I was talking to author Saladin Ahmed on Twitter about the Save the Pearls mess, and the fact that all of the attention being paid to this racist book, particularly with the Weird Tales disaster, has undoubtedly led to additional sales of the book.

I’m skeptical as to how many extra sales the book has gotten — while there are a ton of Amazon reviews, the sales rank is nowhere near as good as I’d expected, based on the controversy. But that rank has still jumped up in recent days, so she’s getting some sales, if only from people curious to see what all of the fuss is about.

I don’t believe this is a reason to not talk about the book, or to not publicly and loudly challenge racism in the genre. I might not appreciate that my blog post yesterday could have given this author a few more sales, but I prefer that potential side effect to silence.

That said, it totally sucks that a hugely problematic book is rewarded with so much attention while other, far better books by and about people of color are overlooked or ignored.

Therefore, I’d like to open the comments to recommendations of better books to read.

I’ll throw out a few of my own to get things started.

Also, see the Carl Brandon Society Resource page for reading lists.

Your turn. What other books by and/or about people of color would you personally recommend? What authors do you believe deserve more time and attention?

ETA: I’ve started a Twitter Hashtag for this conversation as well: #ThoroughlyGoodBooksByPOC

Mirrored from Jim C. Hines.

jain: Dragon (Kazul from the Enchanted Forest Chronicles) reading a book and eating chocolate mousse. (domestic dragon)

From: [personal profile] jain


Ted Chiang is always phenomenal: Stories of Your Life and Others, The Merchant and the Alchemist's Gate, and The Lifecycle of Software Objects

I haven't read much Samuel R. Delany, but I highly recommend Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand and Empire Star, and am quite fond of Babel-17 though I don't think it's quite as good as the other two works I named. (My review of the latter two.)

Karin Lowachee's Warchild is great, though I haven't yet read the sequels. (My review.)

Toni Morrison's Beloved (My review.)

And, of course, if you're considering not just speculative fiction but any book by a person of color, then the list of awesome authors just explodes: Chinua Achebe, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Mariama Ba, Kawabata Yasunari, Mishima Yukio, Yoshimoto Banana, James Baldwin, Zora Neale Hurston, Monique Truong, Michael Ondaatje, Alexandre Dumas, Marjane Satrapi, etc., etc.
jain: Dragon (Kazul from the Enchanted Forest Chronicles) reading a book and eating chocolate mousse. (domestic dragon)

From: [personal profile] jain


Just a little unforgivable. ;-) All of his stuff is short, though, and he's (sadly) not a prolific writer, so it won't take you long to work your way through his oeuvre whenever you get around to it.
.

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