If you're feeling bereft because there are no more episodes since you binged them all in one go, try one of these!
(descriptions from www.lifehacker.com)
Lord
of the Flies by William Golding
One of the most influential books of the modern age, Lord
of the Flies is the Rosetta Stone for stories like Squid Game,
exploring how easily humans (in this case, tiny ones) can descend into
savagery. While being evacuated during wartime, a plane carrying schoolboys
crashes on a remote island. Without contact with the outside world or adult
supervision, the boys form their own society, one initially based on rules and
cooperation. As time goes on and rescue fails to arrive, however, the imprint
of civilization begins to fade and things take a turn for the dark and
horrifying. Unlike Squid Game, Golding isn’t concerned with economics, but
he is concerned with the fundamental nature of humanity and the group
dynamics of desperation.
Battle
Royale by Kōshun Takami
A crueler, darker Lord of the Flies in many ways,
the crucial element Kōshun Takami adds to his debut novel is structure.
Instead of crashing in the wilderness, the junior high kids in Battle
Royale are brought there by the state, forced to fight each other to the
death as part of a research project-slash-totalitarian show of force. The kids
are given random weapons, survival kits, and compliance collars that will
detonate if 24 hours pass without a death, killing everyone. As in Squid
Game, some of the kids comply immediately and enthusiastically, launching an
all-out assault on their peers. Others try to preserve some semblance of their
humanity and seek a way to fight back. The parallels are clear, and the
relationships that develop over the course of the battle are every bit as
intense—and heartbreaking.
The
Plotters by Un-Su Kim
Un-Su Kim’s 2019 novel is also set in modern-day South
Korea, albeit a much darker one. Reseng is a contract killer who has spent his
life murdering people according to the orders of the unseen “plotters” who call
the shots, but when a colleague is unceremoniously murdered, he begins to
question his place in the world. It turns out the Plotters are basically this
universe’s VIPs, the wealthy and powerful who assume they can point at the
things they wish to command; Reseng soon realizes he’s playing a rigged game,
and always has been. The universe of The Plotters isn’t game-oriented
in any way, and yet there’s a similar restrictive structure to Reseng’s life,
and a similar rage against the machine that will remind you of Gi-hun. (If
you’re looking for more South Korean sci-fi weirdness from the author, his
deeply strange novel The Cabinet dropped last week in translation, and is a
similarly unsettling readalike.)
Gateway
by Frederik Pohl
Frederick Pohl’s 1977 Hugo, Locus, and Nebula Award-winning
sci-fi novel might not seem like a natural pivot for a fan of Squid Game,
but it’s a perfect fit if you look at it from the right angle. In a future
where the wealthy can live more or less forever thanks to healthcare far beyond
the means of the vast majority of people, the desperate (which is basically
everyone else) travel to Gateway to take their chances by piloting one of a
fleet of derelict alien ships left rotting on the asteroid. No one understands
the controls or navigation systems, so people form crews and activate the
vessels, risking horrifying death on their travels (your chances of popping up
inside a supernova aren’t exactly zero) in the hope of discovering something
valuable. Not unlike on that certain 456 people on an island near South Korea,
people strategize and scheme in a deadly game that ends in incredible wealth—or
death.
The
Long Walk by Stephen King
If Squid Game were just one game stretched to a
punishing extreme, you might have The Long Walk. The first novel
Stephen King ever wrote, it was eventually published years into his career
under a pseudonym, Richard Bachman. In a dystopian future, The Long Walk is the
most popular game show on TV: 100 teenagers must walk continuously until only
one is left standing. If they fall below a certain pace, they are warned...and
eventually shot; the winner gets cash and a prize of their choice. As
the Walk stretches out over days and days, the grueling nature of the game
slowly grinds everyone down, stripping them of their humanity and their hope,
until they’re all like Sang-woo at the end: Eager for it all to be over.
Hit
by Delilah S. Dawson
In the future, a corporation pays off the US’s debt and
essentially owns the government—and by extension, the indebted citizens toiling
away in a bleak, broken economy. When your debts come due your life is
forfeit—but some are offered an out: If they agree to work as assassins and
murder 10 other debtors, they can walk away scot-free. Teenage Patsy chooses to
do the dirty work to pay her mother’s astronomical healthcare bills, and the
story gets crazy pretty fast—but though violent and fast-paced, the novel
somehow still has time for a romantic subplot and a slow-burn revelation about
what’s really going on. The theme of debt’s power to destroy our
humanity and rob us of our freedom will resonate with fans of Squid Game,
and Patsy’s determination to murder her way to freedom while retaining her
dignity and humanity makes for a compelling tale of physical and spiritual
survival.
The
Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
If you’re looking for a story about a group of people
engaged in violent combat while a team of dedicated professionals tweaks their
environment for dramatic effect, this iconic sci-fi series is probably already
at the top of your list. Every year a boy and girl from each of the 12
districts of Panem are selected to be Tributes in the Hunger Games as
punishment for an attempted rebellion that happened generations ago. The
children are pitted against each other in a sprawling, technologically advanced
arena, where they fight to the death while the elites watch in delight and
celebrate the winners as celebrities. It’s dark and action-packed, and elevated
by heroine Katniss Everdeen’s intelligent approach her situation—and her rage
over what’s been done to her, which fans of Squid Game will find
familiar.
Panic
by Lauren Oliver
Lauren Oliver’s 2014 novel has been adapted into a
streaming series as well, but you should definitely read the source
material. The tiny town of Carp, New York doesn’t offer much hope to it
residents—but an underground game offers a way out in the form of a $67,000
prize. Panic is a series of increasingly dangerous challenges—the first is a
40-foot leap into a lake in total darkness, and things get much nastier quickly—overseen
by two anonymous judges. The contestants’ desperation to break free from their bleak
circumstances is palpable, and as the plot twists out of control, things spiral
into a state literary scientists call bonkers. The ending may be a little
happier than many of these stories, but the theme questioning whether it’s
worth betting your life against enough money to change it is all too familiar.
Docile
by K.M. Szpara
If you found the themes of debt, wealth disparity, and
desperation compelling in Squid Game, this novel is your jam. In a slightly more
horrifying future America, debt has become a burden handed down from generation
to generation, with most people indebted to the super-wealthy. In order to pay
off what you owe, you can volunteer to become a slave to whoever owns your
family’s debt for a specific period of time. Most slaves opt to take a drug
called Dociline that makes them calm and fogs their pain and suffering—because
the wealthy VIPs are not often kind, nor gentle. Like Squid Game, Docile makes
the subtext of debt and capitalist oppression into text, making it clear how
our relationship to money increasingly defines our humanity.
Gambling
Apocalypse Kaiji by Nobuyuki Kumoto
Just like Squid Game’s Gi-hun, Kaiji Itō is a gambling
addict who lives in perpetual poverty and shame. One day he’s tricked by a loan
shark into participating in a deadly, high-stakes gambling event based on the
game Rock, Paper, Scissors; the loan shark assumes he won’t make it out alive.
But he emerges victorious, which leads him to complete in more and more
dangerous gambles. The way Kaiji’s fortunes bounce wildly between temporary
triumph and miserable defeat—at one point he finds himself in a labor camp to
pay off his debt, a process that will take decades—mimics the experience of any
habitual gambler, and the deadly nature of his bets definitely has the same
dark, desperate vibe Squid Game gives off in spades.
Haunted
by Chuck Palahniuk
A kind-of hybrid between a novel and a short story
collection, Haunted tells the story of 17 aspiring writers who agree
to be locked inside an abandoned theater for three months in order to isolate
them and ostensibly inspire them to write their novels. Alternating between the
stories they write (including “Guts,” one of the most distressing, visceral
reading experiences ever put to paper) and the things that happen to them
inside the retreat, the parallels between the theater and the Squid
Game complex become clearer as the story progresses. Seeking heightened
drama and stakes in the hopes of gaining reality-TV fame and literary success,
each participant sabotages an aspect of the retreat until the group has
descended into bloody violence and body horror. Just like Squid Game,
there’s a moment when the writers can choose to turn away from the madness—and
instead, they choose violence.
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