This doesn't exactly answer your question, but John Brunner's "The Shockwave Rider" was written in the mid-1970s, set around now, and is bizarrely prescient to a degree that few authors ever achieve. (Brunner was arguably too pessimistic about the USA, but in many of the cases where he guessed wrong, it's because what he predicted happened in China or Russia instead.)
More on topic, it's difficult to imagine what anyone could write nowadays that would have the devastating impact of 1984. It's not like there is any shortage of works attacking neoliberal capitalism or any other economic/political system, and none of these has the messianic pretensions or fundamental hypocrisy of the Leninism that Orwell was critiquing. (Arguably, Orwell made it impossible for any such system to be taken at face value again.)
Animals farm was about Leninism but 1984 not so much and more about totalitarism in general, that's why it's so relevant today (while the former is much less known).
More on topic, it's difficult to imagine what anyone could write nowadays that would have the devastating impact of 1984. It's not like there is any shortage of works attacking neoliberal capitalism or any other economic/political system, and none of these has the messianic pretensions or fundamental hypocrisy of the Leninism that Orwell was critiquing. (Arguably, Orwell made it impossible for any such system to be taken at face value again.)