Photo Credit: Knopf
Photo Credit: Harper Voyager
By Octavia E. Butler This reissue of the 1993 original takes readers to the early 2020s, or, erm, soon. Climate change and economic issues have led to social chaos and imminent danger. In a gated community in California, 15-year-old Lauren Olamina wants to help save humankind, but is her intuition and leadership enough to survive this post-apocalyptic America? ” data-id=”131016247″ data-link=”https://amnewyork.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/6413_image.jpg” class=”wp-image-1.31016247″/>
By Mike Chen Kin Stewart is far away from home. Because home is in 2142, and hes stuck in the 1990s after his mission as a secret agent goes awry. He starts a new life in San Francisco, unaware of his alternative reality, but when a rescue team shows up from the future (or, his current, kind of), Kin is split between two identities, realities and families. ” data-id=”131016249″ data-link=”https://amnewyork.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/6414_image.jpg” class=”wp-image-1.31016249″/> Photo Credit: Mira
By Ian McEwan Robots and artificial intelligence may be on everyones mind in 2019, but in the 1980s this was, for some, no less the case. At least, so it is in an alternative 1980s London, where Charlie and Miranda find themselves in a love triangle with one of the worlds first synthetic humans, Adam, designed to be the perfect person. Only Adam is very much not a person. ” data-id=”131016251″ data-link=”https://amnewyork.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/6669_image.jpg” class=”wp-image-1.31016251″/> Photo Credit: Nan A. Tales
The world may seem like too much right now, so escape to another one. This May, get swept away farther than your MetroCard can take you with these fictional worlds and alternative realities created in new sci-fi page-turners that may have you missing your subway stop.