Techno-Thrillers discussion

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CURRENT READS > 2025: What’re you reading?

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message 1: by Steve (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
What are you reading this year?
- In the rough vicinity of techno-thriller
- Expand our horizons a bit
- Skip book-of-the-month here

I suggest using the add book/author button to add a book cover and author photo, or in words [Title] by [Author] (Year first published). Maybe share a line or two about it ... the plot / your thoughts.


message 2: by Steve (last edited Jan 22, 2025 02:53PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Prey by Michael Crichton (2002)
Prey by Michael Crichton Michael Crichton
A swarm of nanoparticles capable of reproducing and evolving. What could go wrong?

Ranked #9 on legacy Best Technothrillers Ever list
I rank it …
#16 on The Best of Michael Crichton
#32 on Technothrillers: Best of All Time


message 3: by Steve (last edited Jul 21, 2025 02:33PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton (1990)
Jurassic Park (Jurassic Park, #1) by Michael Crichton Michael Crichton

Revisiting to rate, review, and rank it. Speilberg’s movie adaptation with paradigm changing CGI-based effects does influence our ratings. The general premise is tremendously innovative, but the writing is not remotely as dazzling as the CGI was at the time.

Ranked #1 on legacy Best Technothrillers Ever list.
I rank it …
#1 on The Best of Michael Crichton
#10 on Technothrillers: Best of All Time


message 4: by Steve (last edited Feb 02, 2025 07:14AM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Upgrade by Blake Crouch (2022)
Upgrade by Blake Crouch Blake Crouch
Thriller involving genetic upgrades mainly for humans. Upgrade is rated only 3.81 whereas Recursion gets 4.17, but I liked Upgrade just as much or maybe slightly more.


message 5: by Steve (last edited Jan 21, 2025 04:41PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
The Lost World by Michael Crichton (1995)
The Lost World (Jurassic Park, #2) by Michael Crichton Michael Crichton


message 7: by Steve (last edited Apr 06, 2025 08:07AM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Timeline by Michael Crichton (1999)
Timeline by Michael Crichton Michael Crichton

It is ranked …
#7 on Best Technothrillers Ever
#2 on The Best of Michael Crichton

I don’t rate it that high. Crichton was my favorite author in my 20s. On the reread, many of his books are falling quite a bit in my rankings.


message 8: by Benson (new)

Benson | 1 comments nice, Steve, I'm almost done with the first Jurassic Park book by Michael Crichton, he's becoming one of my favorite authors


message 9: by Steve (last edited Mar 30, 2025 06:50AM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Rendezvous with Rama by Arthur C. Clarke (1973)
Rendezvous with Rama (Rama, #1) by Arthur C. Clarke Arthur C. Clarke


message 10: by Steve (last edited Apr 05, 2025 11:21AM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Westworld by Michael Crichton (1974)
Westworld by Michael Crichton Michael Crichton


message 11: by Steve (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Heir Apparent: A Short Story by Daniel Suarez (2025)
Heir Apparent A Short Story by Daniel Suarez Daniel Suarez


message 12: by Steve (last edited Apr 08, 2025 07:22AM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Eaters of the Dead by Michael Crichton (1976)
Eaters of the Dead by Michael Crichton Michael Crichton


message 13: by David (new)

David (davidjamesduprey) | 11 comments I'm a big fan of Crichton ever since I discovered Jurassic Park. Since then, I've read all of his books except for a few early books he wrote under pseudonyms.


message 14: by Steve (last edited Apr 09, 2025 07:07PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Just finished Eaters of the Dead, which has long been one of my favorite Crichton books. Having reread many of them this year, they haven’t all aged well, or my standards have progressed, but this one is relatively timeless. Very creative. I will very generously and questionably say it qualifies as a techno-thriller, despite no technology per se, because there is science. It definitely has thriller moments. The book isn’t about the science per se, but evolution is noted in some detail in the epilogue, so … science thriller … or so I’m saying, but uniquely so.


message 15: by Steve (last edited Apr 18, 2025 12:17PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Kill Chain by Christian Brose (2020)
The Kill Chain Defending America in the Future of High-Tech Warfare by Christian Brose Christian Brose
A former aid to John McCain makes the case that America is losing the edge, in a state of hubris fighting asymmetric wars against substantially less capable foes like the Iraq, while China has raced ahead in their capabilities.


message 16: by Steve (last edited Apr 18, 2025 12:20PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Kill Chain: Drones and The Rise of the High-Tech Assassins by Andrew Cockburn (2015)
Kill Chain Drones and The Rise of the High-Tech Assassins by Andrew Cockburn Andrew Cockburn
Canvases a history of remote war systems and tactics, in an unflattering light.


message 17: by Steve (last edited Apr 27, 2025 03:32PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Micro by Michael Crichton & Richard Preston (2011)
Micro by Michael Crichton Michael Crichton


message 18: by Harry (last edited May 03, 2025 05:50PM) (new)

Harry Buck | 14 comments Three Grams of Elsewhere by Andy Giesler

I got turned onto this indie book by Andrew McGlinchey. So far it's one of my favorite books of the year. (Right up with Tranquility Sea). It's vibe is pure sci-fi, but the plot is a detective novel. Really a great find.


message 19: by Steve (last edited May 15, 2025 05:52AM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Who Goes There? by John W. Campbell Jr. (1938)
Who Goes There? by John W. Campbell Jr. John W. Campbell Jr.
The 1938 thing in the ice that inspired the movie The Thing. Didn’t like this book very much.


message 20: by Steve (last edited May 13, 2025 07:49PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Rising Sun by Michael Crichton (1992)
Rising Sun by Michael Crichton Michael Crichton


message 21: by Steve (last edited May 25, 2025 10:22AM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Digital Fortress by Dan Brown (1998)
Digital Fortress by Dan Brown Dan Brown
That was much better than I remembered from the first read decades ago.


message 22: by Steve (last edited May 26, 2025 03:04PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
All Systems Red by Martha Wells (2017)
All Systems Red (The Murderbot Diaries, #1) by Martha Wells Martha Wells


message 23: by G.S. (new)

G.S. Morgan | 1 comments The Gate of the Feral Gods

Totally out of my comfort zone, but it is really funny and some light relief after Pat Cadigan


message 24: by Steve (last edited May 28, 2025 08:32PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
G.S. wrote: "The Gate of the Feral Gods

Totally out of my comfort zone, but it is really funny and some light relief after Pat Cadigan"


I’ve heard good things about Dungeon Crawler Carl.


message 25: by Jed (new)

Jed Henson | 69 comments Love Dungeon Crawler Carl! I'm eagerly waiting for book #8.


message 26: by Steve (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Airframe by Michael Crichton (1996)
Airframe by Michael Crichton Michael Crichton


message 27: by Jed (last edited Jun 05, 2025 04:39AM) (new)

Jed Henson | 69 comments Chasing Shadowsdescription
I picked Sekret Machines: Chasing Shadows up at a sci fi convention with low expectations, but I'm loving it! Historical thriller plus techno thriller.


message 28: by Steve (last edited Jun 08, 2025 12:22PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Where Men Win Glory: The Odyssey of Pat Tillman by Jon Krakauer
Where Men Win Glory The Odyssey of Pat Tillman by Jon Krakauer Jon Krakauer
Rereading one of my favorite authors, a great investigative author. His books explore why does man do [some crazy thing we find ourselves doing]. The parts about Tillman are tragic of course. This book give an interesting account of wars in Afghanistan, Al-Qaeda, 9/11, and Iraq. It also covers friendly fire incidents and how they and other unflattering military events were reported in real-time and then later on. He goes through the saga of Jessica Lynch. He talks about an A-10 friendly fire incident. It is fascinating and frustrating.

I find special ops type non-fiction books far more interesting than fictional techno-thrillers. Because it is real … it is more intense than any thriller. It feels almost like heresy to note them in a “thriller” group, because obviously it is not some joyous entertainment that we get out of them and “thriller” seems an inappropriate label. It is the pulse-pounding intensity and intrigue of real-world events that are truly consequential, and the hard truth of the way people in the real world really behave that I’m drawn to … and I’m obviously not cheering like a juvenile at a Hollywood blockbuster movie during these books. These are just fascinating books.


message 29: by Steve (last edited Jun 14, 2025 04:43PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Pirate Latitudes by Michael Crichton (2009)
Pirate Latitudes by Michael Crichton Michael Crichton


message 30: by Harry (last edited Jun 18, 2025 02:46PM) (new)

Harry Buck | 14 comments I've been on an indy kick lately. Honestly, I'd stack them up against the recent "big books" any day. Three Grams of Elsewhere by Andy Giesler Limit of Vision by Linda Nagata and maybe somewhere between indy and big: Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel


message 31: by David (new)

David (davidjamesduprey) | 11 comments Steve wrote: "Pirate Latitudes by Michael Crichton (2009)
Pirate Latitudes by Michael CrichtonMichael Crichton"


Steve, I see you're reading a lot of Crichton. I'm an avid fan and have read almost every book except for a few early one written under pseudonyms which I'm trying to find.

I recently read:
A Case of Need by Jeffery Hudson by Michael Crichton Michael Crichton writing as Jeffery Hudson (no photo)


message 32: by Steve (last edited Jun 18, 2025 07:30PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Hey David. Props for being such a thorough Crichton fan. We are rare. Haven’t met anyone besides you that knows his work so well. In the 90s, Crichton was my favorite author. I’m rereading many of them this year, to see where they stand in the technothriller pantheon. They were a little foggy in my distant memory. Having fun.

Today, started another.
Congo by Michael Crichton (1980)
Congo by Michael Crichton Michael Crichton


message 33: by David (new)

David (davidjamesduprey) | 11 comments Steve wrote: "Hey David. Props for being such a thorough Crichton fan. We are rare. Haven’t met anyone besides you that knows his work so well. In the 90s, Crichton was my favorite author. I’m rereading many of ..."

My favorites are Jurassic Park (obviously), Eaters of the Dead, and Timeline. Those have always stuck with me over the years. I'm down to six of his early works written under pseudonyms to find.

Enjoy!


message 34: by Jed (new)

Jed Henson | 69 comments Timeline is my favorite Crichton book. Heck, it's probably up in my top 10 of technothrillers overall. I re-read it every few years. Have a thing for time travel stories, lol!


message 35: by Steve (last edited Jun 20, 2025 09:04PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
I went through all 198 people who voted on the Best of Michael Crichton list. Only 1 person had more than me. One had 26. I have 24. There was a 20, 16, some 12s. Mostly people were voting on say 2-6 books. I have Jurassic Park #1, and Eaters of the Dead #2 as well.

Need to work through some of the pseudonym books. I’ll buddy read if you want. Pick one not on my list. I’m in.


message 36: by Steve (last edited Jul 05, 2025 05:58PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
I Am Legend by Richard Matheson (1954)
I Am Legend by Richard Matheson Richard Matheson

Ha! Techno-thriller! He renders vampires not some mystical thing … something caused by disease, and conquerable by science. Except unlike the movie, he isn’t an actual scientist so he struggles. This book inspired the whole zombie genre.


message 37: by Steve (last edited Jul 15, 2025 05:45AM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick (1968)
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick Philip K. Dick

Really liked this one


message 38: by Steve (last edited Jul 19, 2025 07:40AM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut (1969)
Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. Kurt Vonnegut Jr.

There is a “time travel” notion in this book that makes some people call this a science fiction. I’d say it wasn’t science fiction, … just a framing device.


message 39: by Steve (last edited Jul 23, 2025 06:11AM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
The Minority Report and Other Stories by Philip K. Dick
Minority Report and Other Stories by Philip K. Dick Philip K. Dick

Each chapter is a short story or novelette.
1. The Minority Report
2. We Can Remember It For You (Total Recall)
3. Paycheck
4. Second Variety
5. The Eyes Have It
1-4 were all good


message 40: by Steve (last edited Jul 30, 2025 06:59PM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Influx by Daniel Suarez (2014)
Influx by Daniel Suarez Daniel Suarez


message 41: by Steve (last edited Aug 26, 2025 04:57AM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Aggressor by F.X. Holden (2023)
Aggressor (Aggressor #1) by F.X. Holden F.X. Holden

First book in the Aggressor series about China going to war over Taiwan. This series is best of the 60 books I’ve read so far in 2025.


message 42: by Jeff (new)

Jeff | 2 comments Hi I'm new to the group! I just finished up Project Hail Mary which brought me to this page. It was a great read and I really enjoyed the adventure. It made me want to re-read The Apollo Murders by Chris Hadfield. I'm not sure if anyone here has given this series a read, but I think it's great. Currently there are 2 books in The Apollo Murders series, with a third coming out October. I highly recommend!


message 43: by Cody (new)

Cody Alaniz (codyalaniz) | 3 comments 🚨 New Release Alert! 🚨

My latest book, The Edge of Control, is finally here!

Meet Elara Vaughn, a brilliant but haunted tech prodigy, and Nova, an AI companion who’s more than just lines of code. Together, they’re pulled into a high-stakes fight against a powerful corporation that blurs the line between innovation and control. As Elara battles her past and Nova questions its own existence, the two must uncover dangerous secrets that could change the future of humanity forever.

✨ If you love sci-fi thrillers, cyberpunk, AI ethics, and edge-of-your-seat suspense, this one’s for you.

📚 Category: Science Fiction / Techno-Thriller / Cyberpunk
🔗 Read it here: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FNLPSLCC


message 44: by Steve (last edited Aug 26, 2025 05:13AM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Jeff wrote: "Hi I'm new to the group! I just finished up Project Hail Mary which brought me to this page. It was a great read and I really enjoyed the adventure. It made me want to re-read The Apollo Murders by..."

Welcome Jeff! Project Hail Mary was great—my favorite techno-thriller of all time. With the movie coming out, it seems like a good time to reread it. Can’t imagine a movie doing it justice, but if it did …?

Thanks for the Apollo suggestion.


message 45: by Steve (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Cody wrote: "🚨 New Release Alert! 🚨

My latest book, The Edge of Control, is finally here!

Meet Elara Vaughn, a brilliant but haunted tech prodigy, and Nova, an AI companion who’s more than just lines of code...."


Welcome Cody! Thanks for sharing. Please put any posts about your own book(s) as a new thread in the AUTHOR/BOOK PROMOTION folder.


message 46: by Steve (last edited Aug 26, 2025 05:20AM) (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Swarm by FX Holden (2023)
Swarm The hit series continues (The Aggressor Series Book 3) by F.X. Holden Tim Slee

#3 in a great series about China at war over Taiwan set in the 2030s.


message 47: by Jeff (new)

Jeff | 2 comments Steve wrote: "Jeff wrote: "Hi I'm new to the group! I just finished up Project Hail Mary which brought me to this page. It was a great read and I really enjoyed the adventure. It made me want to re-read The Apol..."
Hello Steve, I'm looking forward to the PHM movie. I waited to check out the trailer until I finished the book. I didn't want any spoilers! From what I saw it looks promising.

The Apollo Murders series is probably my favourite in the genre currently so I'm really looking forward to the next entry. I also saw they are making this into a movie as well. Chris Hadfield was an astronaut and Air Force pilot, so his insight and knowledge make the series quite believable.


message 48: by Steve (new)

Steve Shelby | 353 comments Mod
Midnight: A gripping Aggressor Inc. action thriller by F.X. Holden
Midnight A gripping Aggressor Inc. action thriller (The Aggressor Series Book 4) by F.X. Holden F.X. Holden Tim Slee

I just can't stop. This series is so good.


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