Obviously The Handmaid's Tale. Oryx and Crake also very good from Margaret Atwood.
And.. On the beach by Nevil Shute
I’m amazed it’s taken 20 replies to mention the Handmaid’s Tale. Seriously bleak and incredibly written. One of my favourites (after 1984).
I liked this although I preferred Ken Grimwood's take on the idea of reliving your life ( not that I would classify "Replay" as dystopian fiction )
Purchased ken's book on your recommendation thanks!
Depends really on what you mean by "Dystopia"
Edward Bellamies "Looking Backward " (Probably the most influential book that nobody has ever heard of!) is described as a Utopian dream of the future.
But actually, I think Bellemies world would be a truely horrible one to actually live in.
Like my Dad always used to describe working for <Large-Multinational-Corperation> "It is a plush lined Mousetrap!"
On the surface it looks wonderful, but underneath, the brutal level of social conformity and lack of individual freedom that would be required to make it work would be intolerable.
Kind of like the way China is going! :/
Only Forward and Spares by Michael Marshall Smith. I don’t know what happened to him but he was my favourite author at one point.
I've not yet finished Looking Backward, but I'm surprised you found it objectionable. It's getting a bit dry to read, but then it is about 120 years old. It otherwise seems to illustrate a reasonable and plausible basis for society, more so than any of the other few 'Utopian' stab in the dark books I've read.
Looking Backward was never regarded as a great piece of literature, so it can be hard to read in places. the "Sci-Fi" aspects of it was simply a mechanism to allow Bellamy a canvas on which to paint his utopian ideas. (My copy being a 1946 version is a bit dry too, but for different reasons, I doubt I will be able to read it again because the paper is falling to bits) Though it is interesting how well he predicted the developments of various technologies.
As I said, like most utopian ideas, the structure is like Logans Run/Brave new World/Whatever, a small group of people "Who know best" decide what the perfect society is and everybody else has to like it. For those that do its great. For those that dont it is the ninth circle of hell!
This is where socialistic utopias inevitably fall down. They only work in an environment where you have a population that is completely complaint and with no expectation of any freedom of thought or action outside the role that is assigned to them by their betters. Some people of course are happy with that, but many are not. And what happens to those that do not wish to "Get with the Program"??
The Gulag inevitably awaits!
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The Stand by Stephen King was interesting. It's about the world being overtaken by a plague that can't be cured. The descent of civilisation into ruin is excellent. Although the book does get a bit trippy as it goes on...