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Looking for recommendations of neurodiverse characters, characters with different variations of mental health, and unique voices in sci-fi and fantasy
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Melissa
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Feb 24, 2020 09:05AM

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The author of The Outside, Ada Hoffman, frequently reviews books with autistic characters/authors on her blog. Many but not all are sff: http://www.ada-hoffmann.com/reviews-i...
(Also, do you remember the name of the story? That description sounds super familiar but I can't figure out what it is!)

- I second the recommendation of An Unkindness of Ghosts - although it's certainly darker and people do not get help for their mental illnesses nor do they get better, and they experience quite a lot of discrimination due to their neurodiversity (it's a dark story focusing on slavery in a spaceship, very well-written, but not exactly empowering or uplifting).
- Ninefox Gambit features a kind of neurodiversity not existant on earth: the protagonist lives with someone else's mental voice and abilities implanted in her and influencing her, possibly slowly overtaking her personality - I thought it was brilliant.
- Ender's Shadow is about a very small boy who's the result of illegal genetic experiments that gave him beyond genius level intelligence. Now he's got to figure out how to survive alone in the slums of Rotterdam. It turns into a space opera later on - very, very good.
(The author is 70 years old now and unfortunately a homophobe in real life, but I never found that in his books, just letting you know in case you're a very political reader.)
- Ancillary Justice: the main character is a space ship who is also installed in various human bodies ("ancillaries") and thus looks out of many eyes at once. Her society also knows no male pronouns so she refers to everyone as "she", which sounds annoying at first, but is actually very interesting. It taught me a lot about how I make immediate assumptions based on gender, what I associate, how I judge characters based on that, etc. The book made me think "what does it matter if this is a man or woman? and start judging solely based on words and actions" - very different way of thinking, and very interesting.
Hope this helps!


The author of The Outside, Ada Hoffman, frequently reviews books with autistic characters/authors on her blog. Many but not all are sff: http://www.ada-hoffm..."
All three books in Kaia Sønderby's series are worth checking out! Failure to Communicate was one of my favorite books from last year. It features an autistic protagonist that I found extremely refreshing/relatable in her complexity. I think Sønderby deserves more mainstream attention - her writing is superb!
Lots of good recommendations in this thread! Ada Hoffman is great (The Outside, Monsters in My Mind), and IMO Rivers Solomon is a must-read (The Unkindness of Ghosts, The Deep, short fiction).
I'd be interested in knowing the title of the short story in Clarkesworld you mentioned, if you happen to remember it later! :)

A Calculated Life - I just finished reading this one. The MC is a bioengineered human where her brain has been designed for her job.


I also loved the characters in Ninefox Gambit although I didn't struggle enough to understand the mathematical aspect of the book :)
I found the Clarkesworld episode! Here it is: http://clarkesworldmagazine.com/pueyo...
I have added all of these to my TBR! Thanks for all the recommendations. I will keep following this thread for any more that come to mind.

Melissa wrote: "I think any stories about people with neurodiversity, mental health differences, and unusual thinking is really helpful. (I just edited the question). I just finished reading Pet. I..."
Emma Newman's Planetfall series handles mental health better than anything else I've ever read.
The Mere Wife by Maria Dahvana Headley is on the groups bookshelf and deals well with PTSD.
Emma Newman's Planetfall series handles mental health better than anything else I've ever read.
The Mere Wife by Maria Dahvana Headley is on the groups bookshelf and deals well with PTSD.

Yep. I personally wouldn't call it "sci-fi" though. It's more fantasy/horror.



If fantasy is allowed, then definitely read The Stormlight Archive starting with The Way of Kings - the glowing reviews for this series are well-deserved. Incidentally, the main characters in it also struggle with various (interesting) mental health issues (explaining which would be a spoiler) and their sprite-like companions each have very unusual ways of thinking and you can even watch them develop sapience and it's all very fascinating. The non-human beings on the other side of the war also have very unique ways of thinking, but finding all of that out is part of the fun, so I won't spoil it for you. I love this series.
It's no doubt offensive to lump neuro atypical individuals in with AIs, robots, and other inorganic/non-human beings but it seems to me that SFF stories involving sentient machines that in some way strive to be more human might be well received.
I was thinking of recommending Children of Time, The Quantum Magician, The Murderbot series by Martha Wells starting with All Systems Red,
The Gap series by Stephen R Donaldson (which is good but also horrific in ways that many can't/won't stomach), and A Closed and Common Orbit.
I was thinking of recommending Children of Time, The Quantum Magician, The Murderbot series by Martha Wells starting with All Systems Red,
The Gap series by Stephen R Donaldson (which is good but also horrific in ways that many can't/won't stomach), and A Closed and Common Orbit.

And while not science fiction or fantasy, consider taking a look at Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead. It's by a Nobel prize winning author and is an excellent depiction of the inside of an eccentric mind. Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead

Like.

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/......"
That's fair.
But it's tricky, because 'neuro-diverse' doesn't equal 'unhealthy.'
Just saying.

The same underlying phenomenon can be labeled neurodiverse or a mental disorder. Readers bring their own frame to a book.

We need to remember that being Queer used to be considered a mental illness, and Deaf Culture is such a thing that lots of ppl reject the idea of being 'fixed.' A Difference, or even a Challenge, is not necessarily a Disorder. That's an objective statement, not this reader's opinion.
Books mentioned in this topic
Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead (other topics)Blackfish City (other topics)
A Closed and Common Orbit (other topics)
All Systems Red (other topics)
Children of Time (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Emma Newman (other topics)Maria Dahvana Headley (other topics)