span genres and perspectives - from space operas, to Norse mythology retellings, to romances with a dash of time travel. This is precisely the promise of great science fiction and fantasy - categories we’ve chosen to consider in a list together, as fantastic books continue to blur the line between the two speculative genres (and besides, we love to read them all).

If you love books then you know: They aren’t just escapism, they also inspire introspection, making us think harder about the world we live in. Lots new authors wrote fantastic debuts in 2021, while many of our favorite authors continued their sprawling series - ones we were extremely excited to jump back into. Whether we bought a hard copies at the local bookstore or checked out audiobooks from a library app, or consumed them via e-reader.
