The Sword and Laser discussion
What Else Are You Reading?
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A list of Non-European Fantasy Setting Books by Women
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The one I don't see there is Zoo City by Lauren Beukes, which like Akata Witch is a contemporary fantasy set in Africa.


I'm personally recommending Redemption in Indigo by Karen Lord. Standalone too (for now). :)

I'd recommend the audiobook for Redemption in Indigo. Robin Miles does an excellent job and the story works well with audio.

There are several publishers that focus on Japanese SF:
Haikasoru
Yen (mostly manga, but you can search the page for "novel" to find the four series they're doing)
Kurodahan
Vertical (they only list two titles under fantasy, but most of their horror titles qualify as science fiction)
And if you're willing to put up with dodgy translations of dubious legality, there are fan-translations at Baka Tsuki.

http://www.booktionary.blogspot.co.uk...
I've only read nine of the ..."
Well that went right into my bookmarked list.

I loved Nnedi Okorafor.

Just to clarify, it's not that the writers are non-European, it's the settings that are non-EU. (Not that I'm disagreeing that authors from other cultures should be sought out and promoted.)

Just to clarify, it's not that the writers are ..."
Thanks for the clarification update - I've adjusted the title of the topic.
I also agree with Erwin about Non-western sf and fantasy literature (although the genres themselves are popular and perhaps more available to audiences in the translated forms of film, television and graphic novels.)
I find the world sff blog is a good source for the literature. They also have interesting discussions about post-colonial sci-fi and fantasy and the genre itself. http://worldsf.wordpress.com/
I've also started reading genre stories from the Philippines: http://www.philippinegenrestories.com/
There's a sci-fi book called The Stories of Ibis by Hiroshi Yamamoto which is on my to-read list too.

I'm personally recommending Redemption in Indigo by Karen Lord. Standalone too (for now). :)"
Thanks for the recommendations! Those two are high on my list to read soon.

That would make sense since the prose follows an oral tradition-style narrative :)

I've also started reading genre stories from the Philippines: http://www.philippinegenrestories.com/
There's a sci-fi book called The Stories of Ibis by Hiroshi Yamamoto which is on my to-read list too.
Thanks for the shout-out :)
The Stories of Ibis is like a mosaic novel as it's comprised of unrelated but interlinked short stories within a framework (think Arabian Nights). Haikasoru also publishes several Japanese-translated novels.
And it's buried a bit in Author promo but day job also released various volumes of Philippine Speculative Fiction as eBooks, if you're into anthologies.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Stories of Ibis (other topics)Redemption in Indigo (other topics)
Redemption in Indigo (other topics)
Zoo City (other topics)
http://www.booktionary.blogspot.co.uk...
I've only read nine of the authors listed so far: N.K. Jemisin, Ursula Le Guin, Lian Hearn, Shannon Hale, Alison Goodman, Kate Elliot, Catherynne Valente, Cindy Pon and Octavia Butler (for sci-fi).
I'd recommend Across the Nightingale Floor by Lian Hearn and Eon by Alison Goodman for good Japanese inspired fantasy (the alternative worlds are unique).
A few of the others mentioned are already on my TBR list. Feel free to add any more to the list!