“The Inheritance Trilogy” by NK Jemisin concerns the interactions between gods and mortals.
“Centuries Ago And Very Fast” by Rebecca Ore is about a stone-age man who just. . . doesn’t die. The only book I can think of that asked “how much storage space does a brain have, when do you start recording over memories?”
Liu Cixin’s “Earth’s Past” trilogy is a hard sci fi that eventually, around book 3, explores the effects of long-term hibernation on the human psyche.
Richard K. Morgan’s “Takeshi Kovacs” novels are sci-fi noir stories set in a world where computer technology has allowed for functional immortality, of a kind.
The first two novels in Octavia Butler’s “Patternist” speculative fiction series focus on two near-immortals, and how their long lives impact their relationships.
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Gods okay?
“The Inheritance Trilogy” by NK Jemisin concerns the interactions between gods and mortals.
“Centuries Ago And Very Fast” by Rebecca Ore is about a stone-age man who just. . . doesn’t die. The only book I can think of that asked “how much storage space does a brain have, when do you start recording over memories?”
Liu Cixin’s “Earth’s Past” trilogy is a hard sci fi that eventually, around book 3, explores the effects of long-term hibernation on the human psyche.
Richard K. Morgan’s “Takeshi Kovacs” novels are sci-fi noir stories set in a world where computer technology has allowed for functional immortality, of a kind.
The first two novels in Octavia Butler’s “Patternist” speculative fiction series focus on two near-immortals, and how their long lives impact their relationships.
Ramses the Damned
The Postmortal, by Drew Magary
The Bone Clocks by David Mitchell