The third season of Black Mirror has everything that fans have come to expect: hackers with questionable moral lessons, out-of-control sci-fi technology, and plenty of twists. As the name implies, Black Mirror presents dark reflections of our own world—mostly by conjuring nightmare visions of how our present technology may control us in the not-too-distant future.

The biggest downside of Black Mirror? The entire series only thirteen episodes long, so if you’re a fan, chances are you’ve already binge-watched the new episodes and now don’t know what to do with yourself. There’s nothing else quite like Black Mirror on TV, but luckily there is a wealth of fantastic books that can sate your hunger for genre-bending satires and near-future dystopias.

Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood

A long-time master of the satirical speculative fiction—her preferred term—Atwood has several books that could fit this list. My favorite is Oryx and Crake, book one of her dystopian MaddAddam trilogy. Set it a post-apocalyptic world overrun by genetically manipulated animal hybrids like pigoons (pig creatures that can grow human organs) and rakunks (skunk-raccoon hybrids without the smell). Much of the novel is in flashbacks to the pre-apocalyptic time when Jimmy and his genetic genius friend Crake work in corporate research compounds like OrganInc and HelthWyzer to create genetically manipulated food and medicine for the public. Published in 2003, the novel tackles a plethora of issues from global warming to wealth inequality that have only grown more relevant in the last 13 years.

Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro

Ishiguro’s 2005 novel is such a perfect companion to Black Mirror that it could be easily adapted by the series in the future. Never Let Me Go is a heartbreaking, character-driven story with science fiction trappings. It follow a group of students in a boarding school that the reader slowly begin to realize is creepily off. The big sci-fi twist is one that I won’t spoil here, but suffice to say that you’ll remember it long after you finish.

Moxyland by Lauren Beukes

The first episode of season three, “Nosedive,” imagines a dystopian near-future that’s only a shade different than today: everyone is obsessed with their social media profiles, constantly monitoring their star rating and never wanting to offend anyone. If that episode spoke to you, try Moxyland, the debut novel of acclaimed South African author Lauren Beukes. Like “Nosedive,” Moxyland takes place in a near future where people are slaves to their cellphones and social media presence. Beukes’s novel focuses on the corporations who benefit from and rule this future. If you rebel against this technological dystopia, the Big-Brother-by-way-of-Snapchat government will impose the ultimate punishment: “disconnection” from the internet.

Version Control by Dexter Palmer

One of 2016’s best science fiction novels, Version Control is set in a college town just a couple of years the future when self-driving cars are finally on the road and humans are (even more) obsessed with social media metrics to the point we each become a “little marionette made out of data.” In this almost mundane setting, Palmer tackles one of the trickiest of sci-fi tropes: time travel. A novel of ideas, Version Control should be on the reading list of every fan of smart sci-fi.

The Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin

Black Mirror episodes often feel like nightmare visions of how our world might change, but The Lathe of Heaven tells the story of a man who can literally change the world with his dreams. When an egotistical scientist named William Haber discovers George Orr’s ability, he forces Orr to allow Haber to manipulate his reality-shaping dreams with his machine. Like the best Black Mirror episodes, Le Guin’s concerns are more philosophical than technological, and she explores how quickly human attempts at utopia can turn dystopian. For example, when Haber forces Orr to dream a world without racism the result is a dull world where everyone is a monochromatic grey. Le Guin has described the novel as her attempt to imitate Philip K. Dick, and The Lathe of Heaven is every bit the fantastic paranoid nightmare of Dick’s classic science fiction novels.

A Scanner Darkly by Philip K. Dick