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Hidden Identity sci-fi books

Everyone has a secret — and this one could change everything.

148 books
Newest firstMost popular
The Memory of Babel
The Memory of Babel
Christelle Dabos
PGYA 12-17
Prelude to Foundation
Prelude to Foundation
Isaac Asimov
PGAdult 18+
The Handmaid's Tale and The Testaments Box Set
The Handmaid's Tale and The Testaments Box Set
Margaret Atwood
RAdult 18+
The Princess in Black and the Bathtime Battle
The Princess in Black and the Bathtime Battle
Shannon Hale
GChildren 5-8
The Space Between Worlds
The Space Between Worlds
Micaiah Johnson
RAdult 18+
Queen's Peril
Queen's Peril
E. K. Johnston
PG-13YA 12-17
Vagabonds
Vagabonds
Hao Jingfang
PGAdult 18+
Between Burning Worlds (System Divine)
Between Burning Worlds (System Divine)
Jessica Brody
PG-13YA 12-17
Dance of Thieves
Dance of Thieves
Mary E Pearson
PG-13YA 12-17
The Princess in Black and the Science Fair Scare
The Princess in Black and the Science Fair Scare
Shannon Hale
GChildren 5-8
Matt Miller in the Colonies
Matt Miller in the Colonies
Mark Rose
PG-13Adult 18+
Tiamat's Wrath
Tiamat's Wrath
James S. A. Corey
RAdult 18+
Telepath (a Hyllis Family Story #4)
Telepath (a Hyllis Family Story #4)
Laurence Dahners
PGAdult 18+
The One
The One
John Marrs
RAdult 18+
From a Certain Point of View (Star Wars)
From a Certain Point of View (Star Wars)
Renée Ahdieh;Meg Cabot;Pierce Brown;Nnedi Okorafor;Sabaa Tahir
PG-13YA 12-17
Guardian
Guardian
Joe Haldeman
PGAdult 18+
Death Becomes Her
Death Becomes Her
Michael Anderle
RAdult 18+
The Dark Forest
The Dark Forest
Cixin Liu
RAdult 18+
Armada
Armada
Ernest Cline
PG-13YA 12-17
Healers (a Hyllis Family Story #3)
Healers (a Hyllis Family Story #3)
Laurence E. Dahners
PG-13Adult 18+
The Princess in Black
The Princess in Black
Shannon Hale
GChildren 5-8
Born Wicked
Born Wicked
Jessica Spotswood
PGYA 12-17
The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet
The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet
Becky Chambers
PGAdult 18+
Gone Girl
Gone Girl
Gillian Flynn
RAdult 18+
Time of Treason
Time of Treason
Susan M. MacDonald
PG-13Adult 18+
Red Rising
Red Rising
Pierce Brown
RAdult 18+
Not Your Ordinary Wolf Girl
Not Your Ordinary Wolf Girl
Emily Pohl-Weary
PGYA 12-17
Foundation's Edge
Foundation's Edge
Isaac Asimov
PGAdult 18+
Sisterhood of Dune
Sisterhood of Dune
Kevin J. Anderson;Brian Herbert
RAdult 18+
Lady of Devices: A steampunk adventure novel (Magnificent Devices)
Lady of Devices: A steampunk adventure novel (Magnificent Devices)
Shelley Adina
PGYA 12-17

About the Hidden Identity trope

Hidden identity threads suspense through the simplest scenes, because the reader knows what the other characters do not. Someone is not who they claim to be — a fugitive under a false name, an android passing as human, a royal heir raised in obscurity, a spy embedded so deep they half-forget the truth themselves. Every exchange becomes a tightrope, every near-recognition a spike of dread. The trope is ancient, but science fiction supplies fresh and potent ways to bury a self: altered memories, new bodies, fabricated histories printed to order.

The futuristic frame makes concealment both easier and stranger. When faces can be changed and pasts erased, identity becomes something engineered rather than given, and the secret can run far deeper than a name. A character may be hiding what they are, not merely who — a machine among people, a clone among originals, an enemy among trusting friends. The tension is the slow pressure of a truth that wants out, and the cost of keeping it down: isolation, paranoia, the quiet corrosion of living a lie among people who believe they know you.

At its heart the trope is about the gap between the self we show and the self we are, amplified until exposure means ruin. The payoff is the reveal — the moment the mask comes off and the whole story reconfigures around the truth underneath. Whether it lands as triumph, tragedy, or some uneasy braid of both depends entirely on what the secret was protecting. But the engine never changes: a person carrying something they cannot say, walking through a world that would treat them very differently if it only knew. C.J. Cherryh and Philip K. Dick both knew the deepest version of the trope, where the character is no longer certain of the truth themselves, and the reader cannot be sure the mask conceals any stable face at all.

Why readers love it

  • A self that cannot be revealed
  • Every scene a tightrope
  • Dread of the slipping mask
  • The reveal that reconfigures everything