The Anxious Generation by Jonathan Haidt
A piercing look at youth anxiety in the digital age. Haidt exposes the pressures, pitfalls, and social media traps shaping young minds, while offering hope, resilience strategies, and insights to help them navigate modern life without losing their mental balance.

What We Can Know by Ian McEwan
In a post-climate-catastrophe future, academic Tom Metcalfe hunts for a lost early‑century poem and unravels love, secrets, history, and memory. McEwan’s “science fiction without the science” blends dystopia, mystery, and reflection on what we truly understand about people and the past.

Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick
In a ravaged future, bounty hunter Rick Deckard hunts rogue androids, blurring lines between human and machine. Dick’s classic raises provocative questions about empathy, identity, and what it truly means to be human in a technological world.

Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro
Through Klara, an AI with tender curiosity, Ishiguro explores love, loneliness, and the cost of technological dependence. A haunting, beautifully written meditation on humanity, hope, and the invisible bonds that shape our lives.
All Systems Red by Martha Wells
Meet Murderbot: a sarcastic, self-aware security android who just wants freedom—but keeps saving humans anyway. Wells delivers thrilling action, dark humour, and a heartfelt exploration of identity, autonomy, and the surprising complexities of machine consciousness.
