The 100 Most Popular Sci-Fi Books on Goodreads

Dystopias, alien invasions, regenerated dinosaurs, space operas, multiverses, and more, the realm of science fiction takes readers out of this world to tackle all-too-real issues, including oppression, bigotry, censorship, and the horrors of war. To celebrate the most inventive of genres, we’re exploring readers’ 100 most popular science fiction novels of all time on Goodreads.
As all good sci-fi readers know, the science behind the story is half the fun. To create our list, we ran the data to reveal the most reviewed books on our site. Additionally, each title needed at least a 3.5-star rating from your fellow readers to join this list. And, since science fiction is known for its continuing voyages, in the case of multiple titles from the same series, we chose the one with the most reviews.
Here are the top science fiction novels on Goodreads, listed from 1 to 100. We hope you discover a book or two you’ll want to read in this lineup, whether it’s a classic of the genre or one of the newer entries to sci-fi.
How many of these books have you read? What’s your favorite sci-fi novel of all time? Let’s talk books in the comments!
Comments Showing 201-250 of 521 (521 new)

Also, it's the 100 top scifi on Goodreads. I take that to mean the most often read and scored above 3.5. From the original article above:
"To create our list, we ran the data to reveal the most reviewed books on our site. Additionally, each title needed at least a 3.5-star rating from your fellow readers to join this list. And, since science fiction is known for its continuing voyages, in the case of multiple titles from the same series, we chose the one with the most reviews."
So it's got very little to do with subjective individual preference.
I've only read 23. This is a great list for when I just don't know what I want to read next!

Yes! "On the Beach!" One of Shute's best - great movie too!

Yes! Thank you for mentioning Robert Sheckley! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_... He was brilliant! Loved his AAA Ace Interplanetary Decontamination dudes! Several of his stories and books were adapted into movies, including his short story, "Seventh Victim" which became a cult classic, "The 10th Victim," (1965) and "was also the first movie to feature the reality TV death game theme." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_10t...

Good point, this needs a separate list actually. International SF, especially in translation, is really growing at the moment.



Rawzer wrote: "looking forward to spending some time working through this list. Obviously its wrong because Dune is definitively No 1 on any list of greatest SciFi novels, but looks like its got some great stuff ..."
The ranking is not by most number of stars, it's by most number of rankings. More Goodreads readers have read 1984 than Dune.

Oona was such a disappointment for me and I am a huge time travel fan. I think there were enough people who didn't like it to keep it off the list"
It's too new and doesn't have enough readers yet.

Not to mention A..."
The list is "most popular," meaning "most read." 1984 is the book that the most Goodread readers have read.

Anne McCaffrey is fantasy, not science fiction. Different list.




IN fact, no Asimov at all??? how???... If they're going to really call the list 'most popular' then it should simply be the 100 books with the most ratings (or the most reviews).. some sort of objective criteria that can be shared. Otherwise, label it what it really is '100 sci fi book Cybil likes'

Agreed!

Not if you asked her. She spent her entire career insisting that Pern was science fiction with some fantasy cross over, but definitely scifi.

This has nothing to do with the quality of the book!!! So all of the comments just complaining why one book was higher on the list than the other, and why some authors are missing - has nothing to do with the way the list is constructed!
More people read 1984 than Dune - simple as that. Since a disproportionate number of users are from English-speaking countries, there are very few authors in translation. More classics were read than new releases, because they were around longer. Etc, etc, etc....


I believe this is a web page for great SF books that can be read in English. If you care to recommend any great SF books translated into English, I am sure your suggestions would be interesting to myself and other readers.

Of the highest on this list Dune is my number 1.
Really surprised that:
The Stand is considered Science Fiction. Most places I've seen have it classified as Horror or fantasy.,
Shards of Honor is the one Bujold book on here. I liked that book but it isn't even the best of the series.
That Mary Robinette Kowal's astronaut book even made this list but McCaffery is not considering how seminal some of the Pern books seem to be for many.

Also, I think The Man In the High Castle is more alternative history than science fiction. It’s based on the hypothetical question of what might have happened if the Nazis had won WWII. I don’t really see that as science fiction, though.


My favorite sci-fi book of all time... I just read "Wanderers" by Chuck Wendig and my mind was blown. For now, we'll go with that one. Check it out: Wanderers


Perhaps you should try a website not massively populated by English speakers then.




Read the article, it is based on most reviewed by reader with a 3.5 or above rating. Tolkien is fantasy not SF, take a look at the fantasy list.

You are so right, the SF community spent years trying to get rid of the Sci-Fi nomenclature, then that bloody TV channel comes along...

Good point, this needs a separate list actually. International SF, especially in translation, is really g..."
Completely agreed. Some of us can read in other languages, and it would be good to see what international readers enjoy, as that might bring attention from English translators as well.
The list should also include Friday (Heinlein) for a good old fashioned romp.
The Caves of Steel - made such a deep..."
Just my opinion here but I think they limited it to 1 book of a series. I see at least Dune, Leviathan Wakes, Jurassic Park & Ready Player One are the 1st book in a series, on this list. I've only read Starship Troopers by Heinlein, perhaps I should begin another. And the debate goes on...