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2015 YA Sci-Fi to Look Forward to

November 30, 2014 by Sana

It’s always fun to see what sci-fi trends are popular in a certain year. In 2013, it was mainly about time travel with popular releases like Cristin Terrill’s All Our Yesterdays, Kasie West’s Pivot Point, and Lauren Miller’s Parallel and a comeback of dystopia with Rick Yancey’s The 5th Wave, and Alexandra Bracken’s continuation of The Darkest Minds series with Never Fade and Amy Tintera’s Reboot.

In 2014, YA sci-fi releases had varying degrees of success, some were hyped too much others not at all and most involved a group working towards a common goal. Duology starters like Mindee Arnett’s Avalon and Claudia Gabel and Cheryl Klam’s Elusion failed to impress many readers while, Sophie Jordan’s Uninvited fast-paced story kept us hooked and Melissa Landers’ Alienated slowly build up to its finale. Others like Marissa Meyer’s Cress, Erika O’Rourke’s Dissonance and Amie Kaufman and Meagan Spooner’s This Shattered World have been included in the highly anticipated lists of many.

What does 2015 have in store for all of us? I compiled a list of top sci-fi to look out for next year.


Sci-Fi Series Starters

Series starters are roughly mentioned according to their release dates. I just hope the ones without any don’t get pushed back to 2016 because hello, awesome book blurbs!

Seeker by Arwen Elys Dayton – More fantasy than sci-fi, Seeker has already been optioned by Columbia Pictures. Seeker follows a female assassin who travels the globe from Scotland to Hong Kong. I expect great things.
A Darker Shade of Magic by V. E. Schwab – This is much more of sci-fi fantasy with magic, parallel worlds and time travel and a protagonist named Kell who’s a smuggler. Hello, new series with a treacherous main character, I think I’m going to love you seeing as the 150-page preview blew my mind.

Dove Arising by Karen Bao -Initially, this book had an awesome cover and I wanted to read it mainly because of that. Sadly, they changed it

The Cage by Megan Shepard – A half dozen teenagers trapped in a human zoo which is controlled by an otherworldly race known as Kindred.

The Leveller by Julia Durango – Fall into a brand new series about Nixy whose job is to be a bounty-hunter with a twist. Dragging kids from virtual reality back into real life should be easy enough but not when the game’s billionaire developer’s son, Wyn, goes missing.

After the Red Rain by Barry Lyga, Rob DeFranco and Peter Facinelli – This is probably going to be a series and from the intel I’ve gathered, it’s supposed to be a huge dystopian hit. I get Barry Lyga but co-authoring are a director and Carlisle from Twilight? Do I want to read this? From what we do know about After the Red Rain, it’s that the protagonist is a boy name Rose who lives in a world that’s environmentally collapsing and discovers he has inhuman powers. Pretty standard dystopia however, I will admit that anything with environmental in it gets me every time.

Illuminae by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff – There’s so much hype regarding Illuminae and for once, I think it’s well-deserved because have you read These Broken Stars and Stormdancer? Illuminae follows a hacker and her ex-boyfriend on a fleet who team up to uncover the the truth behind the plague ravaging it.

The Outliers by Kimberly McCreight – Already optioned by Lionsgate, The Outliers includes a psychological weapon called EQ Transference and the group which calls itself the Outliers and is set in a utopian world.

Passenger by Alexadra Bracken – The news about Bracken’s new series came at the right time as her highly acclaimed The Darkest Minds series came to an end this year. Passenger follows a modern teen’s accidental discovery of her ability to time-travel and involves a treasure hunt. Fun times ahead.

Futuristic Stand Alones

Everyone likes a standalone now and then and good stand alones are getting increasingly hard to find. Hopefully that won’t be the case next year.

The Ghosts of Heaven by Marcus Sedgwick – Spanning from seventeenth century to 1920s and ending in a spaceship voyage to another another world, The Ghosts of Heaven promises a lot of things. The fact that there aren’t many historical sci-fi in the young adult genre makes it all that more enticing to look forward to.
The Glass Arrow by Kristen Simmons – A sci-fi dystopia which I thought was going to be a series but apparently it’s not? The Glass Arrow takes place in a world where women are auctioned off to the highest bidder and must run to survive.
The Memory Key by Liana Lu – Lora Mint lost her mother five years ago and now she’d have lost her memories due to the Vergets disease, a viral form of Alzheimer’s, if not for the memory key. But when her it goes haywire, Lora remembers a moment that puts everything into question. Lu’s debut aims to question the significance and consequences attached with out ever-increasing need for technology.

Duplicity by N. K. Traver – Duplicity has hacking plastered all over it. It’s a digital hell for Brandon when his reflection starts moving with a mind of its own. Now that’s scary and exciting as hell!

Magonia by Maria Dahvana Headley – Despite being primarily fantasy, Magonia has sci-fi elements as it takes place in a land of trading ships. With a gorgeous cover and a promising story, Magonia is set to enchant its readers.
5 to 1 by Holly Badger – Another futuristic The Handmaiden’s Tale-esque story where the ratio of girls to boys is 5 to 1. In a twist, the women decide to institute a series of tests for the boys to win wives instead of marrying them of to the highest bidders. Girl power, yo.

Illusionarium by Heather Dixon – Illusionarium follows an apprentice scientist who’s desperate to save his family. There are parallel worlds and humor and who doesn’t want to read a book like this.
Tracked by Jenny Martin – Tracked introduces rally racing in the world of science fiction. But really, what more do you really need when there are fast cars involved? The cover could’ve been better, though.

Armada by Ernest Cline – If you haven’t read Ready Player One yet, now’s the time to do it. The highly anticipated sophomore novel is releasing four years after Cline’s groundbreaking debut. Armada introduces us to Zack Lightman who discovers that the videogame he is so obsessed with is real and that Earth needs his help to defend itself from a possible alien invasion. I want.

The Good Ol’ Sequels

I thought about not including this category but hello, it just means that we all get to get excited about these all over again heee. Here goes.

Fairest and Winter by Marissa Meyer – The fact that there will be two Marissa Meyer books releasing next year makes it worth the wait. First we get Queen Levana’s story in January which sets the scene for Winter releasing in November 2015. Excite, much? Hell. Yes.

Firefight by Brandon Sanderson – The sequel to Steelheart got pushed back to January 2015 from its initial release date of November 20th, 2014. The good news is that the early reviews suggest it’s a classic Sanderson awesomeness.
Unleashed by Sophie Jordan – The action-packed duology finale to Uninvited finds Davy on the run from government agents. What will her fate be?
Unchanged by Jessica Brody – Unchanged promises to reveal the the reality of Diotech along with secrets, and enemies unheard of before.
End of Days by Susan Ee – If you haven’t read Angelfall and World After, you fail at life. End of Days is an I-just-know-it’s-going-to-be-epic finale to Penryn’s story and that’s all we really know. Here’s to more from the story in Raffe’s point of view maybe?
More series continuations and finales to look forward to are Aimee Carter’s The Blackcoat Rebellion’s third installation titled Queen, Lindsay Cummings The Death Code, Lydia Kang’s Catalyst, Erin Bowman’s Forged, Anna Jarzeb’s Tether, Mindee Arnett’s Polaris, Claudia Gabel and Cheryl Klam’s Etherworld, and Jennifer Rush’s Reborn.
What are you looking forward to in 2015 (which is only a month away eep)?

Categories: sci-fi month, science fiction

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Crini says

    November 30, 2014

    ARMADA!!!! I NEED THIS BOOK SOOOOOO BAD! I'm still so angry that it didn't come out this year >.<
    and a Darker Shade of Magic obviously *preorders a million copies from different sellers to get it as early as possible*

    2015 is going to be EPIC! (especially when I think of all the movies that come out on top of these books *_* )

  2. Mel@Thedailyprophecy says

    December 1, 2014

    I also thought The glass arrow was going to be a series, how refreshing that it turns out to be a stand-alone! Magonia sounds interesting, which is why I had to download it from Edelweiss right away. A darker shade of magic has such a pretty cover. FAIREST! I need it 😀

  3. acps927 says

    December 4, 2014

    Thanks so much for this list! There was so much on here I have never heard of but sounds awesome!

  4. Cassie G says

    December 9, 2014

    These sound excellent, and I'm always looking for wonderful sci-fi standalones, so I'm glad to see this list! I definitely went and added them all to my Goodreads just now!

    Cassie @ Happy Book Lovers

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