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36 Science Fiction And Fantasy Books From AAPI Authors That Are Impossible To Put Down

About the Article

36 Science Fiction And Fantasy Books From AAPI Authors That Are Impossible To Put Down
Article
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/margaretkingsbury/aapi-authors-science-fiction-fantasy
Journal
BuzzFeed News
Issued Date
May 13, 2021
Page
-
Language
English(English)
Country
UNITED STATES
City
-
Book
-
Writer
Lee Yoon Ha , Angela Hur

About the Author

Writer default image
  • Lee Yoon Ha
  • Birth : 1979 ~ -
  • Occupation : Writer
  • First Name : Yoon Ha
  • Family Name : Lee
  • Korean Name : 이윤하
  • ISNI : -
  • Works : 0
Descriptions - 1 Languages
  • English(English)

The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories by Ken Liu (Gallery/Saga Press) These melancholy and gorgeous short stories infused with Chinese history and culture have won many awards. The title piece became the first work of fiction to win all three of SFF's major awards: the Hugo, the Nebula, and the World Fantasy Award. In it, a boy's Chinese mother makes him origami animals that move after she breathes into them. In “The Literomancer,” a young girl with big dreams of becoming a bullfighter moves to China in the 1960s with her military family and has trouble adjusting. “Mono No Aware,” my favorite piece in the collection, describes an Earth nearing destruction. Countries hurriedly build spaceships to save themselves, but the US is the only one to complete a ship in time, and the young narrator is chosen as the only Japanese member of its crew. The Chosen and the Beautiful by Nghi Vo (Tordotcom; out June 1) Nghi Vo’s stunning and subversive retelling of The Great Gatsby subtly infuses the world with magic. Jordan Baker is a queer, adopted Vietnamese American raised in America’s wealthiest social circles. She can make cut paper come to life — though it's a skill she has little opportunity to hone as it comes from her Vietnamese ancestry, and she knows no other person of her heritage. She befriends Daisy as a child, and Daisy becomes the epitome of white wealth and privilege. Immersed in Jazz Age culture, Vo expertly draws out the white patriarchal racism and sexism of The Great Gatsby.