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r/printSF


Is there cozy sci-fi in the same way there is cozy fantasy?
Is there cozy sci-fi in the same way there is cozy fantasy?

I interviewed Rebecca Thorne about her new book Moss'd in Space, and during the conversation, she said she wants cozy sci-fi to become a sub-genre like cozy fantasy is. I love the idea of more sci-fi books in general, but also especially with a cozy feel to them.

I have to assume that some are already published, and I either don't think of them as "cozy" (which is subjective) or I just don't know about them.

So I guess my question is, what are some "cozy sci-fi" books?

I've found a few self-published ones, but they can be pretty hit or miss for me.


Advertisement: No logs. No tracking. No selling your data. Not even to us.
No logs. No tracking. No selling your data. Not even to us.
No logs. No tracking. No selling your data. Not even to us.


What science fiction novel had humanity lose, but still somehow felt hopeful?
What science fiction novel had humanity lose, but still somehow felt hopeful?

A lot of sci-fi stories end with humanity surviving, winning the war, escaping extinction, or at least finding a way forward.

But I'm curious about the opposite.

What's a sci-fi book where, if you look at the situation objectively, humanity basically lost... yet the ending didn't feel completely bleak?

Maybe Earth was abandoned. Maybe humans became something else entirely. Maybe another species inherited the future. Maybe civilization collapsed and never recovered. The important part is that the outcome wasn't really a "victory" in the traditional sense.

I'm not necessarily looking for happy endings. More the kind of ending where you close the book and think, "Well, that didn't go well for us... but maybe that's okay."

The best examples for me are the ones where the loss forces a change in perspective rather than just serving as a tragedy.

Any recommendations? Obviously spoilers are unavoidable, but please hide details when possible.


Children of time reminds me of *spoilers*
Children of time reminds me of *spoilers*
Children of time reminds me of *spoilers*

I have just finished the book after some time. i read it up to 2/3 a couple of months ago, got busy and then read it again after reading a summary.

The book reminds me of Independence day and other alien invasion movies, but from the inverted perspective of the invaders. In a way you are much more immersed in the perspective if the invaders are humans and the invaded are aliens.

Like the other comments, the kern's world storyline i think is superior but the gilgamesh is not that bad, it kinda reminds me of a short stay in hell. The way he kept sleeping and waking up and then time passed, it was an effective and smart plot device.

Anyway, i like that in the end and it was kinda funny that after all the other chaotic and dystopian scifi content, we finally get a true kumbaya moment, i was actually half waiting for a dance sequence ttytt