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A class of 42 Japanese students are taken to an island where they are instructed to kill each other, and they do. Not overly violent but does contain some. I'm very very nearly at the end. It's a long book, and the names get a bit tricky.
It was published well before the Hunger Games stories, but the similarities are striking.
Has anyone else read this book?

But, I think of dystopian as a subgenre of speculative fiction.

Has anyone read House of Stairs?

I've read some of the manga of Battle Royal, but I didn't really like it. The film is great, but stay away from the sequel.

For one man's 'utopia' I can recommend Ethan of Athos

And if you're interested in an anti-utopian book, which features a dystopia that works for its citizens, you may want to check out my own book, The Amadeus Net. (It also features an immortal, jazz-piano playing Mozart, a sentient city, and more robots than you can shake a stick at.)

Lena Hillbrand
The Superiors (my own dystopian novel)



I'll avoid rambling on about my love for this book, if you want to check out my 5-star review it's here.



Sea of Glass sounds really interesting. I might get that one from the library.


I am the writer of this book and would love to hear from anyone who reads it--you know, did you like it, what it made you think about your current situation and how it relates.

Suzy Turner
Maggie wrote: "Currently reading Battle Royale which I've described as The Hunger Games for grown ups. It certainly is dystopian.
A class of 42 Japanese students are taken to an islan..."
Just finished it yesterday but have known the Battle Royale theme for a while now through the movies and manga. It is indeed awesome dystopian literature. I'd also add A Clockwork Orange to the list and maybe the V for Vendetta graphic novel, which I've yet to read but if it's anything like the film, I guess it would be and great addition.
A class of 42 Japanese students are taken to an islan..."
Just finished it yesterday but have known the Battle Royale theme for a while now through the movies and manga. It is indeed awesome dystopian literature. I'd also add A Clockwork Orange to the list and maybe the V for Vendetta graphic novel, which I've yet to read but if it's anything like the film, I guess it would be and great addition.


Day of the Triffids is fantastic! I love that book so much that I keep re-reading it over and over again. Another good one by John Wyndham is The Chrysalids.

I agree Triffids is a classic with relevance today. I got a HC omnibus of Wyndhn novels which includes: The Day of the Triffids ; the Kraken Wakes ; the Chrysalids ; the Seeds of Time : Trouble with Lichen ; the Midwich Cuckoos.
I've only read Triffids. The Midwich Cookoos is the novel that the movie Village of the Damned was based. A young Thomas Dekker of the Sarah Connor Chronicles, severl Star Treks and Kaboom was in the 1995 version of the movie.
@François - Definitely A Clockwork Orange!


I agree Triffids is..."
I must lay my hands on that omnibus!

More in the YA category, but I very much enjoyed the Uglies and am reading Skinned now.

I'd also recommend This Time of Darkness by H.M. Hoover. This one is a YA book, but adults will enjoy it too. It's about two children in an underground society who try to escape to the surface.

Good suggestion! I think the book is better too. The movie is strange, but fascinating in an odd sort of way. I wonder how it would play today? The movie was 1971, the book the same year. I wonder if the book came 1st or was written from the screenplay?
Which reminds me of Farenheit 451, a better movie and book, IMO. We usually watch these 2 movies together.
Which remind's me of another suggestion: the Logan's Run trilogy. Great movie. I have yet to read the trilogy Logan: A Trilogy


The Road by Cormac McCarthy
The Chrysalids by John Wyndham
Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller
The Passage by Justin Cronin
Metro 2033 by Dmitry Glukhovsky
The Rifters Series by Peter Watts
Vacuum Diagrams by Stephen Baxter
The Night Land by William Hope Hodgson
On the Beach by Nevil Shute

OR "Amimal Farm"...?
However, I agree with you on "Canticle for Liebowitz"..... it's plot is convoluted, but you're reminded of "Fahrenheit 451" and "On The Beach" so much with it,....
BTW, a shameless plug here....my "Cassiopeia" series deals with a dystopian situation after the subversive collapse of a U-topian society after the distraction of a Universe-wide pehnomenon focuses everybody's attention elsewhere....
Check it out....
The Last Voyage of the Cassiopeia
Almagest
3700
The Avedon Question

OR "Amimal Farm"...?
However, I agree with you on "Canticle for Liebowitz"..... it's plot is convoluted, but you're remin..."
I'll defintely check out your Cassiopeia series! Sounds interesting!
There are so many books I love, that just narrowing it to 10 was hard. 1984 and Animal Farm are among my favorites.
I included Canticle and The Chrysalids over others because those two books are the reason I am into both Dystopian and Post-Apocalyptic Fiction. I read them in in the summer before highschool while at the same time playing Black Sabbath's album Paranoid over and over... Good times!
Electric Funeral lyrics for your morning Dystopian fix:
"Electric Funeral"
Reflex in the sky warn you you're gonna die
Storm coming, you'd better hide from the atomic tide
Flashes in the sky turns houses into sties
Turns people into clay, radiation minds decay
Robot minds of robot slaves lead them to atomic rage
plastic flowers, melting sun, fading moon falls upon
dying world of radiation, victims of mad frustration
Burning globe of oxy'n fire, like electric funeral pyre
Buildings crashing down to a cracking ground
Rivers turn to wood, ice melting to flood
Earth lies in death bed, clouds cry water dead
Tearing life away, here's the burning pay
Electric Funeral (repeat)
And so in the sky shines the electric eye
supernatural king takes earth under his wing
Heaven's golden chorus sings, Hell's angels flap their wings
Evil souls fall to Hell, ever trapped in burning cells!
Books mentioned in this topic
Almagest (other topics)The Last Voyage of the Cassiopeia (other topics)
The Avedon Question (other topics)
3700 (other topics)
The Passage (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Peter Watts (other topics)Suzy Turner (other topics)
Stephen Baxter (other topics)
Does anyone have a personal favorite that would be good to add to my "library" of books?