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Lost Colony sci-fi books

A settlement cut off, forgotten, and changed by the silence.

337 books
Newest firstMost popular
Sublimia Syndrome
Sublimia Syndrome
Exurb1a
PG-13Adult 18+
Ashes of Halcyon
Ashes of Halcyon
Christopher Hopper
RAdult 18+
Tomb World: Warhammer 40,000
Tomb World: Warhammer 40,000
Jonathan D Beer
Hard RAdult 18+
The Gauntlet: (An Old Guns Prequel)
The Gauntlet: (An Old Guns Prequel)
J.N. Chaney
RAdult 18+
Isles of the Emberdark: A Cosmere Novel (Secret Projects)
Isles of the Emberdark: A Cosmere Novel (Secret Projects)
Brandon Sanderson
PG-13Adult 18+
The Oracle (First Contact)
The Oracle (First Contact)
Peter Cawdron
RAdult 18+
Arrival: A Silo 42 Protopian Adventure
Arrival: A Silo 42 Protopian Adventure
Zev Paiss
PG-13Adult 18+
Having the Barbarian's Baby: Ice Planet Barbarians: A Slice of Life Short Story
Having the Barbarian's Baby: Ice Planet Barbarians: A Slice of Life Short Story
Ruby Dixon
RAdult 18+
The Pilgrim and the Wolf
The Pilgrim and the Wolf
C.S. Garrand
PG-13Adult 18+
The Signal Beneath the Sand
The Signal Beneath the Sand
Hank Garner
PG-13Adult 18+
The Sunlit Man: A Cosmere Novel
The Sunlit Man: A Cosmere Novel
Brandon Sanderson
PG-13Adult 18+
New Worlds
New Worlds
J.N. Chaney
PG-13Adult 18+
Starship Settler
Starship Settler
J.N. Chaney
PG-13Adult 18+
Mercenaries
Mercenaries
Joshua Anderle
PG-13Adult 18+
Non-Human Origin: A Science-Fiction Thriller
Non-Human Origin: A Science-Fiction Thriller
Vern David Buzarde
RAdult 18+
What We Can Know: A Novel
What We Can Know: A Novel
Ian McEwan
PGAdult 18+
Cutpurse
Cutpurse
Jamie McFarlane
PG-13YA 12-17
Alien Safari: White Water
Alien Safari: White Water
Robert Appleton
PG-13Adult 18+
Last Gate
Last Gate
John Walker
PG-13Adult 18+
We Will Intervene: The Warning (Invisible Dome Projector, What Happens After Death, the Journey of the Soul, the Ancestrals, the Anakim Giants, Beyond ... Lands, the Ice Walls, Terra Infinita Map)
We Will Intervene: The Warning (Invisible Dome Projector, What Happens After Death, the Journey of the Soul, the Ancestrals, the Anakim Giants, Beyond ... Lands, the Ice Walls, Terra Infinita Map)
Claudio Nocelli
PGAdult 18+
The Eye of the Sahara: A Mitch Dinkle Archaeological Thriller
The Eye of the Sahara: A Mitch Dinkle Archaeological Thriller
Chris Fox
PG-13Adult 18+
The Masks of Janus
The Masks of Janus
Travis Starnes
PG-13Adult 18+
Echoes of Deceit: A Science-Fiction Thriller
Echoes of Deceit: A Science-Fiction Thriller
Douglas E. Richards
PG-13Adult 18+
Echoes of Time: A Science-Fiction Thriller
Echoes of Time: A Science-Fiction Thriller
Douglas E. Richards
PG-13Adult 18+
Stellar Heritage: The Complete Series: Stellar Heritage, Books 1-4
Stellar Heritage: The Complete Series: Stellar Heritage, Books 1-4
Bob Mauldin
PG-13Adult 18+
Bastion
Bastion
M.R. Forbes
PG-13Adult 18+
Old Colony
Old Colony
John Walker
PG-13Adult 18+
The Ship: Final Voyage: Science Fiction Thriller
The Ship: Final Voyage: Science Fiction Thriller
Tim L. Rey
PG-13Adult 18+
Graduation Day
Graduation Day
John Walker
PG-13YA 12-17
Entropy (First Contact)
Entropy (First Contact)
Peter Cawdron
PG-13Adult 18+

About the Lost Colony trope

The lost colony begins after the umbilical to home is cut. A settlement is planted on a distant world, the ships stop coming, and centuries pass in isolation — long enough for language to drift, technology to decay or mutate, and the founders' purpose to fossilize into myth. The drama usually ignites when contact resumes: a ship arrives to find descendants who have become something the rest of humanity no longer recognizes. Anne McCaffrey's Pern is the classic case, a colony so thoroughly cut off it forgets it is science fiction at all, its dragons a forgotten engineering project reimagined as legend.

What gives the trope its charge is the anthropological mystery. The returning visitors — and the reader — must reconstruct what happened from the strange shape of what remains. Why do these people fear the sky? What does that ritual actually preserve? Marion Zimmer Bradley's Darkover follows a crashed colony that loses its technology and rediscovers stranger powers in its place. The lost colony is a thought experiment about cultural drift, about how quickly the human becomes the other when a community is sealed off and left to evolve entirely on its own terms.

This is the inverse of the colony world's hopeful founding, and distinct from the hostile planet's immediate survival fight. Here the survival already happened, generations ago, and the story is the long aftermath — the gap between who the settlers were meant to be and who their great-grandchildren became. It carries a melancholy that pure adventure lacks: the sense of a thread severed, a heritage half-remembered, and the unsettling possibility that the people back home might be the strangers now. Gene Wolfe's far-future settings turn the same idea inward, to places where even the survivors no longer trust their own histories, and the line between memory and legend has dissolved almost entirely.

Why readers love it

  • Settlements lost to isolation
  • Cultural drift into the strange
  • Anthropological mystery and reconstruction
  • Melancholy of severed heritage