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Genetic Engineering sci-fi books

Rewriting life from the genome up.

108 books
Newest firstMost popular
Inherited Revenge
Inherited Revenge
James Haddock
RAdult 18+
Shards Of Hope
Shards Of Hope
BL Jones
RAdult 18+
Murgul: Brigands of Ruk
Murgul: Brigands of Ruk
Jewel Shipley
RAdult 18+
Jurassic Park: Precuela (Spanish Edition)
Jurassic Park: Precuela (Spanish Edition)
Milton De Renzo
PG-13Adult 18+
Knot All is Whole: A Lunarcrest City Omegaverse
Knot All is Whole: A Lunarcrest City Omegaverse
Holly Monroe
XAdult 18+
Hellmarine: The Omnibus
Hellmarine: The Omnibus
Virgil Knightley
Hard RAdult 18+
Hero Chimera: A Progression Fantasy
Hero Chimera: A Progression Fantasy
Zachary Holzgen
RAdult 18+
Dragon Blood - Omnibus: Dragon Blood, Books 1-3
Dragon Blood - Omnibus: Dragon Blood, Books 1-3
Lindsay Buroker
PG-13Adult 18+
The Error Within
The Error Within
Alex Timothy
PG-13YA 12-17
Body Horror
Body Horror
Joshua Rettew
RAdult 18+
Vector One: The Tree of Life
Vector One: The Tree of Life
Adam C. France
RAdult 18+
Frankie - Pestilencia: Frankie 2 (Spanish Edition)
Frankie - Pestilencia: Frankie 2 (Spanish Edition)
Olga Soler
PG-13Adult 18+
The Female Uprising: A Dystopian Novel
The Female Uprising: A Dystopian Novel
Melanie Bokstad Horev
PG-13YA 12-17
The Four Worlds: Subversion
The Four Worlds: Subversion
Skyler Ramirez
PG-13YA 12-17
The Angel Experiment
The Angel Experiment
James Patterson
PG-13YA 12-17
The Twelfth Child
The Twelfth Child
Raymond Van Over
RAdult 18+
The Golden Grove
The Golden Grove
Nancy Kress
PGAdult 18+
Wild Seed
Wild Seed
Octavia E. Butler
RAdult 18+
The Time Stream
The Time Stream
John Taine
PGAdult 18+
The New Adam
The New Adam
Stanley G. Weinbaum
PG-13Adult 18+
Livesuit: The Captive's War
Livesuit: The Captive's War
James S. A. Corey
RAdult 18+
Jurassic Park: A Novel
Jurassic Park: A Novel
Michael Crichton
PG-13Adult 18+
Allotropes (an Ell Donsaii story #8)
Allotropes (an Ell Donsaii story #8)
Laurence Dahners
PG-13Adult 18+
Fledgling
Fledgling
Octavia E. Butler
RAdult 18+
The Dragon Factory
The Dragon Factory
Jonathan Maberry
RAdult 18+
DNA (an Ell Donsaii story #13)
DNA (an Ell Donsaii story #13)
Laurence Dahners
PG-13Adult 18+
Ender's Game: Special 20th Anniversary Edition
Ender's Game: Special 20th Anniversary Edition
Orson Scott Card
PG-13YA 12-17
Rogue: A Sci-Fi Superhero Origin Story
Rogue: A Sci-Fi Superhero Origin Story
Toby Neighbors
RAdult 18+
Warlords & War Machines: The Complete Military Science Fiction Epic
Warlords & War Machines: The Complete Military Science Fiction Epic
David Beers
RAdult 18+
Red Ocean: A Deep Sea Thriller
Red Ocean: A Deep Sea Thriller
Eric S. Brown
RAdult 18+

About the Genetic Engineering trope

Genetic engineering is the trope where biology becomes a design problem, and the design problem becomes a moral one. Once the code of life can be read and rewritten, the questions arrive fast and hard: who decides what counts as an improvement, and who gets left behind when the standard moves? The film Gattaca crystallized the anxiety, imagining a society sorted by edited DNA into the valid and the in-valid, where a person's ceiling is fixed at conception and ambition cannot lift it. Nancy Kress's Beggars in Spain pushes the premise further, engineering children who never need to sleep and then watching society fracture along the widening gulf between the enhanced and the rest.

The genre uses the trope to interrogate inequality, identity, and hubris in equal measure. Aldous Huxley's Brave New World grew its rigid caste system in bottles; Margaret Atwood's Oryx and Crake follows corporate gene-splicing all the way to an apocalyptic punchline. Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis imagines an alien species that trades in genetic material as casually as we trade goods, forcing humanity to confront exactly what it would surrender in order to survive. Whether the edits are therapeutic, cosmetic, or coercive, the trope keeps pressing the same nerve: the power to redesign life is also the power to decide which kinds of life are allowed to exist at all.

It sits close to cloning and biopunk without being identical to either. Cloning asks what a copy owes its original; biopunk renders the wet, corporate, back-alley texture of a bioengineered world. Genetic engineering is the broader act of deliberate design — the choice to reach into the blueprint and change it on purpose. At its best the trope refuses easy verdicts, holding the genuine promise of curing disease in the same hand as the genuine horror of a world where the wealthy simply purchase better children, and asking the reader where the line should honestly fall.

Why readers love it

  • Life as editable code
  • Inequality engineered into the genome
  • Healing, enhancing, and hubris
  • Who decides what counts as better