There’s this thing that happens sometimes where someone asks about book recommendations from an author and that author — probably a white guy, like me — rattles off some names of other authors who are also probably white guys like me. I don’t believe this to be an actively racist kind of thing, but more a product of an industry that doesn’t publish as many writers of color. And when they do publish them, they tend to remain marginalized because of various institutional reasons. Plus, then you get that excuse that’s meant to be a positive — “I don’t see color!” — which is a noble thought that ultimately fails, because while you mean I don’t give into preconceived divisions between race, what often results is, I don’t see color because mostly I see only white and if I don’t see color then I don’t have to acknowledge people of color.
I made an effort a couple years back to include a far deeper bullpen of women writers on my shelves, and I’d say at this point about half of my SFF reading is of women authors. This isn’t because of some kind of diversity bingo — I’m not reading books that are bad just to read them because they were written by a woman. I’m reading awesome books by awesome authors. The single result of expanding my reading has been that I am reading more amazing books.
I’ve been making the same effort to include more writers of color — and so it seems like this is a good time to open the comments up to recommendations of writers of color in the SFF space (or, more broadly, feel free to wander into horror and YA if you need to). I recognize there’s some danger in making this a Very Special Post like it’s an Afterschool Special or That One Panel At A Con About Women Authors Where All The Other Panels Are Assumed Then To Be About Men By Default. The ideal goal is, when we recommend books, to have a more diverse slate of books to recommend and not sequester them in their very own marginal post — at the same time, my hope is this post serves as a seeding ground for myself and for others where we learn about awesome books we’re not yet reading. And then we read them and we include them going forward in the books about which we proselytize.
HEY LOOK, MORE AWESOME BOOKS FUCKING YAY.
Right? Right.
Here’s a dollop of reading suggestions on my part, but for your part — get into the comments, recommend some writers of color and what they’ve written. Short stories and novellas are totally on the table, though I’ll recommend only novels right now as my reading of short fiction lately has been woefully shallow. If any work is free to read on the web, feel free to drop links.
(I do recognize that not all writers of color are self-identified, and the same goes for some women and QUILTBAG authors — but, many are, so the effort must be made.)
(Also, this really isn’t meant to be a proving ground for arguments about whether or not we should read more diversely or whatever your stance happens to be — please use the comments as a recommendation engine only. In this instance, be a fountain, not a drain. Thanks.)
The Recs
Nnedi Okorafor: Lagoon. I just started reading this a few days ago and my mouth cannot make the proper pleasing sounds. This woman’s prose is fucking astounding. Cinematic, yet also occasionally dreamlike — science-fiction, but also occasional fantastical? It’s a weird, wonderful book so far. The plot is fine and all, but her prose is a place I wanna live.
Daniel Jose Older: Half-Resurrection Blues. This is how I like my urban fantasy. Real, monstrous, street-level stuff. (I have an unattainable dream of mashing up this series with my own The Blue Blazes given how both are set in and around Brooklyn and Manhattan.) It’s funny, too, and grim, and all the things I want. I have Shadowshaper, his newest YA, but haven’t cracked the cover yet as my tbr pile threatens to crush me beneath its weight.
Maurice Broaddus: King Maker. The Arthurian myth recast in modern-day inner-city Indianapolis. Good stuff — neat analogs to the mythology here (Excalibur becomes a gun, the Caliburn, f’rex). It’s a fantasy novel but occasionally pretty brutal about the lives of these characters. It’s harder stuff than you realize — not fluffy fantasy.
Aliette de Bodard: Obsidian & Blood. This is three books in one, and it was a jaw-dropper for me in what it does with your expectations of genre — what I mean is, this is essentially a detective novel set in the Aztec Empire, and is chockablock with blood magic and necromancy and the drama of the gods and goddesses. An ARC of her newest, House of Shattered Wings, just landed across my doorstep, and I’m excited to read it.
Greg Van Eekhout: California Bones. I dunno why this book is $2.99 right now, but do yourself a favor and fling yourself upon it. It’s this cool LA urban fantasy about unearthing ancient things — but just as it’s sometimes about digging up real bones of old creatures, it’s also about digging up the bones of the past.
SL Huang: Zero Sum Game. Listen, I don’t like math, so when you tell me this is a book about a person whose superpower is math, I’m not interested. More the stupid on my part, because this first book is a blast from start to finish. Huang writes with hella energy — whatever mad calculus she’s doing, she’s doing it right. Curse her for making me care about math.
Now?
Your turn.
MsShonnerz says:
I looooove everything I’ve read by Octavia E. Butler. Her works include dystopian Y.A, time travel, vampires, a little of everything.
July 27, 2015 — 8:06 AM
Ryan Canty says:
Octavia is amazing! Fledgling, Kindred (WHY hasn’t this been made into a movie? Ava Duvernay, Dee Rees etc. would be great choices to direct it! It’s ripe for a movie adaptation), Lilith’s Brood (LOVE this series)…she is amazing and I’m happy I got the chance to meet her in person, see her give a talk and have her give me some encouraging words about writing (which I follow to this day), etc. right before her death….great novelist and an exceptional world builder and character creator…
July 27, 2015 — 8:28 AM
MsShonnerz says:
YOU. MET. HER?! I’m so jealous I could kick a kitten! That said, Parable of the Sower is my favorite and should have been a movie years ago.
July 27, 2015 — 11:00 AM
Susan K. Swords says:
I’ll add a “hell, yes!” to this. I’m embarrassed to say how long it took me to discover Octavia Butler’s books. I just finished “Fledgling” and I loved it. It’s a great twist on the vampire legends, with lots of contemporary messages and metaphors about race and class.
July 27, 2015 — 9:00 AM
MsShonnerz says:
I need to revisit Fledgling. Thanks for the reminder!
July 27, 2015 — 11:01 AM
gaeliceyes says:
I was going to mention her. She’s amazing. I’ve only read “Seed to Harvest” but it blew my mind, and I really want to read “Lilith’s Brood”.
July 27, 2015 — 12:51 PM
Puck says:
Fifthing the Butler recommendation! 😀 She’s amazing.
July 27, 2015 — 12:58 PM
garyswiff says:
You’re awesome for doing this Chuck. I need to check out Lagoon myself.
July 27, 2015 — 8:10 AM
Corey Furman says:
Ha! I just jumped in to say Octavia Butler. MsShonnerz, I salute you (thumbs up)
July 27, 2015 — 8:12 AM
MsShonnerz says:
We’re kindred! See what I did there. 😉
July 27, 2015 — 11:01 AM
Ryan Canty says:
Great post!!!
Heidi Durrow: The Girl Who Fell From The Sky, a family drama/mystery that came out in 2010. So powerful and so profound (And I read a draft of it before it came out. It’s a must read)
Danzy Senna: Caucasia. Her debut novel, a coming of age story essentially about race and identity in America. It’s a great read!
Other authors:
Octavia Butler
Samuel Delany (black gay sci-fi/fantasy writer who’s Octavia’s contemporary but may be lesser known because he’s gay, and his work is quite escoteric/difficult to understand at times. BUT, if you get past that, his books are amazing! Driftglass (short story collection), Babel-17/Empire Star (usually come as two books in one), Nova, Aye and Gomorrah (another short story collection) are great books to start with. Finish those and you’ll be ready to tackle his 700+ page epic Dhalgren
Kiese Laymon
James Baldwin
Walter Mosley
Toni Morrison
Nalo Hopkinson
and these are folk I’m naming off the top of my head!
July 27, 2015 — 8:26 AM
Christopher Robin Negelein says:
Stop reading my mind! You stole my brainwave recommendations!
July 27, 2015 — 12:45 PM
todddillard says:
Saladin Ahmed is an awesome fantasy writer.
July 27, 2015 — 8:30 AM
Ryan Canty says:
Great choice, Todd! A few friends have recommended his works to me and I’m going to check him out!
July 27, 2015 — 8:39 AM
zklimczak says:
Marisa Silver’s “The God of War” was a good coming-of-age book. Definitely worth a read. Slightly depressing. Mostly engrossing.
July 27, 2015 — 8:35 AM
Kara Stewart says:
Thanks for this, Chuck! I will def add to my ‘to read’ list. For a list of amazing books by American Indian authors, including my favorites, Tim Tingle, Sherman Alexie and Eric Gansworth, please see the Text Resources page from the North Carolina State Advisory Council on Indian Education here: http://www.dpi.state.nc.us/americanindianed/resources/text/
July 27, 2015 — 8:42 AM
Christopher says:
You had me at “similar to Blue Blazes.” I’m definitely going to check that one out!
Lisa Bolekaja wrote a story called “The Saltwater African” for an Octavia E. Butler Anthology (i actually read it in the 2014 Campellian Anthology) and it was AWESOME! Purchase either of those anthologies for that story alone! Its about two slave sisters on a plantation, and one of them is a witch who still has some powers from the old country and old gods. Great story! Enjoy!
July 27, 2015 — 8:51 AM
M.R. Eggs says:
Two reasons for this comment, well, maybe three
First, per the comments policy “… sometimes new posters … will in fact be put automatically into spam.” I’m a new poster, and as one with an odd name and some would say style as well, could be at added risk for being “oubliette’d”. I don’t want to go into the medieval equivalent of a government black site because of reason two.
2. I plan on entering this week’s flash contest and would rather this post get tossed and know I’ve been incarcerated before I do. Yes, oh Omnipotent Master of the Blog and Probably Other Things too, I know you could just flag me and trash my contest entry. I don’t do trust well, but I have no choice.
C. Zero Sum Game is a few books down from the top of my “Read Me Next” list but I’ll probably bump it up based on your comments. I’m on reading hiatus at the moment after having what was left of my mind blown away when I read A Calculated Life by Anne Charnock. Neurons take time to re-grow. Not an author of color, but a recommendation for a book to add to your shelf of woman authors, if you have not already read it.
Let oubliette-eration commence, or not.
July 27, 2015 — 8:55 AM
decayingorbits says:
I’m always game to read anything by an author I haven’t read before — one notable is Rachel Acks (www.http://katsudon.net) Her short story “They Tell Me There Will Be No Pain” is just fucking fabulous. Read it here: http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/tell-will-no-pain/
I really can’t comment on writers of color — unless the book jacket has a photo, I wouldn’t know what color they are anyway. I just want to read good stories.
July 27, 2015 — 9:22 AM
Zig Zag Claybourne says:
Minister Faust. Get thee to some Minister Faust. His “War & Mir” series is the Phantom Menace done right, but all his books are sharp, masterfully written, and leave you needing to wrap the sheet around you and stare warmly at the sunrise.
July 27, 2015 — 9:39 AM
scifiwritir says:
Seconding the minister!
July 27, 2015 — 2:01 PM
amberjkeyser says:
ZERO BOXER by Fonda Lee – MMA in space, corporate sports sponsorship, futuristic doping, plus great characters both human and Martian, male and female. This one will make you want to punch someone in zero-gravity.
July 27, 2015 — 9:46 AM
terribleminds says:
Ooh I have this sitting on my desk.
July 27, 2015 — 9:47 AM
amberjkeyser says:
… In a good way! (It’s a great read!)
July 27, 2015 — 9:47 AM
lkeke35 says:
Thank you for summing this up so succinctly. I’m not looking at peoples decisions as being inherently racist, so much as kind of lazy.
July 27, 2015 — 9:48 AM
Nicholas Kaufmann says:
I’ve been banging the Tananarive Due drum for years now, ever since I read her amazing novel THE BETWEEN back in the mid-1990s. She explores horror and the supernatural through an African-American lens, and her prose skills are outstanding.
July 27, 2015 — 9:50 AM
MsShonnerz says:
Yes! She has a great voice. I need to read more of her works.
July 27, 2015 — 10:58 AM
Nicholas Kaufmann says:
I think readers of sf/f will like Due’s novels, too. They may lean toward horror, but there are a lot of sfnal ingredients, like races of immortals and traveling through alternate dimensions.
July 27, 2015 — 1:00 PM
Mae Rhys says:
I love her work! The Good House is a fabulous gothic horror.
July 27, 2015 — 2:44 PM
whirlingnerdish (@whirlingnerdish) says:
I only discovered Tananarive Due last year with MY SOUL TO KEEP, but I LOVE her stuff. My horror shelves were very white and male and I’ve been looking to expand my outlook in the genre. I just finished THE GOOD HOUSE a few months ago, and I loved it loved it loved it. I plan to get THE LIVING BLOOD as soon as I have some extra cash.
July 27, 2015 — 8:25 PM
Pat says:
Read and love all of those titles. I had the pleasure of meeting her before her move to the West Coast. Miss her voice. Solitary style.
July 27, 2015 — 9:14 PM
Brandy says:
I read Nnedi Okorafor’s Who Fears Death a few months ago and my brain still resides outside of my skull. It’s a minor inconvenience but one I’ve come to deal with. I will STRONGLY SECOND any Saladin Ahmed recs (if you haven’t read The Throne of the Crescent Moon what are you even doing with life) and, of course, N.K. Jemisin is writing some of the finest genre work around. THE FUCKING FINEST, I SAID. I will also shove Thomas King’s Green Grass, Running Water at random strangers.
July 27, 2015 — 9:59 AM
Alyn Day says:
Blood for the Sun by Errick Nunnally
July 27, 2015 — 10:00 AM
janinmi says:
Seconded!
July 31, 2015 — 2:21 PM
L.A. Barnitz says:
Go now and read Kai Ashante Wilson’s “The Devil in America” on Tor.com. This novella is nominated for the World Fantasy Awards this year and it is just…amazing. Wilson is somehow able to wrestle with the trope of the devil and all that implies with the abstract notions of the loss of history and magic in post-Civil War America, and the combination results in a red-hot fantasy story I could not put down. There’s more about this story on my blog but suffice to say, I think Wilson is the cat’s pajamas and I’m looking forward to reading his new novel, “The Sorcerer of the Wildeeps” soon.
July 27, 2015 — 10:00 AM
lkeke35 says:
Oh, and check out Ayize Jama-Everett’s The Limnal People and its sequel The Limnal War. Also her upcoming book about a Black female Martial Artist called The Entropy of Bones.
I have to second that Daniel Jose Older and his anthology Salsa Nocturna.
And please, everyone check out V.E. Schwab’s A Darker Shade of Magic. It is awesome.
And just about anything by N.K. Jemisin.
July 27, 2015 — 10:12 AM
kirizar says:
Agreed about N.K. Jemisin. I read her The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms series and was absolutely blown away. I hadn’t seen that she had other books out, so now I have new fodder for my ever-growing reading list. Thank you.
July 27, 2015 — 12:29 PM
Alicia F says:
Yes! N.K Jemisin! I thought The Inheritance Triology was brilliant and then I read the two Dreamblood books and thought they were even better.
August 1, 2015 — 1:25 PM
Ridley Kemp says:
Bookmarking this thread for future reference. Buying Lagoon ASAP.
July 27, 2015 — 10:13 AM
Simon says:
Has anyone mentioned Ken Liu and Liu Cixin yet? Because yeah, both of them.
July 27, 2015 — 10:17 AM
yellehughes says:
What attracts you to writers, doesn’t matter what color they are and how do they get your attention?
July 27, 2015 — 10:23 AM
Erin says:
I agree with several of the recommendations already put forth, and I especially want to put in a word for The Killing Moon by N.K. Jemisin. So beautiful!
Ken Liu’s work is excellent. He has several short stories available (a couple at Daily Science Fiction: What Is Expected of a Wedding Host and Nova Verba, Mundus Novus), as well as his novel, The Grace of Kings.
And for urban fantasy with a Southeast Asian vibe, check out Wolf at the Door by J. Damask.
July 27, 2015 — 10:25 AM
Rachel Ambrose says:
Anita Desai Hidier’s “Born Confused” and its sequel “Bombay Blues” (which I haven’t read yet). Born Confused is about an Indian-American teenage girl named Dimple who’s trying to find her place between her Indian upbringing and her American culture, while dealing with high school, meddling parents, a cute drummer, and a seriously dramatic best friend. Hidier’s writing is electrifying and her use of language is one of the most original and poetic I’ve ever come across.
“Bodies in Motion” is a short story collection by Mary Ann Mohanrajj is an amazing, poetic collection following two generations of families from Sri Lanka to America. Fantastic short fiction.
Anything, anything at all by Lisa See, but especially Snow Flower and the Secret Fan, and Peony in Love (my two favorites).
“Girls of Riyadh” by Rajaa Alsanea recounts the fictionalized lives of four young Saudi women in the form of emails. This was a Big Deal in Saudi Arabia when it came out in 2005 since the stories are based on actual women and contains sex and alcohol use, and it’s a great read, highly engrossing.
July 27, 2015 — 10:27 AM
tuppencecowley says:
Helen Oyeyemi’s “The Icarus Girl” – I’m hoping to teach this one in a month or two. Helen Oyeyemi writes all the good things.
And of course, “The Three Body Problem” by Cixin Liu, which is next up on my Audible list, and I’m beside myself about it.
July 27, 2015 — 10:33 AM
Anthony says:
Saladin Ahmed is a great read.
Koushun Takami is also a good read. Battle Royale is basically the other half of the basis for series like Hunger Games. A bunch of students on an island having to fight to the death for their government where disobedience or running away means the explosive collar around your neck goes boom. Also, because life isn’t fair you’re randomly assigned a weapon. Some people get sub machine pistols. Others get paper fans. Good luck!
July 27, 2015 — 10:40 AM
scifiwritir says:
seconding Saladin!
July 27, 2015 — 2:02 PM
edgybear says:
Chuck, big thanks for opening this door. One of my favorite authors–highly recommended to all–is Walter Mosley, who is best known for his mysteries (like Devil in a Blue Dress), but who also writes in SFF. Mosley has an original voice and a fine touch for fresh language. Personally, I’d exhort most highly his five mysteries featuring Leonid McGill. But, in SFF, he’s also written a number of works, including Jack Strong: A Story of Life After Life, Inside a Silver Box, Futureland, Blue Light, The Gift of Fire, On the Head of a Pin, Stepping Stone, Disciple, and The Wave, plus a YA work, 47. Almost anything that Mosley writes is worth a look. Enjoy!
July 27, 2015 — 10:42 AM
Erin says:
Oh! And Henry Lien! His “Pearl Rehabilitative Colony for Ungrateful Daughters” (Asimov’s, Dec. 2013) was wonderful, as is his most recent “The Ladies’ Aquatic Gardening Society” (Asimov’s, June).
July 27, 2015 — 10:43 AM
smisk says:
Check out Conservation of Shadows by Yoon Ha Lee. It’s a SF/F short story collection. Very unique writing style, but beautiful, like nothing else I’ve read. She incorporates asian cultural elements, and mathematics/geometry in her stories, pretty cool stuff.
July 27, 2015 — 10:51 AM
scifiwritir says:
Seconding Yoon Ha.
July 27, 2015 — 2:02 PM
Kate Crowe says:
Yoon Ha Lee has several stories at Clarkesworld including this one: http://clarkesworldmagazine.com/lee_07_15 and has been read by Kate Baker on their podcast a few times also. https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/clarkesworld-magazine-science/id288472896?mt=2 Sorry for the links, not sure how to format them.
July 28, 2015 — 1:07 PM
Ambee says:
I second the Minister Faust recommendation. I’d also recommend “Lightfinder” by Aaron Paquette.
July 27, 2015 — 11:24 AM
Michael says:
Lagoon was wonderful. Gorgeous prose, wonderful blend of sci-fi, myth and magical realism. I’ll also throw out Ken Liu’s Grace of Kings. Chinese history as epic fantasy with nods to classical Western epics as well.
July 27, 2015 — 11:30 AM
K. Ceres Wright says:
Don’t forget the indie and small press writers: Milton Davis (http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=milton+davis); Carole McDonnell (http://www.amazon.com/Constant-Tower-Carole-McDonnell-ebook/dp/B00E1QKHSY/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8); Valjeanne jeffers (http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_1_9?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=valjeanne+jeffers&sprefix=Valjeanne%2Cdigital-text%2C213); Balogun Ojetage (http://www.amazon.com/Balogun-Ojetade/e/B00AVEA7SU/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_3?qid=1438010874&sr=1-3); Zig Zag Claybourne (http://www.amazon.com/Zig-Zag-Claybourne/e/B00IXWUU52/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_2?qid=1438011073&sr=8-2); Bill Campbell (http://www.amazon.com/Bill-Campbell/e/B005BY3PH0/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_5?qid=1438011108&sr=8-5); John Edward Lawson (http://www.amazon.com/John-Edward-Lawson/e/B001K7P9VW/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1?qid=1438011168&sr=8-1); and myself (http://www.amazon.com/K.-Ceres-Wright/e/B00E4ANBKI/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1?qid=1438011196&sr=8-1)
July 27, 2015 — 11:34 AM
patriciabarr says:
I’d recommend Karen Lord’s Best of All Possible Worlds, especially to those who like Star Trek.
July 27, 2015 — 11:39 AM
Zig Zag Claybourne says:
Adding this to my list with the quickness.
July 27, 2015 — 10:06 PM
michelle4laughs says:
Angie Sandro is a new author with a strong style in her Dark Paradise series. She gets some ghosts and mixes it with Southern Gothic on the bayou and heaps of romance.
July 27, 2015 — 11:41 AM
Jeff P. says:
Some amazing authors here to add to the list, thanks! I highly recommend Karin Lowachee – a pleasure to read.
July 27, 2015 — 11:48 AM
Julia says:
LOVE Karin Lowachee, yes! Seconded!
July 27, 2015 — 12:09 PM
Julia says:
You can’t tell me what to do, Chuck! I’m going to rec Robin Kimmerer’s Braiding Sweetgrass, which is technically not SFF. It is, however, actual science, blended with folklore until the edges of both disappear and you’re left feeling like the actual world we live in is as magical and unseen as anything in a novel. Also you’ll know a lot more about how pecan trees decide when to produce nuts by the time you’re done (it turns out trees can actually ‘talk’ to each other, which is pretty sci-fi in its own right).
July 27, 2015 — 11:54 AM
Mark Gardner says:
Greg Dragon has both a space opera series called “The New Phase.” I really dug “The Phasers of Anstractor.” He also has a short called “Re-Wired” and it’s pretty cool.
C. Edward Baldwin has a book titles “The Rememberers.” It’s this sci-fi mash up with a supernatural twist that touches on religion.
Dennis Calloway has a sci-fi/apocalypse thriller called “Return to Earth.”
I’d recommend all four sci-fi books I mentioned above. Go on, get reading.
July 27, 2015 — 11:55 AM
Wendy Bolm says:
I second Nalo Hopkinson. Her book The Salt Roads was amazing.
July 27, 2015 — 12:13 PM
Mildred Achoch says:
I recommend myself…in a year or two 🙂 I am still working on my very first science fiction novel but I have written a couple of drabbles. https://drablr.com/mildandred
July 27, 2015 — 12:14 PM
Courtney Leigh says:
OMG so many good recs here! I want to second the Helen Oyeyemi motion. She’s phenomenal. And to throw some more YA into the mix, I’ll suggest AN EMBER IN THE ASHES by Sabaa Tahir, THE SUMMER PRINCE by Alaya Dawn Johnson, and THE YOUNG ELITES by Marie Lu (told from the villain’s POV).
Also, Alaya Dawn Johnson won two Nebula Awards this year. One for her novelette, “A Guide to the Fruits of Hawaii,” which you can read here: http://www.alayadawnjohnson.com/a-guide-to-the-fruits-of-hawaii/ The second one for her YA novel, LOVE IS THE DRUG. Those are both on my TBR pile.
Two non-YA also on my TBR pile are SORCERER TO THE CROWN by Zen Cho and ON SUCH A FULL SEA by Chang-rae Lee.
July 27, 2015 — 12:18 PM
Jesslyn Hendrix says:
Although I’ve read a few, my TBR list just got quite a bit longer.
I have to 2nd and 3rd anything by N K Jemisin–she IS writing some of the best in the genre.
Lagoon and Who Fears Death by Okorafor was like reading a dream. Her prose softly and slowly just pulled me under the waves.
Thanks for the post and all the great recs.
July 27, 2015 — 12:26 PM
Paula says:
I just read and loved the second book in Stephanie Saulter’s ®Evolution trilogy (starts with a book called Gemsigns), all about genetic engineering in a future London – the third book has just been published, for those like me who care about that kind of thing before picking up a series!
I’m also eagerly awaiting getting my hands on both Aliette de Bodard’s new book (House of Shattered Wings) and Zen Cho’s first (Sorceror to the Crown) over the next few weeks.
July 27, 2015 — 12:36 PM
K. Ceres Wright says:
Milton Davis is an indie writer of SF/F: http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_2?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=milton+davis
July 27, 2015 — 12:46 PM
K. Ceres Wright says:
Carole McDonnell is an indie writer of fantasy: http://www.amazon.com/Constant-Tower-Carole-McDonnell-ebook/dp/B00E1QKHSY/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8
July 27, 2015 — 12:47 PM
Puck says:
I started reading On Such a Full Sea by Chang-rae Lee and I seriously cannot wait to continue it. The only thing about this book that bugs me is that it does that thing where dialogue is not in quotation marks or set off from the text in any way, but that’s a stylistic choice.
Also, yesss to SL Huang.
July 27, 2015 — 1:02 PM
priscilla says:
I’m finding more recommendations than I am able to offer, but Victor LaValle’s Big Machine is a terrific book.
July 27, 2015 — 1:09 PM
Cecil Castellucci says:
Orleans by Sherri L Smith
The Summer Prince by Alaya Dawn Johnson
July 27, 2015 — 1:20 PM
Erin says:
I thought of a couple more, and then a couple more, and then I decided to browse through the people I follow on Twitter to see what other obvious choices I was forgetting (although I’m sure I’ve still missed some).
Usman Mailk — “The Pauper Prince and the Eucalyptus Jinn”
M.C.A. Hogarth — has numerous works in her universe of the Pelted. I enjoyed her Dream Healers set.
Carmen Maria Machado, whose novelette “The Husband Stitch” was nominated for the Nebula in the novelette category.
Alyssa Wong — “The Fisher Queen (most recent accolade: nominated for World Fantasy Award)
Wesley Chu — The Lives of Tao (and others in that series). I haven’t grabbed his latest (The Time Salvager) yet, but it’s definitely on the TBR list
JY Yang — “Tiger Baby”/a>
Hiromi Goto — loved her Half World
Tony Pi — “No Sweeter Art”/a> (nominated for the Aurora Award for Best Short Fiction)
Alaya Dawn Johnson — her novelette, “A Guide to the Fruits of Hawai’i” won the Nebula and her novel Love is the Drug won the Andre Norton Award
Marjorie Liu — her urban fantasy work tends more toward the romance side (The Dirk and Steele books), but she also writes for Marvel (Black Widow, Astonishing X-Men, Dark Wolverine)
July 27, 2015 — 1:22 PM
Erin says:
Ugh! I apologize for screwing up the tags.
July 27, 2015 — 3:00 PM
Erin says:
Tiger Baby (Yang) link: http://lackingtons.com/2015/02/12/tiger-baby-by-jy-yang/
No Sweeter Art (Pi) link: http://www.beneath-ceaseless-skies.com/stories/no-sweeter-art/
July 27, 2015 — 3:25 PM
pakaalito says:
So Long Been Dreaming: Postcolonial Science Fiction & Fantasy is a great set of short stories. Highly recommended.
July 27, 2015 — 1:31 PM
scifiwritir says:
Recommendations:
Abengoni by Charles Saunders
The Griots, Steampunk anthologies by Milton Davis
Acacia by David Anthony Durham
A Conservation of Shadows by Yoon Ha Lee
Demon by Tosca Lee
Ashok Banker
Other writers include:
Nalo Hopkinson
Nnedi Okorafor
N K Jemisin
Balogun Ojetade
Malon Edwards
Tade Thompson
Nisi Shawl
Valjeanne Jeffers
DeVaun Sanders
K Ceres Wright
Speculative Fiction Poets
Bryan Thao Worra
Linda Addison
http://chroniclesofharriet.com/2012/11/01/great-black-authors-of-science-fiction-fantasy/
July 27, 2015 — 1:55 PM
Kyra Dune says:
K.N. Lee’s The Chronicles Of Koa are fairly decent paranormal if you’re into vampires and such. And also by Lee is Thicker Than Blood, which is a very nice, kind of chilling collection of three paranormal short stories. http://amzn.to/1GV1kG2
July 27, 2015 — 1:56 PM