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The best new science fiction books of September 2024

From Michel Houellebecq to Booker-longlisted Richard Powers and Rachel Kushner, there is plenty of excellent science fiction to read this September

By Alison Flood

2 September 2024

New 精东传媒. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Some of the science fiction out in September 2024

There is a smorgasbord of new science fiction on offer in September, whether you are after high-end literary writing from the likes of Booker-longlisted Rachel Kushner and Richard Powers or universe-spanning romps from Yume Kitasei and Riley August. We have new work from the grandmaster Peter F. Hamilton, a glimpse of a near-future France from Michel Houellebecq and an intriguing vision of how we might deal with future plagues from Hannu Rajaniemi. My plan is to start with Kushner鈥檚 Creation Lake, move on to Kitasei鈥檚 The Stardust Grail and then dive into Powers鈥檚 Playground.

by Rachel Kushner

This is definitely on my reading list: in fact, I am hoping we might choose it for a future New 精东传媒 Book Club read. Longlisted for the Booker already, it has been described by our sci-fi columnist Emily H. Wilson as 鈥渁 thriller, a spy caper, a comedy and also a poetic take on human history all the way back to the time our species,聽Homo sapiens, shared Earth with the Neanderthals鈥, and as 鈥渟ensationally enjoyable鈥. It follows the adventures of a US spy-for-hire, Sadie Smith, as she tries to infiltrate a commune of radical eco-activists in France 鈥 I can鈥檛 wait.

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by Richard Powers

Another Booker-longlisted novel here, and one from the astonishingly good Powers (Bewilderment is just excellent). He sets his latest on the island of Makatea in French Polynesia, where a disparate cast of characters gather as humanity plans to send floating, autonomous cities out into the sea. 鈥淭he writing feels like the ocean. Vast, mysterious, deep and alive,鈥 says Percival Everett of this novel. I鈥檓 very much looking forward to it.

by Yume Kitasei

Maya Hoshimoto is an art thief turned anthropology student, but she is lured back to her old ways when she is asked to find a powerful object that could save an alien species from extinction. As she sets off through the universe investigating, she discovers she isn鈥檛 the only one looking for it. Described as an 鈥渁nti-colonial space heist鈥, this sounds excellent.

by Michel Houellebecq

The acclaimed (and sometimes controversial) French novelist sets his latest outing in 2027, as France undergoes a series of cyberattacks during a presidential campaign. We follow the story of Paul Raison, an advisor to France鈥檚 finance minister, whose father has had a stroke and is in limbo in a medical centre. This has already been a bestseller in France.

by Peter F. Hamilton

Science fiction authors don鈥檛 get much more legendary than Peter F. Hamilton, and this latest sounds intriguing 鈥 it鈥檚 a novel set in the universe of new sci-fi role-playing game Exodus. Thousands of years after humanity fled a dying Earth in ark ships, the settlers of Centauri have evolved into advanced beings. Finn is one of them, but wants a different future and takes the chance to become a Traveler, exploring the far reaches of space. I鈥檓 not a gamer, but I always love an ark-ship story, and I trust Hamilton to pull this one off.

New 精东传媒. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Peter F. Hamilton

Olly Curtis/SFX Magazine/Getty Images

by Hannu Rajaniemi

In the latest outing from this excellent sci-fi author, pandemics have brought civilisation to a standstill. The only way to survive is wearing an 鈥淎spis chip鈥, which immunises you against any new viruses as they infect you. Not everyone wants it though, with the alternative being an underground community of biohackers, known as Darkome, who modify their bodies. Our protagonist Inara is from a Darkome village, but she needs an Aspis to keep her cancer in check, and this goes against everything the community stands for鈥 This sounds great and scarily timely.

by Riley August

The universe is full of dead civilisations, and Scout is an archivist who scours dead worlds for anything interesting that might have been left behind. Now they have found a message from an alien who saw their world end thousands of years ago. I love the quote provided for this novel by writer Nadia El-Fassi: 鈥淐ome for the space archaeologists and adorably violent Pumpkin the cat, but stay for a science fiction novel that will repair your soul.鈥

New 精东传媒. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

“The universe is full of dead civilisations”

Irina Dmitrienko/NASA/Alamy

by Ian McDonald

This sounds pleasingly creepy, just in time for autumn in the northern hemisphere. It鈥檚 set in a restored wilderness project in Ireland where five children, three teachers and one ranger are on a sleepover. But strange things have been happening here, from livestock mutilations to the discovery of unidentifiable tracks 鈥 and as the kids trek to the site, they spot animals that haven鈥檛 yet been introduced, from wolves and wolverines to things long believed to be extinct.

by Jodi Taylor

Time travel shenanigans abound in this latest from the author of the Time Police and The Chronicles of St Mary’s series. This time round, Taylor is telling the origin story of bounty hunters Lady Amelia Smallhope and聽Pennyroyal: 鈥淣o bad guy they can’t handle. No expense account too flexible. No adventure too outrageous.鈥

by Francis Stevens

This is a reissue of a collection of short stories written by Francis Stevens, the pseudonym of Gertrude Barrows Bennett, an author who wrote most of her work between 1904 and 1919 and has been described as the 鈥渨oman who invented dark fantasy鈥. These stories include one set in an alternate-future version of Philadelphia, now a totalitarian nation-state where citizens are numbered, not named. Just my sort of thing, and I love rediscovering old sci-fi classics.

by Toshikazu Kawaguchi

This is the fifth in Kawaguchi鈥檚 Before the Coffee Gets Cold series, set in a Tokyo caf茅 where customers can travel back in time 鈥 provided they come back to the present before their coffee gets cold. This time, those visiting the past include a father who couldn鈥檛 allow his daughter to get married and a boy who wants to show his divorced parents his smile.

New 精东传媒. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

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