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Utopian novels

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Utopia
1516 book by Thomas More
Atlas Shrugged
1957 novel by Ayn Rand
The City of the Sun
1623 book by Tommaso Campanella
New Atlantis
incomplete utopian novel by Sir Francis Bacon
The Naked Sun
novel by Isaac Asimov
The Begum's Fortune
1879 novel by Jules Verne
The Dispossessed
1974 novel by Ursula K. Le Guin
Childhood's End
1953 novel by Arthur C. Clarke
Lost Horizon
1933 novel by James Hilton
The Old New Land
1902 novel published by Theodor Herzl
Island
1962 novel by Aldous Huxley
Looking Backward
novel by Edward Bellamy
The Coming Race
Vril: The Power of the Coming Race, originally published as The Coming Race, is a science and subterranean fiction novel by the British politician and writer Edward Bulwer-Lytton, published anonymously in 1871.
Prisoners of Power
1969 novel by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky
The Magellanic Cloud
novel by Stanisław Lem
The Futurological Congress
1971 novel by Stanisław Lem
Andromeda
1957 novel by Ivan Yefremov
Erewhon
thumb|right|400px|Map of part of New Zealand to illustrate Erewhon and Erewhon Revisited Erewhon: or, Over the Range () is a utopian novel by English writer Samuel Butler, first published in 1872, set in a fictional country discovered and explored by the protagonist. The book is a satire on Victorian society.
The Blazing World
1666 Margaret Cavendish story
Walden Two
1948 novel by B.F. Skinner
Red Star
novel by Alexander Bogdanov
News from Nowhere
novel by William Morris
Ecotopia
Ecotopia: The Notebooks and Reports of William Weston is a utopian novel by Ernest Callenbach, published in 1975. The society described in the book is one of the first ecological utopias and was influential on the counterculture and the green movement in the 1970s and thereafter. The author himself claimed that the society he depicted in the book is not a true utopia (in the sense of a perfect society), but, while guided by societal intentions and values, was imperfect and in-process.
When the Robbers Came to Cardamom Town
1955 children's book by Thorbjørn Egner
Dinotopia
Dinotopia is a series of illustrated fantasy books, created by author and illustrator James Gurney. It is set in the titular Dinotopia, an isolated island inhabited by shipwrecked humans and sapient dinosaurs who have learned to coexist peacefully as a single symbiotic society. The first book was published in 1992 and has "appeared in 18 languages in more than 30 countries and sold two million copies." Dinotopia: A Land Apart from Time and Dinotopia: The World Beneath both won Hugo Awards for best original artwork. The original work won the Locus Award for Best Non-fiction in 1993, a point at
A Modern Utopia
novel by H. G. Wells
The Voyage to Icaria
1840 novel by Étienne Cabet
The Shape of Things to Come
1933 novel by H. G. Wells
Men Like Gods
novel by Herbert George Wells
Chevengur
Chevengur () is a socio-philosophical novel by Andrei Platonov, written in 1928. It is his longest work and often regarded by scholars as the most significant of his works. Although its fragments were published in the Soviet magazine Krasnaya Nov, the novel was banned in the Soviet Union until 1988. Full text of the novel was published by Ardis in 1972.
The Adventures of Mr. Nicholas Wisdom
1776 novel by Ignacy Krasicki
For Us, the Living
2004 novel by Robert A. Heinlein
The Year 3,000
novel by Paolo Mantegazza
Woman on the Edge of Time
1976 novel by Marge Piercy
Blue Remembered Earth
2012 novel by Alastair Reynolds
The Commonwealth of Oceana
1656 novel by James Harrington
L’An 2440, rêve s´il en fut jamais
1771 novel by Louis-Sébastien Mercier
Always Coming Home
1985 novel by Ursula K. Le Guin
The Blithedale Romance
novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne
The Ministry for the Future
2020 novel by Kim Stanley Robinson
The Santaroga Barrier
1968 novel by Frank Herbert
Kazohinia
Kazohinia is a novel written in Hungarian and in Esperanto by Sándor Szathmári (1897–1974). It appeared first in Hungarian (1941) and was published in Esperanto by SAT (Sennacieca Asocio Tutmonda) in 1958, and was republished in that language without change in 1998. Several Hungarian editions appeared over the decades (1946, 1957, 1972, 1980, 2009), and an English translation in Budapest in 1975 (Corvina Press). In 2012, this translation first received wide distribution outside of Hungary with its publication by New Europe Books under the title Voyage to Kazohinia—in keeping with the more desc
Triton
novel by Samuel R. Delany
Etidorhpa
Etidorhpa, or, the end of the earth: the strange history of a mysterious being and the account of a remarkable journey is the title of a scientific allegory or science fiction novel by John Uri Lloyd, a pharmacognocist and pharmaceutical manufacturer of Cincinnati, Ohio. Etidorhpa was published in 1895.
A Crystal Age
1887 novel by William Henry Hudson