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8 Short SFF Books You'll Devour in a Day

Science fiction and fantasy books don't have to be long to make an impression. 

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  • Photo Credit: Mark Rabe / Unsplash

We all know that science fiction and fantasy stories get a bad reputation for being too long. Many of the most popular series today, like A Song of Ice and Fire or The Stormlight Archive, require not only the reading of 1,000-page tomes but also delving into histories, related short stories, and on. Sometimes, it can feel more like unraveling some hidden conspiracy than reading a novel. And while that level of investment is great for loyal fans, it's important to remember that not all of speculative fiction has to take weeks to finish. 

If you're delving into the sci-fi/fantasy space for the first time or if you're just looking for a quick read, you're in luck. Some of the best SFF novels of the past century are short reads. In fact, all of the entries on this list are less than 300 pages, and many less than 200. Some of these books might typically be considered novellas, others novels, but using HowLongtoRead's formula of 300 words per minute, we estimate that each of these stories can be read in five hours or less. So dive in and, if you have the time, try knocking out one of these great stories in a day. 

books like a wrinkle in time

The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

By C.S. Lewis

Word count: 38,421

Pages: 208

Read time: 2 hours, 8 minutes

Here's a fun fact: You can actually read The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe in less time than it takes to watch the movie (which clocks in at 2 hours, 23 minutes). Any list of the best and most influential fantasy books ever would be incomplete without this entry by C. S. Lewis, which begins the story of the four Pevensie children and their adventures in Narnia. Technically the second book of the in-world chronology, just after The Magician's Nephew, Lewis actually wrote The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe first. You probably already know at least a little about the characters, the plot, and the religious themes, but the story remains a charming tale that both kids and adults adore.

a-psalm-for-the-wild-built-becky-chambers

A Psalm for the Wild-Built

By Becky Chambers

Word count: 34,000

Pages: 160

Read time: 1 hour, 54 minutes

The 2022 Hugo Award Winner for Best Novella packs a punch from the first line: "If you ask six different monks the question of which godly domain robot consciousness belongs to, you’ll get seven different answers.” Monks and robots mixing together in a story of our distant future makes for a fantastic and thoughtful read. 

'Piranesi' by Susanna Clarke audiobook cover

Piranesi

By Susanna Clarke

Word count: 81,600

Pages: 272

Read time: 4 hours, 32 minutes

Piranesi is an odd book about an odd man stuck in an odd place. I loved it. Susanna Clarke's first novel, Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, took place on an epic scale—across decades and continents, from the Napoleonic Wars to hidden libraries—but her second sees a man confined to a series of halls and vestibules that he simply calls the House. The House has a magic about it, which blurs a person's memory. Only one man lives in the House, and he calls himself Piranesi. But the truth of his identity is unknown even to him as the story opens.

neil gaiman quotes

The Ocean at the End of the Lane

By Neil Gaiman

Word count: 53,984

Pages: 178

Read time: 3 hours

The Ocean at the End of the Lane is fantasy and folklore tied into one, but it starts with something more mundane: a middle-aged man returns to his childhood home and reminisces. Told in the first person, the story relays the narrator's memories of the odd girl, Lettie Hempstock, and her mother and grandmother. As he sits by a pond, which Lettie used to claim was an ocean, he remembers the strangeness of the past they shared. 

The story is great on the page, as is typical of a Neil Gaiman work. But if you want an extra treat, Gaiman himself reads the audiobook version, which only adds to the feeling of nostalgia. 

Ray Bradbury books Fahrenheit 451

Fahrenheit 451

By Ray Bradbury

Word count: 46,118

Pages: 249

Read time: 2 hours, 34 minutes

Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 is a classic for a reason, and it's never been more relevant than today. It tells the story of Guy Montag the fireman, but not the sort you're familiar with. Rather, Montag's job is to find printed books and burn them along with the houses that hide them. 

Montag's world changes when he meets his young neighbor, Clarisse, who introduces him to ideas that are both new and old.

The Time Machine

The Time Machine

By H. G. Wells

Word count: 32,000

Pages: 128

Read time: 1 hour, 47 minutes

Given that The Time Machine was published in 1895, it's no wonder that H. G. Wells's imagining of the year 802,700 looks a little different than his own reality. The Time Traveller believes the future to be a utopia—a future he's most eager to investigate. His enthusiasm wanes, however, when the time machine is stolen and he finds himself trapped in a time not his own. 

science fiction authors

Slaughterhouse-Five

By Kurt Vonnegut

Word count: 49,459

Pages: 240

Read time: 2 hours, 45 minutes

World War II veteran Billy Pilgrim now experiences all the events of his life out of order. Sometimes simultaneously. Vonnegut himself described Slaughterhouse-Five as the result of trying to write about what he witnessed as an American prisoner of war, and the classic novel is one of the best of all time, regardless of genre.

The Emperor's Soul by Brandon Sanderson

The Emperor's Soul

By Brandon Sanderson

Word count: 31,925

Pages: 175

Read time: 1 hour, 47 minutes

While Brandon Sanderson's The Emperor's Soul is labeled as the second book of the Elantris series, the novella stands well on its own. The 2013 Hugo Award Winner for Best Novella tells the story of the forger Shai. Caught in the midst of a heist, Shai receives an odd sort of punishment: She must use her forgery skills to craft a new soul for her emperor, who was wounded during an assassination attempt. Can she find a way to do as her captors ask, or must she dare to escape before time runs out?

Featured photo: Mark Rabe / Unsplash