Books tagged with: cryosleep

  • 3001Arthur C Clarke
    3001
    by Arthur C Clarke
    Science Fiction

    In 3001, the human race has, unbelievably, survived, living in fear of the trio of monoliths that dominate the solar system. Then a small hope flickers to life. The body of Frank Poole, thought dead for a thousand years, is recovered from the deep frozen reaches of the galaxy. Restored to conscious...

  • Cantata 140Philip K Dick
    Cantata 140
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    Cantata 140 (also known as "the crack in space") is a science fiction novel by Philip K Dick. The name comes from Bach's Cantata BWV 140 which is also known as "Sleepers, Wake". The year is 2080 and overpopulation has become such an issue that millions of people have voluntarily become cryogenically...

  • CoyoteAllen Steele
    Coyote
    by Allen Steele
    Science Fiction

    I first found this novel during a book hunt back in 2006, at that time I hadn't heard of the author however I had just read Kim Stanley Robinson's Red Mars and as such was looking for another space opera "settlement" style novel. What I found with Coyote impressed me so much that I went straight out...

  • HeadsGreg Bear
    Heads
    by Greg Bear
    Science Fiction

    Heads is a science fiction novel, written by Greg Bear. A hundred years in the future, Michael Sandoval is the manager at Ice Pit Station – a research station on the Moon. Two projects are taking place here. His brother in-law is trying to reach absolute zero in a small piece of copper. His sister i...

  • Lost Fleet: DauntlessJack Campbell
    Lost Fleet: Dauntless
    by Jack Campbell
    Science Fiction

    Lost Fleet: Dauntless is the first in the military science fiction series by Jack Campbell. The Alliance has been fighting a losing battle with it's deadly enemy - the Syndic for over a century. Now its primary fleet is stranded deep in enemy territory. Their only hope is Captain John "Black Jack" G...

  • Lost Fleet: VictoriousJack Campbell
    Lost Fleet: Victorious
    by Jack Campbell
    Science Fiction

    Lost Fleet: Victorious is the sixth and final volume in the Lost Fleet series by Jack Campbell. Captain "Black Jack" Geary was cryogenically frozen for a hundred years before this final conflict gathered. Upon awakening he finds himself sucked back into a war he thought would long be over, leading a...

  • Love Minus EightyWill McIntosh
    Love Minus Eighty
    by Will McIntosh
    Science Fiction

    Will McIntosh writes love stories with high body counts. In terms of total death toll, he's probably killed all of humanity at least twice by now, yet each of his books is genuinely touching. In his first novel, Soft Apocalypse, his characters try to hold relationships together in the face of appall...

  • Pilgrims' MoonStacey S Thompson
    Pilgrims' Moon
    by Stacey S Thompson
    Science Fiction

    Scott is going to Terranova to begin a new life. Most of the trip is supposed to be done in biostasis, so Scott is rather surprised to be awoken in the middle of nowhere, just to be told that their ship has been thrown five hundred years into the future and far away from their intended target. Soon...

  • Planet JanitorChris Stevenson
    Planet Janitor
    by Chris Stevenson
    Science Fiction

    Planet Janitor Custodian of the Stars is a science fiction novel by Chris Stevenson. The Planet Janitor Corporation are experts in the handling of environmental clean-ups and close system jumps to pick up precious ores and space trash, led by Captain Zachary Crowe they have won a number of accolades...

  • Tech HeavenLinda Nagata
    Tech Heaven
    by Linda Nagata
    Science Fiction

    Tech Heaven is a science fiction novel by Linda Nagata. This is Linda Nagata's second book and is in a lot of ways, a lot better than her first (The Bohr Maker(TBM)). It's easier to read, it has a better flow and it also has a lot more to say. At the same time I think that it has lost something when...

  • The Dark ForestLiu Cixin
    The Dark Forest
    by Liu Cixin
    Science Fiction

    Defeatism. Fatalism. These are universal, recurrent maladies that everyone experiences at points throughout their lives. Even if one moves forward - how do we find meaning in such a vast, uncaring universe? Only here, the universe isn’t uncaring, it’s quite pointedly predatory. These are the central...

  • The World of PtavvsLarry Niven
    The World of Ptavvs
    by Larry Niven
    Science Fiction

    The World of Ptavvs is a classic science fiction novel by Larry Niven. A good old idea book from the good old days when a book didn't have to be 500+ pages – not that I don't like thick books, but once in a while it's nice to read something that you can actually see an end to. Ptavvs (how do you pro...

  • World Engines: DestroyerStephen Baxter
    World Engines: Destroyer
    by Stephen Baxter
    Science Fiction

    In Stephen Baxter's collaboration with the late Terry Pratchett, he imagined that there were a limitless number of parallel dimensions just a small step away, each with a slightly different version of Earth (although none others of which contained indigenous humans). In his latest novel, World Engin...

  • Kings of a Dead WorldJamie Mollart
    Kings of a Dead World
    by Jamie Mollart
    Science Fiction

    There are two ways that you can view the future. We are all doomed, or we will somehow save ourselves. The optimistic  The Day the Earth Stood Still  way of thinking is that humans will only get around to do something when we are really in a pickle. World ending disaster will be averted at the last...

  • Liege-KillerChristopher Hinz
    Liege-Killer
    by Christopher Hinz
    Science Fiction

    Science Fiction does not have to be epic. It can tell a small story about a single person or family as they struggle against a strange new world, but sometimes you want to read a stonking great space opera where an individual's actions can alter worlds.  Liege-Killer  by Christopher Hinz is one such...

  • RefractionsMel Melcer
    Refractions
    by Mel Melcer
    Science Fiction

    Any story of colonial rescue, involving cryosleep spaceships and small crews operating to solve a crisis far from Earth has all the ingredients to be an exciting read. However, the way in which a writer organises these elements and makes them palatable as a story remains an issue at hand. Refraction...