Current books on literature and science in the twentieth century and after include:
- Philip Armstrong, What Animals Mean in the Fiction of Modernity
- Stephen H. Blackwell, The Quill and the Scalpel: Nabokov’s Art and the Worlds of Science
- Peter J. Bowler, Science for All
- Daniel Cordle, States of Suspense
- Robert Crawford (ed.), Contemporary Poetry and Contemporary Science
- L. S. Jacyna, Medicine and Modernism
- Vike Plock, Joyce, Medicine, and Modernity
- Gregory Radick, The Simian Tongue
- Nicholas Ruddick, The Fire in the Stone: Prehistoric Fiction from Charles Darwin to Jean M. Auel
- Charlotte Sleigh, Six Legs Better
- Dongshin Yi, A Genealogy of Cyborgothic
See also:
- Heike Bauer, English Literary Sexology
- Brian Boyd, On the Origin of Stories
- Mark L. Brake and Neil Hook, Different Engines: How Science Drives Fiction and Fiction Drives Science
- Philip Coleman (ed.), On Literature and Science
- Harold Fromm, The Nature of Being Human
- Graeme Gooday, Domesticating Electricity
- Rae Beth Gordon, Dances with Darwin, 1875-1910
- John Holmes, Darwin’s Bards
- George Levine, Darwin Loves You
- George Levine, Realism, Ethics and Secularism
- Steven McLean, The Early Fiction of H. G. Wells
- Steven McLean (ed.), H. G. Wells: Interdisciplinary Essays
- M. M. Mahood, The Poet as Botanist
- Adam Roberts, The History of Science Fiction
- Sharon Ruston (ed.), Literature and Science
- Thomas Söderqvist (ed.), The History and Poetics of Scientific Biography
- Anne Stiles (ed.), Neurology and Literature, 1860-1920

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