If you want to read some fun sci-fi, the Bobiverse books are great. The first one is "We are Legion (We are Bob)".
It's about a guy who sells his software company for a lot of money, retires and pays for one of those "put me in cryo-sleep when I die so you can revive me in the future" type deals. When the future arrives they do revive him. Kind of. How does being the controlling AI for a Von Neumann probe sound like?
I love these books because they are "crunchy" the same way The Martian is. And just the idea of being a self-replicating probe tasked with exploring the universe is compelling to me.
The Bobiverse books are great! I've read them a couple of times now, super fun reads. Can't wait to see what the future holds for the series (apparently he's talked about wanting to do at least 8 total).
Project Hail Mary is a fantastic book from Andy Weir, author of The Martian. A mysterious cosmic event puts Earth on the brink, and as a last-ditch effort, humanity sends out a team on a long trip out into space to figure out how to fix it. Very much in the vein of The Martian, sort of nearish future sci-fi rooted firmly on the science side.
I know this one has been talked about before, but I'll yell about it forever: The Gone World by Tom Sweterlitsch. The story follows an investigator trying to solve a crime unfolding in the present by traveling to possible futures where they already found the guy. However, there's a constant, looming threat in the form of cosmic horror/end-of-the-world event moving backwards in time from the distant future, tracking closer and closer as they continue to jump through time. It's a very surreal and haunting story, part sci-fi, part thriller, part horror.
Really stretching the definition of "modern" at this point (2005 was only a few years ago, right? Right?) but I'll throw it out there anyway: the Spin trilogy by Robert Charles Wilson. One night, the stars disappear entirely from the night sky, and technologies based on space or high orbit are thrown into chaos. It eventually comes out that the Earth has been encased in a bubble, and time is passing at an extremely rapid pace outside of it. The story is a mix of both the sci-fi side of figuring out what to do about it, but the main character is not actually directly involved in that plot, so it's more about people trying to live their lives in a very uncertain time. I wasn't as hot on the sequels, but Spin is one of the best sci-fi books I've read in a long time.
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