January is officially underway, and the previous year is fading in the rearview. It's going to be an interesting year ahead to say the least...but one thing we ...
Our writers pick their favourite science fiction books of all time We asked New Scientist staff to pick their favourite science fiction books. Here are the results, ranging from 19th-century ...
From Cory Doctorow to Nnedi Okorafor and from fancy space opera to elegantly written visions of a flooded future world, there is plenty of great science fiction published this month ...
There are lots of great science fiction book series out there ... as a boy after a horrifying encounter with the Nophek ...
Contrary to what some might think, space opera isn’t an interstellar ... Originally published in 1965, the epic science ...
What we find at the intersection of science fact and science fiction, from utopian metropolises to visitors from other worlds. By Andrew Paul By Andrew Paul By Mack DeGeurin By Andrew Paul By ...
Orbital” by Samantha Harvey is a fascinating and contemplative new piece of science fiction that gives readers an eye-opening ...
Gibson’s “console cowboys” of a near future, chase one another through a virtual space known as ... breathes new life into science fiction in the 1990s. The first book in Kim Stanley ...
While this technology has not yet been fully realized, it remains a tantalizing possibility for future space exploration. The Intersection of Science and Fiction Weinzweig's use of simulated ...
Do Martha Wells’ books suit a prestige TV series starring Alexander Skarsgård as the genderless, autistic-coded Murderbot?