Adrian Tchaikovsky

A British author known for his diverse and imaginative science fiction and fantasy novels, often featuring intricate world-building, unique alien species, and thought-provoking explorations of evolution and consciousness. His Arthur C. Clarke Award-winning novel, Children of Time, is a prime example of his ability to create compelling narratives with truly alien perspectives. Tchaikovsky's prolific and inventive storytelling has made him a significant figure in contemporary speculative fiction.

Children of Time
4.3

Adrian Tchaikovsky’s Children of Time is a sweeping sci-fi epic about the rise of a new civilization. As humanity flees a dying Earth, they discover a planet where uplifted spiders—descendants of a failed terraforming experiment—have evolved intelligence and complex societies. The novel alternates between the spiders’ development and a desperate human crew searching for a new home. It explores themes of evolution, empathy, and what it means to be human. With bold ideas and a richly imagined alien perspective, Children of Time is a thought-provoking, genre-bending masterpiece that challenges assumptions about intelligence, progress, and survival.

House of Open Wounds
4.5

Behind the Palleseen crusade to eradicate magic, a field hospital confronts war's brutal reality. Yasnic, a former priest reprieved from execution, serves in an unorthodox medical unit led by the formidable 'Butcher'. Amidst gore and suffering caused by monsters, magic, and enemy soldiers, this motley crew of conscripts and healers works to save the seemingly unsavable. Their precarious existence is threatened by their illicit practices involving unapproved magic, necromancy, and Yasnic's forbidden Gods, risking disbandment, arrest, or worse at the hands of the zealous Palleseen.