So I ⌨️ a long 🧵 on scifi/fantasy recommendations last night (all excellent or boundary-expanding reads, but all also #diversifyyourbookshelf) 👇🏽 in case you missed it.
Couple questions for y'all:
- good (non-Amazon) book URLs are surprisingly rare. I did a lot of bookshop.org links, only to find today that they don't work in the EU. Better ideas? - this should be better structured than just #bookstodon tags. Bookwyrm? "books" user on my blog → fedi? ...?
@kissane suggested yesterday(?) that we should Bring Back Book Talk #OnHere and I heartily agree.
Which I’m taking as the nudge I needed to start a new version of an old thread (prompted by @josh) on science fiction and fantasy (SFF) from perspectives that are (sadly) mostly new to SFF.
Note that for most of my life I’ve been a scifi reader; it’s in part the new breadth of storytelling that has brought me into fantasy.
Recommendations welcome! List is in no particular order.
This list will be mostly *new* SFF but FWIW there’s a vigorous tradition of writing—and critiquing—diversity in SFF.
Samuel Delany’s 1977 review of the first Star Wars is a landmark here: in it he says, of SFF films, “the variety of human types should be as fascinating and luminous in itself as the variety of color in the set designer’s paint box. Not to make use of that variety… seems an imaginative failure.”
Lots of this list will still be American, but there’s an increasing amount of sci-fi in translation these days. This collection of Chinese shorts is consistently good; not just the stories but also the introductory and closing essays, which push back healthily on attempts to generalize about China through its scifi.
I didn’t like the second and third books of the trilogy very much, but Liu Cixin’s Three Body Problem deserves every bit of the very wide praise that it got. I strongly recommend reading it *after* the essays in Ken Liu’s translated short-story volume, as helpful context.
Probably not to everyone’s taste (less Big Ideas; more Just Plain Fun, And Also Sex (author’s description: “BSDM-inflected cyberpunk lesbian”), but I’ve thoroughly enjoyed the Machine Mandate novellas: https://beekian.wordpress.com/
Picking up this old #bookstodon thread on science fiction and fantasy from different perspectives, because it is summer and friends have been asking for recs.
Tade Thompson’s Rosewater / Wormwood trilogy is one of the few members of the *extremely* rare genre of “science fiction that acknowledges that the Hausa language exists”, a language with 50-80M speakers, and meaningful to me personally because my wife speaks it after her stint in Niger in the Peace Corps. These are hard to summarize; suffice to say “alien invasion via West Africa”, with a structure that is sometimes jarring and always engaging.
Surfacing this rec from @brainwane from the older thread’s responses. The best scifi is a lens through which we can look at ourselves; @zencho ‘s Sorcerer’s To The Crown was part of how I learned that fantasy can have the same impact: https://social.coop/@brainwane/112195892365448957
🧵 Nghi Vo’s novella Empress of Salt and Fortune melted me; strikingly original. (Also reminded me, in terms of form, of the underrated classic The Carpet Makers, by Andreas Eschbach.) The rest of her Singing Hills cycle of novellas have also been fun, though I admit none struck me quite as directly as the first.
🧵 Silvia Moreno-Garcia is a bit hit-or-miss for me (eg, Mexican Gothic wasn’t bad but didn’t quite hit the spot for me) but Gods of Jade and Shadow was *terrific*:
🧵 In the “BDSM space lesbians” category, special sub-category “space necromancers”, Tamsyn Muir’s Locked Tomb is absolutely as good as everyone says it is, though not a light read—second book in particular I found structurally challenging (in a good way!)
🧵 NK Jemisin’s Broken Earth shouldn’t require a recommendation from me because anyone who is into science fiction or fantasy at all should already have read it; it is one of the towering achievements of the genre.
🧵I really enjoy everything Becky Chambers writes, but I particularly have been enjoying her #solarpunk novellas, starting with Psalm for the Wild Built. They’re good for the heart.
🧵 @Catvalente gets two shoutouts, for vastly different books. If you want *light*, and/or are into Eurovision, Space Opera is… hilarious.
Her “Radiance”, on the other hand, is more… deeply weird. In a way that I found deeply amazing but, especially if you’re newer to scifi, may not be for everyone. https://social.coop/@luis_in_brief/111942707909189921
🧵 @ArkadyMartine ’s Teixcalaan books are Very Serious Hard Scifi but also smart about colonialism, gender, and a host of other topics, and in a style that really works for me.
(I say “but” here because, well, lots of Very Serious Scifi traditionally has been completely awful on all of those fronts. But if you’ve read this far in the thread you probably knew that already.)
🧵 @maryrobinette ‘s Lady Astronauts series gets my highest possible praise, which is that I want to share it with my son as part of his early-teen intro-to-scifi reading—it’s smart, fun, and engaging, and also for a developing kid, so much better and more thoughtful about gender and race than any scifi I read at that age. And it’ll be getting a fourth book soon, apparently!
Programmer turned lawyer and community guy. Current: Tidelift, Creative Commons, OpenET, California HDF, 415/94110, dad.Previously: Wikimedia, Mozilla, Open Source Initiative, GNOME, LegOS, Duke, 305/MIA, more.