Welcome to the untamed frontier of biopunk science fiction, a genre where the human genome is playground, laboratory, and battleground all at once. Buckle up for stories that make you question the very nature of life itself, that draw you into the scenic but unnerving overlap between biology and technology, where DNA becomes an open source code and life is just another variable to tinker with. Birthed from the junction of cyberpunk's neon-lit dystopias and hard science fiction's rigorous speculation about future of biology, Biopunk grapples directly with what lies at the heart of us all: our life, our flesh, our genes, and our free will.
Neuromancer
By William Gibson
How it fits the "Biopunk Science Fiction books" vibe: Neuromancer is the defining work of the Cyberpunk genre and a classic biopunk pick. Gibson's speculative science surrounding AI, biotechnology, and the internet, mirror the biopunk subgenre's signature fusion of biology and technology.
4 / 5 Stars on Google Books
Publisher: Penguin
Page Count: 292
Published Date: 2000-07-01
Oryx and Crake
By Margaret Atwood
How it fits the "Biopunk Science Fiction books" vibe: This novel centers around biotechnological and genetic engineering catastrophes, which is a common theme found in most biopunk novels. It provides a terrifying glimpse of the consequences of playing God with biology.
4.5 / 5 Stars on Google Books
Publisher: Vintage Canada
Page Count: 416
Published Date: 2010-07-27
Dawn
By Octavia E. Butler
How it fits the "Biopunk Science Fiction books" vibe: Dawn is the first book in the 'Lilith's Brood' trilogy which deals extensively with themes of genetics and alien interbreeding. The biopunk elements come with a heavy dose of dystopia and interesting social commentary.
Publisher: Hachette UK
Page Count: 324
Published Date: 2014-03-27
The Windup Girl
By Paolo Bacigalupi
How it fits the "Biopunk Science Fiction books" vibe: The Windup Girl features a world dominated by biotech mega-corporations where genehacked seeds are the currency of the kingdom. The 'Windup Girl' herself is a genetically engineered being, an illustration of biopunk ethos.
Publisher: Start Publishing LLC
Page Count: 376
Published Date: 2015-05-05
Beggars in Spain
By Nancy Kress
How it fits the "Biopunk Science Fiction books" vibe: Beggars in Spain is about a generation of biologically engineered children who do not need to sleep, raising questions about what it means to be human and the ethics of bio-engineering, exactly the sort of thought-provoking themes you want from a biopunk novel.