SF CORE Best Lists
- Best Modern Science Fiction Books
- Best Science Fiction Series
- Best Stand Alone Science Fiction Books
- Top 25 Underrated Science Fiction Books
- Best Science Fiction by Women
- Best Science Fiction Books for Young Adults
- Best Science Fiction Books for Children
- The Alternative Top 25 Best Science Fiction List
- Top 25 Science Fiction Books
- Top 100 Best Science Fiction Books
- Top 50 Best Science Fiction Movies of All Time
- Best Sci-Fi Movies of the 21st Century
- Best Sci-Fi TV Shows of All Time
- Best Science Fiction Graphic Novels
SF ERA Best Lists
- Best Science Fiction Books of 2014
- Best Contemporary Science Fiction Books
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- Best Classic Science Fiction Books
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- Best Modern Science Fiction Classics
SF GENRE Best Lists
- Best Hard Science Fiction Books
- Best Cyberpunk Books
- Best Space Opera Books (OLD AND MERGED WITH NEW)
- Best Dystopian Science Fiction Books
- Best Post Apocalyptic Science Fiction Books
- Best Alternate History Books
- Best Time Travel Science Fiction Books
- Best Robot Science Fiction
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- Top 25 Best Mars Science Fiction Books
- Best Literary Science Fiction Books
- Best Books About Science Fiction
- Best Space Opera Books
- Top 25 Post Human Science Fiction Books
- Top 25 Best Science Fiction Mystery Books
- Top 25 Best Science Fiction Books About the Moon
- Best Non-English Science Fiction Books
- Best Science Fiction Games of All Time
- Best Science Fiction Comic Books
- Best Science Fiction Anime
- Top 25 Military SciFi Books
OTHER Best Lists
With The Night Mail
Author: Rudyard Kipling
Not many science fiction writers have won the Nobel Prize for Literature, but Kipling was the first member of this exclusive club. His finest science fiction is a pair of stories concerning the Aerial Board of Control, "With the Night Mail: A Story of 2000 A.D." and "As Easy as A.B.C.: A Story of 2150 A.D." Kipling shared with Wells the idea that control of the air would lead to peaceful world government, and the first of these stories simply recounts a transatlantic journey by dirigible. Though the story is made particularly memorable by the inclusion of several pages of newspaper advertisements from this future age which, taken together, provide a wonderful snapshot of daily life in this future world. By the second story, set 150 years later, the world government has become more oppressive, and "As Easy as A.B.C." tells how agents of the Aerial Board of Control have to rush to Chicago to put down a revolt by people demanding a return to democracy. Why it's on the list: Taken together, these are fascinating stories which present a vividly realised portrait of the future, right down to the minutiae of what people eat and read and wear. They also present the first glimpse of a world government of flyers, which Wells himself wouldn't fully develop until The Shape of Things to Come some thirty years later.