The 21 Best Science Fiction and Fantasy Book Series Ever
The sheer number of new science-fiction and fantasy books published in any given year can be overwhelming, and it doesn’t help matters that both genres are so series-heavy. We’ve done the hard work for you and rounded up the 21 best science fiction fantasy series of all time, in no particular order.
For the sake of tidiness (and our own sanity), we’ve limited this list to series that include at least three books, and that are either completely finished or have no further books currently planned (so, no A Song of Fire and Ice), or have at least one finished multi-book story arc within the larger series (for instance, the Farseer Trilogy is a completed series within the Realm of the Elderlings series).
More: The best books published in 2019 so far
The Broken Earth Trilogy (2015-2017) by N.K. Jemisin
Including: The Fifth Season, The Obelisk Gate, The Stone Sky
Accolades like “masterpiece” and “instant classic” get thrown around a lot these days, but the acclaim for Jemisin’s series is more than just marketing. Each of the books in this masterful science fantasy trilogy won the Hugo Award for Best Novel, making Jemisin the first author ever to win the award three years in a row, and the series is currently in development for TV at TNT. These books are a pleasure to read, heartbreaking, joyous, inventive, and challenging in equal measure, tackling systemic oppression, climate change, and the complications of parenthood and grief. There’s simply no question that Jemisin is in a league of her own.
The Culture Series (1987-2012) by Iain M. Banks
Including: Consider Phlebas, The Player of Games, Use of Weapons, The State of the Art
If we have to say more than “utopian socialism on sentient spaceships” to sell you on this series, it may not be for you, but give it a shot anyway, won’t you? Banks started the Culture series at a time when space opera was considered facile and passé, and took full advantage of that attitude to reinvent and revitalize the genre, offering a smart, playful, and often stylistically flashy subversion of space opera tropes wrapped around a core of radical politics.
The Vorkosigan Saga (1986-ongoing) by Lois McMaster Bujold
Including: Shards of Honor, The Warrior’s Apprentice, Ethan of Athos
Spanning 30 years and sixteen novels, this sci-fi epic is full of political intrigue, corrupt corporations, weird family dynamics to rival your own, travel via wormhole, and a universe of colorful cultures and societies. Bujold’s universe is both witty and weighty, inclusive before inclusivity became a watchword of genre fiction, and a total joy to read.
The Wheel of Time (1990-2013 by Robert Jordan (with Brandon Sanderson)
Including: The Eye of the World, The Great Hunt, The Dragon Reborn
Jordan pretty much defined the conventions of modern epic fantasy in this sprawling, intricate series (which was completed by Brandon Sanderson after Jordan’s untimely death). In the same way that Tolkien’s races and grand quests defined the epic fantasy that followed The Lord of the Rings for a generation, The Wheel of Time’s political machinations had an incalculable influence on the epic fantasy of the past thirty years (most notably in A Song of Ice and Fire). And with a TV adaptation from Amazon starting production this fall (and the publication of Jordan’s never-before-published first novel, Warrior of the Altaii, on sale now), expect to see a resurgence of interest in Jordan’s world in the coming months.
The Pern Series (1967-ongoing) by Anne McCaffrey (with Todd and Gigi McCaffrey)
Including: Dragonflight, Dragonquest, The White Dragon
If “telepathic dragons fight deadly space spores” doesn’t sound like something you want to read then we’re not sure why you’re reading this list in the first place. The world of Pern is unique and fascinating, yet never buckles under the weight of its own world building. The dragons and dragon riders provide an intensely compelling narrative hook (Lessa and Ramoth in Dragonflight are direly overdue for a film adaptation). And McCaffrey, was, notably, the first woman to win a Hugo or a Nebula award. Don’t sleep on Pern.
The Hainish Cycle (1964-2000) by Ursula K. Le Guin
Including: Rocannon’s World, The Dispossessed, The Left Hand of Darkness
Le Guin was a legendary talent, a force of nature who helped solidify the place of women in the SFF world and helped legitimize SFF as a genre to be taken seriously. The Hainish Cycle, which is a loosely connected series of novels set in the same universe of mostly peaceful civilizations, just so happens to contain two of the single best science fiction novels ever written: The Dispossessed and The Left Hand of Darkness. That alone should qualify the Hainish Cycle for its place on this list, but the joy of it is that there are so many more books to read in this world beyond those two legends of the genre. Le Guin’s stories blur the boundaries of the “literary” and the speculative, but what really shines through is her focus on how we work through our prejudices and differences and come to understand one another.
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