The 20 Best Dystopian Novels of All Time 

If you are like us, then you are also drawn to dystopian novels, But not all dystopian novels are the same. That is why we decided to list the 20 best dystopian novels of all time. Keep reading to find out which ones made the list! 

The 20 Best Dystopian Novels of All Time 

Choosing 20 dystopian novels feels like the right amount. There are some classics that make up most lists and a few others that may be overlooked by readers. You can see the full list below 

The 20 Best Dystopian Novels of All Time 

20 Timeless Dystopian Novels 

One of the most notable dystopian novels must be The Handmaid’s Tale. Some people may have read it in school while others read it for fun but either way, it is an impactful novel. Another classic dystopian novel that is up there is 1984. They both tackle serious issues and make us imagine the worst-case scenarios. 

A novel that everyone has heard of on this list is The Hunger Games. If you haven’t read it because it became mainstream, then you are missing out on an amazing novel. It helped reshape dystopian novels and popularized them and influenced a few books along the way. 

A couple of my favorites on the list are Station Eleven and The Passage. They are both great novels that take the genre in a different direction. Great writing is what makes these novels special and I can’t wait to see what new the future holds for this genre. 

Conclusion 

That is all for our list of the 20 best dystopian novels of all time. What books should we have included on our list? Let us know in the comments below! 

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22 thoughts on “The 20 Best Dystopian Novels of All Time 

  1. Mark says:

    Anthem by Ayn Rand is read by hundreds of thousands of high school students annually.

    Reply
  2. Anastasia M says:

    Hi – Not to be pedantic, but Children of Men was written by PD James. Fabulous list, I just wish there was something on it I hadn’t already read as I’ve been a fan of dystopian and utopian literature all of my life.

    Reply
    1. Jeremy Braden Worst says:

      A Canticle for Leibowitz should be on the list.

      Reply
  3. Janice Dannenberg says:

    I think Soylent Green should have been included.

    Reply
    1. LesM says:

      Soylent Green is from the novel Make Room,Make Room by Harry Harrison, I believe

      Reply
  4. Drew says:

    Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson. Better than most on the list.

    Reply
  5. A stinky butt says:

    Laziest drek I’ve ever seen. Have you even read these novels? Some of these are post-apocalypse settings where mass society never recovered and lots of them just plain aren’t dystopian. And for the ones that are, books like ready player one and hunger games are closer to the da vinci code than literary powerhouses like atwood, orwell or Philip k dick. A high schooler could do a more thorough job researching such a list.

    Also shout out to there’s always one douchnozzle trying to shoehorn Ayn Rand into everything. She spent her twilight years on welfare.

    Reply
    1. Sabu says:

      Unum salbrium lobular aster tablum. Horas ascybus calamutus dors’a!

      Reply
    2. Sholom Kaspi says:

      Any Rand on welfare? Really? Free Market Zealot support by the very institutution she most scorns. You couldn’t make that up, so somebody should–turning it into the story it deserves!

      Reply
  6. Erwan says:

    The Passage is not a dystopian novel. Children of Men is from PD James

    Reply
  7. Paul M says:

    A Canticle for Liebowitz, William Miller. Dystopia destruction of civilization 3 times over. Now that one is as good and as dark, with moments of searing humor, as any of them.

    Reply
    1. Cellophamous says:

      Along the “women in charge” theme, there’s Division: The Chronicles of the Fallen States of America

      Reply
  8. Daniel C. Felsted says:

    The Bridge at Andou by Mitchner, Atlas Shrugged, the children’s story by Clavel, the Giver, and Agenda 21 should be considered as well.

    Reply
  9. Robert says:

    The Devil’s Advocate by Taylor Caldwell published in 1952.

    Reply
  10. Dee says:

    Wool by Hugh Howey. If you haven’t read it, I can assure you – you’re missing out. One of my all time favorite dystopian novels

    Reply
  11. Jung man says:

    Along the “women in charge” theme, there’s Division: The Chronicles of the Fallen States of America

    Reply
  12. Jim C. says:

    “A Canticle for Leibovitz” (1959) by Walter M. Miller, Jr. and “Dhalgren” (1975) by Samuel R. Delany Both are both on my top-10 dystopian novels.

    Reply

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