Logo

List of 15 authors like Beth Revis

Beth Revis is a standout YA sci-fi author known for imaginative world-building, emotional stakes, and high-concept adventure. Her bestselling novel Across the Universe is a great example, combining mystery, romance, and futuristic suspense.

If you enjoy reading Beth Revis, these authors are well worth adding to your list:

  1. Marie Lu

    If Beth Revis’s mix of fast-moving plots and compelling characters works for you, Marie Lu is a natural next pick. She excels at dystopian fiction driven by danger, moral conflict, and memorable young protagonists.

    Her novel Legend  follows two teenagers from opposite sides of society. June is a gifted military prodigy raised in privilege, while Day is the state’s most wanted fugitive, struggling to survive on the margins. When June’s brother is murdered, Day becomes the chief suspect.

    As their lives collide, both uncover unsettling truths about the world they live in. With sharp pacing and strong emotional tension, Legend  is an easy recommendation for readers who like YA sci-fi with momentum and heart.

  2. Maggie Stiefvater

    Maggie Stiefvater writes imaginative fiction filled with atmosphere, layered characters, and a strong emotional pull.

    If you enjoy Beth Revis’s character-driven storytelling, The Raven Boys  may be a great fit. The novel centers on Blue Sargent, who comes from a family of clairvoyants even though she herself has no psychic gift.

    Everything changes when she meets Gansey, Ronan, Adam, and Noah—students from the local private school, known as the raven boys.  Together they set out to find a sleeping Welsh king, whose awakening is said to grant a wish.

    Blending mystery, friendship, and myth, Stiefvater creates a story that feels intimate and expansive at the same time.

  3. Veronica Roth

    Veronica Roth draws readers into intense futuristic worlds with the same kind of tension and emotional stakes that make Beth Revis so appealing.

    Her novel Divergent  follows Beatrice Prior in a version of Chicago divided into factions based on personality traits.

    At sixteen, Beatrice must make a life-altering choice: stay with her family or join a different faction and leave them behind. As initiation grows more dangerous, she begins to uncover secrets that threaten the entire system.

    Roth pairs action with questions about identity, loyalty, and courage. If you like YA stories that balance adrenaline with emotional depth, Divergent  is a strong choice.

  4. Marissa Meyer

    Marissa Meyer is a great match for readers who appreciate Beth Revis’s imaginative approach to sci-fi. Her books often rework familiar stories in fresh, inventive ways.

    Her book Cinder,  the first novel in The Lunar Chronicles,  introduces a futuristic Cinderella named Cinder, a gifted mechanic who also happens to be a cyborg.

    Set in a technologically advanced New Beijing, the story follows Cinder as she faces prejudice because of her mechanical parts and gets drawn into political upheaval after meeting the prince.

    With its blend of fairy-tale reinvention, science fiction, romance, and intrigue, Cinder  offers the kind of vivid, adventurous reading experience Beth Revis fans often enjoy.

  5. Amie Kaufman

    Amie Kaufman writes gripping sci-fi adventures packed with romance, danger, and striking settings. Readers who enjoy Beth Revis’s balance of action and emotion will likely connect with her work.

    Her book These Broken Stars,  co-written with Meagan Spooner, follows Lilac and Tarver, two teens from very different worlds who are stranded together after a luxury spaceliner crashes on an unfamiliar planet.

    As they search for safety and rescue, they begin to uncover strange secrets about the planet and about one another. The result is a suspenseful, character-focused story with a strong romantic thread.

  6. Jay Kristoff

    Jay Kristoff is known for ambitious storytelling, high stakes, and inventive formats, making him a strong recommendation for Beth Revis readers looking for something immersive.

    His book Illuminae,  co-authored with Amie Kaufman, begins when Kady and Ezra’s home planet comes under sudden attack, shattering both their lives and their already fragile relationship.

    Separated on escape ships, they must survive enemy pursuit, a deadly outbreak, and a dangerously unstable artificial intelligence. The novel unfolds through emails, reports, interviews, and classified files, giving it a distinctive energy.

    For readers who enjoy sci-fi that feels urgent and cinematic, Illuminae  delivers.

  7. Suzanne Collins

    Suzanne Collins is one of the defining voices in YA dystopian fiction, with a talent for creating stories that feel both thrilling and emotionally immediate.

    If you liked the tension and speculative elements in Beth Revis’s work, Collins’s The Hunger Games  is an obvious next read. The story follows Katniss Everdeen, who volunteers to take her younger sister’s place in a deadly televised competition.

    As Katniss fights to survive, she faces brutal opponents, political manipulation, and impossible choices. The pacing is relentless, but the emotional impact is just as strong.

  8. Kass Morgan

    Kass Morgan writes YA science fiction centered on survival, secrets, and complicated relationships, all of which should appeal to Beth Revis fans.

    Her novel The 100  follows a group of teenagers sent from a space habitat back to Earth long after a nuclear war made the planet unlivable. For them, Earth is both a hope and a terrifying unknown.

    Once they arrive, they must deal with harsh conditions, buried conflicts, and the truths they brought with them from space. Morgan keeps the story moving while giving plenty of attention to character drama and suspense.

  9. Ally Condie

    Ally Condie creates polished YA worlds shaped by control, longing, and rebellion. If you enjoy Beth Revis’s speculative settings and emotional undercurrents, her work is worth exploring.

    Her novel Matched  introduces Cassia, a teenager living in a society where every important decision has already been made for her, including whom she will marry.

    At first, the system appears orderly and reassuring. But when a glitch disrupts the process, Cassia begins to question everything she has been taught. What follows is a thoughtful story about choice, conformity, and the risks of wanting more.

    Readers who enjoy quiet tension alongside bigger dystopian ideas will likely find Matched  especially appealing.

  10. Scott Westerfeld

    If you like Beth Revis’s futuristic settings and strong character arcs, Scott Westerfeld is another author to try. His books often pair accessible storytelling with sharp social commentary.

    His novel Uglies  imagines a society in which everyone undergoes mandatory cosmetic surgery at sixteen to become “pretty” by the culture’s standards.

    Tally Youngblood can’t wait for her transformation—until she befriends Shay, who questions what that kind of perfection really costs. When Shay disappears, Tally is forced into an impossible choice by the authorities.

    Westerfeld combines a gripping premise with timely ideas about identity, beauty, and individuality.

  11. Pierce Brown

    Pierce Brown writes intense, large-scale science fiction filled with upheaval, ambition, and hidden truths. Readers drawn to Beth Revis’s high-stakes speculative worlds may want to pick up his work next.

    In Red Rising  readers follow Darrow, a young miner living beneath the surface of Mars. He believes his labor is helping build a better future for generations to come.

    When he discovers the reality behind his people’s suffering, Darrow is pulled into a rebellion against the ruling elite. The novel offers plenty of twists, danger, and momentum, along with a strong central drive for justice and revenge.

  12. Rick Yancey

    Rick Yancey is another good option for readers who enjoy Beth Revis’s combination of tension, emotion, and speculative storytelling.

    His novel, The 5th Wave,  begins after a devastating alien invasion has shattered human civilization. Cassie Sullivan is determined to find her younger brother while trying to stay alive in a world where trust has become incredibly dangerous.

    As the story unfolds, shifting perspectives reveal different sides of the catastrophe and deepen the uncertainty. The result is a suspenseful read that keeps asking who can be trusted—and what survival really demands.

    For fans of apocalyptic YA with emotional urgency, The 5th Wave  is an easy pick.

  13. Laini Taylor

    Laini Taylor brings lyrical writing, vivid imagery, and emotional intensity to her stories. While her work leans more fantasy than science fiction, Beth Revis readers may still appreciate the same sense of wonder and character depth.

    If you enjoyed Beth Revis, you might connect with Taylor’s novel Daughter of Smoke and Bone.  The story follows Karou, a blue-haired art student in Prague who juggles ordinary life with strange errands for mysterious creatures.

    When black handprints begin appearing on doorways around the world, long-buried secrets begin to surface. Taylor builds a rich, haunting atmosphere and layers it with romance, mystery, and revelations that steadily raise the stakes.

  14. Lauren Oliver

    Lauren Oliver writes speculative fiction that places emotional experience at the center, which makes her a strong match for readers who appreciate Beth Revis’s more character-driven moments.

    Her novel Delirium  takes place in a society where love is considered a disease. Lena, the protagonist, looks forward to the government-mandated procedure that will supposedly remove the risk of emotional pain.

    But after meeting Alex, she starts to question everything she has accepted as truth. The novel explores control, rebellion, and the cost of living without genuine feeling, all through an intimate and emotionally charged lens.

  15. Claudia Gray

    Claudia Gray writes YA science fiction with suspense, adventure, and well-developed relationships, making her a strong fit for fans of Beth Revis.

    Beth Revis readers may enjoy her novel Defy the Stars,  which follows Noemi Vidal, a young soldier from Genesis who is caught up in an interstellar war with Earth. Her mission leads her to Abel, an advanced humanoid robot prototype.

    Together they travel across the galaxy, facing dangerous missions and difficult moral choices. Gray balances action with thoughtful questions about humanity, loyalty, and connection, giving the story both excitement and depth.

StarBookmark