Goto

Collaborating Authors

 john scalzi


The best new science fiction books of March 2025

New Scientist

The moon has turned to cheese in John Scalzi's new sci-fi novel My only complaint about the science fiction due to be published in March is: how in the world are we meant to find the time to read all these great novels? There are so many must-reads out this month, whether it's the latest from Nicholas Binge, Silvia Park's tale of a lost robot sibling or Laila Lalami's vision of a future where our dreams are policed for what we might be going to do (sounds quite Minority Report โ€“ a very good thing in my view). All I can say is, I think it's time to step away from the computer and get reading, if we want to keep upโ€ฆ Sadly for humanity, in this latest slice of comic sci-fi from the excellent John Scalzi, the moon has turned to cheese and they have to work out what to do about it. This sounds like a lot of fun, but I'm primarily planning to read it to find out what type of cheese the moon has become. Our sci-fi columnist Emily H. Wilson heartily approves of Binge's latest, writing that this time travel tale is well-deserving of its upcoming big-screen treatment.


John Scalzi on machine learning and remembering our favorite pets

#artificialintelligence

There's not someone at Google who has been assigned to John Scalzi, going, "Oh, I see John Scalzi is at an airport today!" It is a vast, unconscious processor that goes, "Oh, he's at the Raleigh airport, so let's point to where he can get a burger," or something like that.


John Scalzi's Head On is a murder mystery set in a robot fighting league

#artificialintelligence

John Scalzi is known for his witty science fiction thrillers. Old Man's War and its sequels are his take on military science fiction, while last year's Collapsing Empire was a new foray into space opera. His latest novel Head On is a techno-thriller involving robotic sports leagues and murder, and it's a book that's particularly relevant in our own, technological world. Head On is the sequel to Scalzi's 2014 thriller Lock In and an accompanying novella, Unlocked: An Oral History of Haden's Syndrome. In each, he introduces readers to a world that's experienced a medical catastrophe: a flu pandemic infected and killed millions of people around the world, and left some of the survivors with Haden's Syndrome, a condition that left them "locked in" to their bodies.


John Scalzi says listen to your teacher: The Great American Novel is 'To Kill a Mockingbird'

Los Angeles Times

Asking a bunch of literate people about the Great American Novel is an open invitation for us all to show off and make cogent, compelling arguments about the importance of [insert a favorite novel here] in the canon of American literature, regardless of whether anyone outside our small circle of literary compatriots knows of the novel or would agree. As a science fiction and fantasy writer, for example, I can make a pretty good argument for Philip K. Dick's "The Man in the High Castle" or Ray Bradbury's "Fahrenheit 451," or maybe even Mark Helprin's "Winter's Tale," and I might even get a cheering section behind the choice. Ubiquity: It has to be a novel that a relatively large number of Americans have read, and that a large proportion of those who haven't read it know about in other ways (for example, by a popular filmed adaptation). Notability: There has to be a general agreement that the novel is significant -- it has literary quality and/or is part of the cultural landscape in a way that's unquestionable (even if critically assailable). Morality: It needs to address some unique aspect of the American experience, usually either our faults or our aspirations as a nation, with recognizable moral force (not to be confused with a happy ending).