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All Tomorrows by C. M. Kosemen

Have you read this book? Just a few quick questions — it takes about a minute. Share what you liked (or didn’t), and we’ll use your answers to recommend your next favorite read!

Love All Tomorrows but not sure what to read next?

These picks are popular with readers who enjoyed this book. Complete a quick Shelf Talk to get recommendations made just for you! Warning: possible spoilers for All Tomorrows below.

In All Tomorrows, did you enjoy ...

... scientific plausibility and speculative evolution?

Blindsight by Peter Watts

If you were fascinated by the speculative biology and deeply plausible future evolution depicted in All Tomorrows, you'll be riveted by Blindsight. Watts imagines a crew encountering truly alien life with unsettling scientific rigor, pushing the boundaries of what intelligence and consciousness might look like in the universe.

... a vast timeline and civilizations rising and falling?

The Book of the New Sun: Shadow & Claw by Gene Wolfe

If you loved the sweeping, epoch-spanning narrative of All Tomorrows, The Book of the New Sun delivers a similarly epic sense of history. Wolfe's world is layered with the ruins and echoes of countless lost cultures, casting humanity's fate on a cosmic scale.

... alien societies and non-human perspectives?

Embassytown by China Miéville

If the wildly imaginative alien civilizations and post-human species in All Tomorrows captured your interest, Embassytown will immerse you in an alien culture so unique that even the concept of language is redefined. You'll appreciate the same sense of wonder and strangeness as humans struggle to communicate with the enigmatic Hosts.

... philosophical explorations about humanity’s place in the universe?

Roadside Picnic by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky

If the existential reflections and philosophical questions posed in All Tomorrows resonated with you, Roadside Picnic offers a similarly haunting meditation on humanity’s insignificance in the face of the unknown, as scientists and scavengers grapple with the mysteries left behind by incomprehensible visitors.

... deeply imagined worlds and cultures?

The Left Hand Of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin

If you were drawn to the intricate worldbuilding and richly detailed societies in All Tomorrows, you'll love The Left Hand of Darkness. Le Guin crafts a planet with its own history, politics, and gender dynamics, making each culture feel as real and complex as our own world’s future descendants.

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