The Three-body Problem trilogy and The Wandering Earth by Cixin Liu (plus some fanfiction) are the obvious choice.
Recently there was a thread here about Africa-focused sci-fi but I don't remember what that genre is called...
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The Three-body Problem trilogy and The Wandering Earth by Cixin Liu (plus some fanfiction) are the obvious choice.
Recently there was a thread here about Africa-focused sci-fi but I don't remember what that genre is called...
Africa-focused sci-fi but I don’t remember what that genre is called…
Yea, there was recently a thread here. My brain kept going in the -punk direction but I knew it can't be africapunk :p
The Three Body Problem is absolutely amazing and I can't recommend it enough.
Octavia Butler, Nnedi Okorafor
I second Octavia Butler.
On my list to read, but haven't yet, is N.K. Jemisin.
A fairly new author is Malcom Turnbull. He was on a radio interview a while back and the book (The Lesson) sounded interesting so I gor it and read it.
A lot of the sci-fi books I've been reading lately have black [main] characters. I don't know if those authors are black though. I have to look into it.
I really loved the Broken Earth trilogy by N.K. Jemisin, and have been wanting to reread them, which I don't do with many books, plus read her other stuff.
Also, it's fantasy not sci-fi but I'm currently reading Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse and liking it so far.
I have heard of this one a few times and added to my list, thanks :)
Two of my faves, N. K. Jemisin & Nalo Hopkinson
Yoon Ha Lee - Ninefox Gambit
Temi Oh - Do You Dream of Terra Two?
Tochi Onyebuchi - War Girls
Trade Thompson - Rosewater
Marlon James - Black Leopard Red Wolf
P. Djeli Clark - A Master Of Djinn
S. A. Chakraborty - The City Of Brass
Ryka Aoki - Light From Uncommon Stars
That’s probably enough for now, but I’ve got more on request 😅
Yoon Ha Lee really plays with fun math concepts. Great stuff. The Ninefox trilogy was a real entry point for me to begin to appreciate Korean mythology.
I'm currently reading Ken Liu, who wrote the short stories that would eventually be adapted in Pantheon (2022).
I have a book called Sinopticon which primarily consists of science fiction stories by woman from China. So far they have been very different from anything else I've read as they often completely abandon any kind of tropes.
Different good/interesting? Or different and difficult to read and you're not so sure?
They are good and interesting in my opinion. I haven't finished all of the short stories yet though, but I can't imagine the rest of them would be bad.
Sounds really interesting and unique. Will definitely give it a go.
I thoroughly enjoyed an Unkindness of Ghosts by Rivers Solomon. It's an interesting take on the generation ship theme.
Samuel Delany, if you're interested in look at New Wave stuff.
My reading list is growing and I love it, thanks all :)