Alastair Reynolds and Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson are two of the authors setting their novels in space this January. Alamy Stock Photo
New science fiction isnāt thick on the ground this January, but there are some gems to look forward to ā including a new novel from sci-fi supremo Alastair Reynolds, who wrote our fab Āé¶¹“«Ć½ Christmas short story this year, Lottie and the River. I am also really looking forward to Esmie Jikiemi-Pearsonās debut novel, which is a space opera with grand ambitions, and to Alice McIlroyās creepy psychological thriller The Glass Woman, in which a scientist is implanted with tech that has resulted in the loss of her memories. And if Iām feeling brave enough, Iāll be reading Tlotlo Tsamaaseās Womb City. If that isnāt enough and youāre looking for more suggestions for the year ahead, do check out our sci-fi columnist Sally Adeeās tips for 2024 reading.
by Alastair Reynolds. Iāll always snap up a new Alastair Reynolds. This latest is in his Prefect Dreyfus series, and sees Dreyfus investigating the death of Invar Tench, a police officer who worked to maintain democracy among the 10,000 city-states orbiting the planet Yellowstone.
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by Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson. This space opera is the first novel from Jikiemi-Pearson and it sounds amazing, moving from 6066 on the planet Garahan, where humans are indentured labourers for the emperorās war machine, to London in 1812 and the time-travelling Obi, who meets a girl from another time in the British Museum. We are told itās for fans of Becky Chambers, V.E. Schwab and N. K. Jemisin ā all must-reads for me. It sounds like the perfect antidote to any January blues.
by Alice McIlroy. This is a psychological thriller pitched as āBlack Mirror meets Before I Go to Sleep by way of Severance“:Ā it follows a scientist, Iris, who volunteers to be the test subject for an experimental therapy that will see tech inserted into her brain. But she now no longer has her memories, so doesnāt know why she volunteered for the treatment in the first place ā or even what it is. This sounds creepily brilliant, and Iāll be whiling away January commutes and evenings with it for sure.
Strange tech is implanted into a scientist’s brain in Alice McIlroy’s The Glass Woman. Shutterstock / MDV Edwards
by Tlotlo Tsamaase. The Handmaidās Tale meets Get Out? Thatās quite a tall order, but this Africanfuturist horror novel sounds like it will be enjoyably terrifying. It takes place in a cruel surveillance state, where Nelah is trapped in a loveless marriage in which her every move is monitored by her police officer husband, via microchip. When she buries a body following a car accident, the ghost of her victim starts hunting down the people she loves. Our sci-fi columnist Sally Adee has tipped it as one to watch out for.
by Maud Woolf. This sounds like a lot of fun. Itās set in the near future, where celebrities can make clones of themselves (known as āPortraitsā) to take on their various duties. We are following the story of the 13th copy of the actor Lulabelle Rock, who is out to eliminate her predecessors.
by Ali Millar. Set in the near future, when the heat is spiralling, this novel takes place over a week when Anna and Ava become caught up in their own world and find themselves reckoning with who they really are. Ian Rankin, no less, describes it as ā[Philip K.] Dick’s They meets early Iain Banks or Ian McEwan in this novel of a near-future family meltdownā, which is every bit āas gripping as it is horrifyingā.
by Karen Langston. A decade after the death of his partner Neav, Ink wakes to find he has no concept of the past, and can only think of her in the present tense. He appears to be part of a new āamnesia crisisā. But could this be down to a corruption in the code of the artificial language, Klova, that enables everyone to think and speak?
by Chris M. Arnone. This slice of cyberpunk sci-fi is Arnoneās follow-up to his novel The Hermes Protocol and follows an āIntel Operativeā with cybernetic enhancements as she tries to steal data from the offices of an evangelical preacher.
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