Reading order
| # | Title | Published | Author | Buy on Amazon |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Podthology: The Pod Complex | 2011 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 2 | Obsidian | 2012 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 3 | The End is Nigh | 2014 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 4 | Robot Uprisings | 2014 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 5 | The End is Now | 2014 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 6 | The End Has Come | 2015 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 7 | V-Wars: Night Terrors | 2015 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 8 | Unfettered II: New Tales By Masters of Fantasy | 2016 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 9 | Mech | 2017 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 10 | Unfettered III: New Tales By Masters of Fantasy | 2019 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 11 | Ignorance Is Strength | 2020 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 12 | Burn the Ashes | 2020 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 13 | Or Else the Light | 2020 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 14 | Aliens vs. Predators - AVP: Ultimate Prey | 2021 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 15 | The Hitherto Secret Experiments of Marie Curie | 2023 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 16 | The Good, The Bad, & The Uncanny | 2023 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
| 17 | The Big Bad Book of Kaiju | 2026 | Scott Sigler | Buy |
Scott Sigler has contributed to numerous science fiction and horror anthologies, including Robot Uprisings (2014), V-Wars: Night Terrors (2015), Unfettered II (2016), The Hitherto Secret Experiments of Marie Curie (2023), and The Big Bad Book of Kaiju (2026).
His anthology work spans fifteen years, from Podthology: The Pod Complex (2011) to The Big Bad Book of Kaiju (2026). The range of projects reflects Sigler’s interests: the three-volume “The End” apocalyptic fiction series (2014-2015), franchise entries like Aliens vs. Predators: Ultimate Prey (2021), and the Unfettered fantasy anthologies (2016, 2019). Several of these collections pair him with other major names in genre fiction.
Sigler’s shorter contributions tend to carry the same biological horror and hard science fiction flavor found in his full-length novels. Readers who know him through the Infected or GFL series will find familiar territory in these anthologies, though some entries like Mech (2017) push into different subgenres.