The Black fantastic 20 afrofuturist stories

Book - 2025

"On the shoulders of Afrofuturist masters like Octavia E. Butler and Samuel R. Delany and pioneering visionaries before them, a new, abundant, and brilliant generation of contemporary Black authors, some of them just beginning their careers, is conjuring up a very real renaissance. Edited by SF-expert andré carrington, and including Hugo, Nebula, and Locus award winners alongside emerging and experimental voices, The Black Fantastic showcases the artistry of these breakout literary stars and celebrates the diversity of their talents. Including Afrofuturist science fiction, weird and fantastic tales, horror and the paranormal, apocalyptic lyricism, time travel, superheroes, and more, here are twenty mindblowing, horror-strewn, weird, w...oke, nerdy, terrifying, liberating, fantastic, utopian, surreal, genre-defying and empowering short stories, all of them worth reading and rereading now and far into futurity. Reclaiming histories of racism and oppression and seizing the day, these writers are forging kaleidoscopic new senses of Black identity, community, and imaginative freedom."--

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Subjects
Genres
short stories
Science fiction
Paranormal fiction
Horror fiction
Afrofuturist fiction
Short stories
Nouvelles
Published
New York, NY : Library of America 2025.
Language
English
Physical Description
viii, 368 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781598538113
  • Introduction / by andré m. carrington
  • Herbal / Nalo Hopkinson
  • All that touches the air / An Owomoyela
  • Bludgeon / Thaddeus Howze
  • A guide to the fruits of Hawai'i / Alaya Dawn Johnson
  • Sanford and sun / Dawolu Jabari Anderson
  • A song for you / Jennifer Marie Brissett
  • Tender / Sofia Samatar
  • The malady of need / Kiini Ibura Salaam
  • The Venus effect / Violet Allen
  • The secret lives of the nine Negro teeth of George Washington / Phenderson Djèlí Clark
  • The hospital where / Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah
  • The ones who stay and fight / N.K. Jemisin
  • The final flight of the unicorn girl / Alex Smith
  • Calendar girls / Justina Ireland
  • Shape-ups at Delilah's / Rion Amilcar Scott
  • Habibi / Tochi Onyebuchi
  • Spyder threads / Craig Laurance Gidney
  • The orb / Tara Campbell
  • We travel the spaceways / Victor LaValle
  • Ruler of the rear guard / Maurice Broaddus.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Editor Carrington (Speculative Blackness) sets out to "remind" Black readers and authors that "we have the power to define ourselves and redefine our worlds"--and he succeeds with aplomb. Filled with grandmasters (Nalo Hopkinson), multiple-award winners (N.K. Jemisin), and breakout stars (Phenderson Djèlí Clark, Victor LaValle, Tochi Onyebuchi), this eclectic survey of the latest works in Afrofuturism sprouts fresh fruits from traditional genre motifs. Take LaValle's "We Travel Spaceways," for example, which grants unhoused Grimace and trans woman Kim passage to the stars in place of the typical clean-cut space patrollers. Clark's hidden history of General Washington's false teeth, "The Secret Lives of the Nine Negro Teeth of George Washington," illuminates the way those forgotten by the chroniclers of history still exert a great deal of influence. Nevertheless, oppression takes its toll even on those who attempt to collaborate with the ruling classes, as in Alaya Dawn Johnson's "A Guide to the Fruits of Hawai'i," which follows a part-Japanese camp guard and her vampire lover. In these stories, humor can be whimsical, as in Hopkinson's "Herbal," about a very literal elephant in the room, or mask the pain of the Omega Question ("Who matters?"), as in Violet Allen's "The Venus Effect." This is essential reading. (Feb.)

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