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Military SF sci-fi books

The future of war, told from inside the ranks.

609 books
Newest firstMost popular
Last Stand
Last Stand
A.K. DuBoff
PG-13Adult 18+
Janissary Commander: A Science Fiction LitRPG Novel
Janissary Commander: A Science Fiction LitRPG Novel
Fred Hughes
RAdult 18+
Mercenaries
Mercenaries
Pam Uphoff
PG-13Adult 18+
Ender's Game: Special 20th Anniversary Edition
Ender's Game: Special 20th Anniversary Edition
Orson Scott Card
PG-13YA 12-17
Moon Cultivation: Sci-fi Cultivation LitRPG Adventure
Moon Cultivation: Sci-fi Cultivation LitRPG Adventure
Maksym Pachesiuk
PG-13Adult 18+
Revenge
Revenge
Mark Tufo
RAdult 18+
Fourth Wave
Fourth Wave
Michael Simon
RAdult 18+
The Legion is My Country: A Miltary Sci-Fi Series
The Legion is My Country: A Miltary Sci-Fi Series
Robert Kurtz
RAdult 18+
Virtus Essendi
Virtus Essendi
Jonathon Clinesmith
PG-13Adult 18+
Armory in Time
Armory in Time
Brake Fraley
RAdult 18+
The Last Mission of the Seventh Cavalry: A Military Time-Travel Thriller
The Last Mission of the Seventh Cavalry: A Military Time-Travel Thriller
Charley Brindley
RAdult 18+
CIVIL WAR : Fall of Washington: THE CIVIL WAR SERIES BOOK 1: The Confederacy rises at Bull Run
CIVIL WAR : Fall of Washington: THE CIVIL WAR SERIES BOOK 1: The Confederacy rises at Bull Run
Max Lamirande
PG-13Adult 18+
The Gathering Storm
The Gathering Storm
Brian C. Thompson
PG-13Adult 18+
Dark Age
Dark Age
Pierce Brown
Hard RAdult 18+
Iron Gold
Iron Gold
Pierce Brown
RAdult 18+
Survival of the Fittest: A Military Sci-Fi Series
Survival of the Fittest: A Military Sci-Fi Series
Gary Budd
RAdult 18+
RESOLUTION
RESOLUTION
Veronica Scott
RAdult 18+
Rogue Agent: A novel in the Dumb Luck and Dead Heroes universe
Rogue Agent: A novel in the Dumb Luck and Dead Heroes universe
Skyler Ramirez
RAdult 18+
Entropy (First Contact)
Entropy (First Contact)
Peter Cawdron
PG-13Adult 18+
Against All Odds: A Military Sci-Fi Series
Against All Odds: A Military Sci-Fi Series
Jeffery H. Haskell
RAdult 18+
Making The Grade
Making The Grade
Jason Cheek
Hard RAdult 18+
Livesuit: The Captive's War
Livesuit: The Captive's War
James S. A. Corey
RAdult 18+
Collapse
Collapse
Sean Oswald
PG-13Adult 18+
RuinForged Architect Book One: LitRPG OP MC System Apocalypse
RuinForged Architect Book One: LitRPG OP MC System Apocalypse
Malik Mark
RAdult 18+
Dropout: A LitRPG Sci-Fi Adventure
Dropout: A LitRPG Sci-Fi Adventure
Tao Wong
RAdult 18+
Hell on Earth
Hell on Earth
J.Z. Foster
RAdult 18+
Cosmic Games
Cosmic Games
Wilbur Woods
RAdult 18+
Empire of Ivory
Empire of Ivory
Naomi Novik
PG-13Adult 18+
Primitive War 1
Primitive War 1
Ethan Pettus
Hard RAdult 18+
The Copper Throne
The Copper Throne
Alexey Terletsky
PG-13Adult 18+

About the Military SF trope

Military science fiction puts the reader in the boots, the cockpit, or the command chair, and treats the machinery of war — logistics, chain of command, the grind of a campaign — with genuine seriousness. The tradition runs in two directions from a single root. Robert Heinlein's Starship Troopers gave the subgenre its powered armor and its arguments about duty and citizenship. Joe Haldeman answered with The Forever War, where relativistic time dilation means soldiers return from each deployment to a society that has moved on without them, turning combat into a study of alienation and waste.

That tension — between the thrill of competence under fire and the horror of what war does to the people inside it — is the subgenre's beating heart. John Scalzi's Old Man's War delivers brisk, propulsive combat alongside questions about whose bodies get spent. David Drake's Hammer's Slammers draws on hard experience to render mercenary warfare without romance. Lois McMaster Bujold uses a military frame to explore command, disability, and political loyalty. Even Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game, ostensibly about a gifted child, is a meditation on training, obedience, and the manipulation of soldiers. The Forever War's bleakness and Starship Troopers's fervor still argue with each other across the decades.

What distinguishes military SF from space opera with guns is its respect for the texture of service: the boredom, the bureaucracy, the bonds forged in a foxhole that happens to orbit a gas giant. It can celebrate valor or indict the machine that demands it, sometimes on the same page. Readers come for the tactics and the tension, and stay for the harder thing underneath — the steady, unblinking attention to what it actually costs to send people to fight among the stars. Whether it salutes the soldier or indicts the war, it never pretends the question is simple.

Why readers love it

  • Tactics, hardware, and command
  • The human cost of combat
  • Duty, loyalty, and sacrifice
  • War's machinery taken seriously