#(the book is bang bang bodhisattva)
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i picked up a few books today and started on one and was like wow, this has a lot of elements i'm primed to like. i hope i enjoy my time with it. and in chapter 1 a woman named gloria walks out and starts bickering with her anachronistic retrofuture wisecracking cyborg-detective sort-of-boyfriend-but-it's-complicated. and i'm sitting here like
#text post#(the book is bang bang bodhisattva)#it's pretty amusing to be like hmm will i like this let's see and getting smashed with the Keyword Deluge#ms wood i see your vision#dead man talking#dead woman walking#just a fun coincidence. only so many beats you can hit in a genre etc
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Bang Bang Bodhisattva by Aubrey Wood
An edgy, queer cyberpunk detective mystery by an exciting new trans voice from New Zealand.
Someone wants trans girl hacker-for-hire Kiera Umehara in prison or dead—but for what? Failing to fix their smart toilet?
It’s 2032 and we live in the worst cyberpunk future. Kiera is gigging her ass off to keep the lights on, but her polycule’s social score is so dismal they’re about to lose their crib. That’s why she's out here chasing cheaters with Angel Herrera, a luddite P.I. who thinks this is The Big Sleep. Then the latest job cuts too deep—hired to locate Herrera’s ex-best friend (who’s also Kiera’s pro bono attorney), they find him murdered instead. Their only lead: a stick of Nag Champa incense dropped at the scene.
Next thing Kiera knows, her new crush turns up missing—sans a hand (the real one, not the cybernetic), and there’s the familiar stink of sandalwood across the apartment. Two crimes, two sticks of incense, Kiera framed for both. She told Herrera to lose her number, but now the old man might be her only way out of this bullshit...
A fast-talker with a heart of gold, Bang Bang Bodhisattva is both an odd-couple buddy comedy that never knows when to shut up, and an exploration of finding yourself and your people in an ever-mutable world.
#bang bang bodhisattva#aubrey wood#transfem#trans book of the day#trans books#queer books#bookblr#booklr
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I'm reading Bang Bang Bodhisattva by Aubrey Wood right now (about halfway through) and it is sooooo fun. It's a cyberpunk noir novel about Kiera Umehara, a down-on-her-luck trans hacker-for-hire, and Angel Herrera, a technophobe private investigator, who are thrown together when a mutual friend is murdered and one of Kiera's friends disappears under similar circumstances. It feels very aware of its genre influences (I've caught references to Neuromancer, Blade Runner, and Humphrey Bogart so far), but also very fresh and snappy in its own right.
#it's a very fun whirlwind of a story so far. like the world is bleak in the way that cyberpunk is always bleak but it's super engaging#and the protagonists have an enjoyable dynamic#bang bang bodhisattva#aubrey wood#books#lulu speaks#lulu reads#lulu reads bang bang bodhisattva
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Bang Bang Bodhisattva by Aubrey Wood It’s 2032 and we live in the worst cyberpunk future. Kiera is gigging her ass off to keep the lights on, but her polycule’s social score is so dismal they’re about to lose their crib. That’s why she's out here chasing cheaters with Angel Herrera, a luddite P.I. who thinks this is The Big Sleep. View the full summary and rep info on wordpress!
#Bang Bang Bodhisattva#Aubrey Wood#bookblr#daily book#polyamorous#queer#queer rep#trans female#transgender#adult books#female protagonist#in uniform#lgbtqia#mystery#noir#queer books#robots#science fiction
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Adding to this, @lowercasebreezy 's book Bang Bang Bodhisattva
Post about it here:
You like cyberpunk? Queer and trans polyamorous relationships? Tough decisions and high stakes?
I read this book in a single sitting, which I never fucking do any more. Something about it grabbed my brain by the collar and didn't let go until I was done.
SFF Polyamory Recs Part 1
2024 seems to be the year of polyamory in literature and movies, and I've been wanting to read some books featuring polyamory lately, so here is a non-exhaustive list of sci-fi and fantasy books that feature polyamory!
Evocation, by S.T. Gibson - fantasy. first in a series. seems to be f/m/m
Running Close to the Wind, by Alex Rowland - fantasy. standalone. m/m/nb
Iron Widow, by Xiran Jay Zhao - sci-fi. first in a series. f/m/m
A Dowry of Blood, by S.T. Gibson - gothic fantasy. standalone. sapphic
Silver Under Nightfall, by Rin Chupeco - fantasy. first in a series. seems to feature f/m/m
In the Ravenous Dark, by A.M. Strickland - fantasy. standalone. seems to feature f/f/m
True Love Bites, by @joydemorra - fantasy. first in a series. seems to be f/m/m
To Be Taught, If Fortunate, by Becky Chambers - sci-fi. novella. pairing unknown
The Door Into Fire, by Diane Duane - fantasy. first in a series. pairing unknown
Heliacle Rising, by C.C. Davie - fantasy. first in a series. pairing unknown
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I'm hungry for more lgbt scifi (esp space operas) .... but I've read a lot already lol. I've read everina Maxwell's books and really enjoyed them. also the teixcalaan books, once & future (and its sequel), Emily skrutskie's bloodright trilogy, the darkness outside us, light from uncommon stars, a complicated love story set in space, the space between worlds, this is how you lose the time war, the disasters, Empress of forever, a strange and desperate glory, unconquerable sun, the locked tomb series... just to name a few. I think more recent books (published 2023-2024) and upcoming books are less likely to be on my radar, and I really enjoy romantic drama in my space operas but it's not necessary, and I also really enjoy when there's a major surprise twist. the wayfarers series is on my list but it doesn't seem to be available on Libby unfortunately
Try Bluebird by Ciel Pierlot, Seven Devils by Laura Lam and Elizabeth May, The Starmetal Symphony by Alex White, the Xuya Universe Romances by Aliette de Bodard, the NeoG series by K.B. Wagers, The Salvation Gambit by Emily Skrutskie, Persephone Station by Stina Leicht, The First Sister by Linden A. Lewis, Bang Bang Bodhisattva by Aubrey Wood, A Fractured Infinity by Nathan Tavares, and if you like mystery, The Mimicking of Known Successes by Malka Older!
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Favorite Obscure Reads of 2024
The books that didn't make the overall best books of the year, but are hidden gems that deserve more attention.
Hold Me, Courtney Milan. A funny and extremely geeky m/f romance featuring a trans woman.
Letters to Half Moon Street, Sarah Wallace. Charming gay romance set in an alt-Regency with queernormativity and magic.
The Wings Upon Her Back, Samantha Mills. A winged soldier betrayed by her leader and suffering from chronic pain.
The Witchstone, Henry Neff. Adult debut about a family's demonic bargain from one of my childhood favorite authors.
Midnight Rooms, Donyae Coles. A disturbing gothic novel about a biracial girl who marries into a haunted, decomposing house.
The House of the Red Balconies, AJ Demas. Demas' latest charming and gentle queer romance set in an alt-Mediterranean world, about an engineer and a courtesan.
Activation Degradation, Marina J Lostetter. SF about a robot sent to attack a spaceship, but instead gets captured and discovers its humanity.
Bang Bang Bodhisattva, Aubrey Wood. Dystopian cyberpunk about a trans girl hacker.
Moorewood Family Rules, Helenkay Dimon. A woman gets revenge, Leverage-style, on her family, who had her take the fall for her and go to prison.
The Tenfold Tenants, EV Belknap. A charming and spiky novel about a guy who's resigned to running a boarding house for magical beings due to the economic slump.
Shoestring Theory, Mariana Costa. Second chance time travel romance, in which a wizard court jester confronts his evil king ex.
Sorcery and Small Magics, Maiga Doocy. Two academic rivals go on a quest after one of them accidentally (and illegally) curses the other.
Mazes of Power, Juliette Wade. A twisty political SF book about the fight to be the heir in an underground eugenicist cave society.
Dark Woods, Deep Water, Jelena Dunato. A lovely dark fantasy novel about three people whose paths lead them to be trapped in a cursed castle.
The Uses of Illicit Art, Wendy Palmer. An absolute souffle of a romance novel set at a breakneck pace about a guy with magical thief powers and the bounty hunter desperately trying to capture him.
#book recommendations#my list mostly for highlighting little indie novels!#all of these books deserve a lot more love
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You want a cyberpunk detective noir story that feels like you're reading the next modern Gibson or Russo? GRAB. THIS. BOOK.
https://www.amazon.com/Bang-Bodhisattva-Aubrey-Wood-ebook/dp/B0BQL36DNC/ref=sr_1_1
You're still reading this? No. Scroll back up and click buy. I'll wait.
Okay, you need more convincing. You want a rich, thickly built world that's a cyberpunk extension of out current (and I mean current) late capitalistic hellscape? This has it. Wit and humor that'll delight the crap out of all the Locked Tomb Fans? This has it. Real, believable characters just as queer, trans, poly and strange as ourselves? Check. Elegantly telegraphed twists, setups, and red herrings, plus a few extra of each that you won't see coming? Check. It's got all of it, and I'm really looking forward to see what comes Aubrey Wood in the future. (More Kiera? PLEASE?!)
Regardless, get this book.
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just finished reading it yesterday
to give the pitch: it's a cyberpunk noir thriller following down on her luck 30s something transwoman Kiera, trying to raise enough money to raise her polycule's social score so they aren't evicted from their apartment. in the wrong place at the wrong time, Kiera and her on-again off-again friend/employer Angel Herrera, a luddite private investigator, are framed for two separate murders. they have to work together to avoid the fascist police in order to clear their names and find the real killer.
i loved this book. It's fast-paced, heartfelt, and sincerely queer. It feels like proper cyberpunk but free of all the weird anti-Asian and ableism that plagues the common cultural conception of 'classic' cyberpunk while keeping the scathing critique of capitalism with a picture of a future that's more of a fun-house mirror of our present.
bang bang bodhisattva is such a good book goddamn
proper queer cyberpunk story centering a 30s something trans woman loser (affectionate)
cracking it open really helped re-energize my own enthusiasm for writing
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It was a good year for reading! Tumblr's own @dianeduane apparently ruled my bookshelf -- I binged Young Wizards and got started on the Tale of the Five series, too. My favorite read of the year was one of my last: The Last Unicorn. Just a perfect little pearl of a book; I don't think I've cried simply because a book is over since my first read-through of LOTR. I didn't read tons of nonfiction this year, but H is for Hawk really stood out; it's about falconry, yes, but also grief, and T.H. White, and it has this paragraph which made me feel like an unwary rabbit getting bodied by a goshawk:
Other 5-star reads (besides the one this website randomly selected to display) included:
Bang Bang Bodhisattva by Aubrey Wood (look. it's a cyberpunk neonoir.)
Boys Weekend by Mattie Lubchansky (my wife and I read this one over each other's shoulders; it gave her Big Feelings)
The Familiar by Leigh Bardugo
Deep Wizardry by Diane Duane
Juniper and Thorn by Ava Reid
A Sorceress Comes to Call by @tkingfisher (the most effective horror I read this year)
Wildwood Dancing by Juliet Marillier
The Curse of Chalion by Lois McMaster Bujold (I want to feed the protagonist soup)
When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain by Nghi Vo
Aside from loads more Beagle and Bujold, what should I put on my TBR list for '25?
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StoryGraph puts together a book cover collage of the books you finished this year. (No alt text as it’s 110 book covers and the only thing worse than me trying to type them out would be someone’s screen reader reading them out. But if you’re curious about them I’m @tgebst on StoryGraph or you can ask!)
I don’t do ratings, but I did pick my top 3 books that I read each month, which I will paste under the cut.
January
The Helm of Midnight (Marina J Lostetter)
Spear (Nicola Griffith)
Use of Weapons (Iain M Banks)
February
Him (Geoff Ryman)
Exordia (Seth Dickinson)
Just Like Home (Sarah Gailey)
March
In Ascension (Martin MacInnes)
The Cage of Dark Hours (Marina J Lostetter)
Bang Bang Bodhisattva (Aubrey Wood)
April
Babel-17 (Samuel R Delaney)
Deadhouse Gates (Stephen Erikson)
Memories of Ice (Stephen Erikson)
May
Barrayar (Lois McMaster Bujold)
Brothers in Arms (Lois McMaster Bujold)
The Circumference of the World (Lavie Tidhar)
June
The Unraveling (Benjamin Rosenbaum)
The Mountain in the Sea (Ray Nayler)
The Unbroken (C L Clark)
July
A Scanner Darkly (Philip K Dick)
Bury Your Gays (Chuck Tingle)
The Element of Fire (Martha Wells)
August
Ubik (Philip K Dick)
The Tainted Cup (Robert Jackson Bennett)
Nemesis Games (James S A Corey) (I guess)
September
Assassin’s Apprentice (Robin Hobb)
These Burning Stars (Bethany Jacobs)
Babylon’s Ashes (James S A Corey)
October
Assassin’s Quest (Robin Hobb)
Tiamat’s Wrath (James S A Corey)
Monstrous Regiment (Terry Pratchett)
November
1984 (George Orwell)
The Sunforge (Sascha Stronach)
Three Assassins (Kotaro Isaka)
December
The Saint of Bright Doors (Vajra Chandrasekera)
Ship of Magic (Robin Hobb)
Mad Ship (Robin Hobb)
These were not all the good books I read this year! But you gotta narrow it down somehow. I mean, you don’t gotta. But you kinda gotta.
#weirdly formal text but OH WELL#that’s just who I am today apparently#long post#(bc the image is long)
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May 2023 Queer Adult SFF Books!
ORPHIA AND EURYDICIUS by Elyse John 5/1/2023
bi MCs, m/f
Orphia is the warrior who would write verse, Eurydicius the shield-maker she's drawn to protect
both draw the ire of the gods
gender-swapped Greek myth with a twist
DRAGONFALL by L.R. Lam 5/2/2023
bi, pan rep
chosen one story, but make the chosen one a dragon hellbent on revenge
just have to convince this human to trust him long enough so they can both betray all of humankind
oh no
i think I love the human
SEASON OF SKULLS by Charles Stross 5/16/2023
bi MC
third in a trilogy in the Laundry Files universe, where the Prime Minister is an eldritch horror and everyone's manifesting powers
and Eve still has to deal with her ex-husband, whom she murdered
BANG BANG BODHISATTVA by Aubrey Wood 5/9/2023
trans MC
hacker-for-hire framed for murder must clear her name with the help of a stuffy PI
come for the dystopian cyberpunk, stay for the stubborn defiance
TRIALS OF THE INNERMOST by Jonathan Fuller and Kristina Kelly 5/26/2023
bi, gay, and ace MCs
the world was shattered into 3
regular trials of their best warriors keeps the peace
but when one of those warriors might harbor a consuming darkness,,, well
THE BATTLE DRUM by Saara El-Arifi 5/23/2023
f/f
myth and conspiracy merge in a blood-caste-segregated empire
they've succeeded, but their world still threatens to unravel
war is coming
sequel to THE FINAL STRIFE
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Hey Laya! I have another recommendation for you aro/ace book database–I just finished reading Bang Bang Bodhisattva by Aubrey Wood and one of the protagonists is asexual (probably biromantic). It's not a huge part of the book, but he has a small subplot of realizing over the events of the story and I hadn't seen anyone mention it in reviews before I read the book, so I thought it might not be on your radar. (There's a little romance in both POVs but I would say the main relationship is the platonic partnership between the two protagonists.)
Oh interesting! I hadn't heard of it, thanks! and the author is from nz. the audiobook is available so I will check that out soon !!
#my radar of new releases is getting ever smaller tbh the places I used to find this stuff are often people who dont post anymore#ask
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2023 Books in Review
a tiered ranking of all the books i read in 2023! originally i was going to write up my commentary on each one but then i was like hahaha.....no, so below the cut is just a list of the titles/authors in each tier instead.
changed my brain chemistry
The Idiot, Elif Batuman
Land of Milk and Honey, C Pam Zhang
The Borrowed, Chan Ho-kei (trans. Jeremy Tiang)
My Cousin Rachel, Daphne du Maurier
Vagabonds, Hao Jingfang (trans. Ken Liu)
The Membranes, Chi Ta-wei (trans. Ari Larissa Heinrich)
Under the Pendulum Sun, Jeannette Ng
Severance, Ling Ma
He Who Drowned the World, Shelley Parker-Chan
Vita Nostra, Marina & Sergey Dyachenko (trans. Julia Meitov Hersey)
Network Effect, Martha Wells
top-tier stuff
Our Share of Night, Mariana Enriquez (trans. Megan McDowell)
Brainwyrms, Alison Rumfitt
The Door, Magda Szabo (trans. Len Rix)
The Lover, Marguerite Duras (trans. Barbara Bray)
Fun Home, Alison Bechdel
Strange Beasts of China, Yan Ge (trans. Jeremy Tiang)
The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet, Becky Chambers
Pachinko, Min Jin Lee
Lesser Known Monsters of the 21st Century, Kim Fu
Tell Me I’m Worthless, Alison Rumfitt
Bliss Montage, Ling Ma
How to Read Now, Elaine Castillo
Annihilation, Jeff VanderMeer
The Fifth Season, N. K. Jemisin
If Beale Street Could Talk, James Baldwin
My Brilliant Friend and The Story of a New Name, Elena Ferrante
The Jasmine Throne, Tasha Suri
good, well-written
Carmilla, Sheridan Le Fanu
Life Ceremony, Sayaka Murata (trans. Ginny Tapley Takemori)
Yellowface, R. F. Kuang
A Memory Called Empire, Arkady Martine
Assassin of Reality, Marina & Sergey Dyachenko (trans. Julia Meitov Hersey)
Witch King, Martha Wells
Tokyo Ueno Station, Miri Yu (trans. Morgan Giles)
Parable of the Sower, Octavia Butler
Peaces, Helen Oyeyemi
Gingerbread, Helen Oyeyemi
Project Hail Mary, Andy Weir
The Pachinko Parlor, Elisa Shua Dusapin (trans. Aneesa Abbas Higgins)
All Systems Red, Artificial Condition, Rogue Protocol, Exit Strategy, Fugitive Telemetry, and System Collapse (Murderbot #1-4, #6-7), Martha Wells
Revenant Gun, Yoon Ha Lee
The Dry Heart, Natalia Ginzburg (trans. Frances Frenaye)
Gods of Want, K-Ming Chang
Paradais, Fernanda Melchor (trans. Sophie Hughes)
The Mushroom at the End of the World, Anna Tsing
Your Emergency Contact Has Experienced An Emergency, Chen Chen
The Hurting Kind, Ada Limon
Murder on the Orient Express, Agatha Christie
An Unauthorised Fan Treatise, Lauren James
Upstream, Mary Oliver
The Art of Death, Edwidge Danticat
Meander, Spiral, Explode, Jane Alison
alphabet, Inger Christensen (trans. Susanna Nied)
Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates
flawed, but enjoyable
The Wicker King, K. Ancrum
Exit West, Mohsin Hamid
Detransition, Baby, Torrey Peters
Flux, Jinwoo Chong
Bang Bang Bodhisattva, Aubrey Wood
The Murder of Mr. Wickham, Claudia Gray
Natural Beauty, Ling Ling Huang
The Monster Baru Cormorant, Seth Dickinson
Certain Dark Things, Silvia Moreno-Garcia
The Likeness, Tana French
The Cabinet, Un-su Kim (trans. Sean Lin Halbert)
The Kingdom of Surfaces, Sally Wen Mao
The World Keeps Ending, and the World Goes On, Franny Choi
good, well-written, but not my cup of tea
The Good House, Tananarive Due
The Transmigration of Bodies, Yuri Herrera (trans. Lisa Dillman)
Roadside Picnic, Arkady & Boris Strugatsky (trans. Olena Bormashenko)
The School for Good Mothers, Jessamine Chan
At Night All Blood Is Black, David Diop (trans. Anna Moschovakis)
Family Lexicon, Natalia Ginzburg (trans. Jenny McPhee)
The Empress of Salt and Fortune, Nghi Vo
The Kingdom of This World, Alejo Carpentier (trans. Harriet de Onís)
Against Silence, Frank Bidart
flawed, less enjoyable
Tenth of December, George Saunders
Counterweight, Djuna (trans. Anton Hur)
Authority, Jeff VanderMeer
Comfort Me with Apples, Catherynne M. Valente
Babel, R. F. Kuang
The Genesis of Misery, Neon Yang
Carrie Soto Is Back, Taylor Jenkins Reid
not ranking
These are nonfiction and they aren’t literature-related, so it just felt weird trying to rank them.
Visual Thinking, Temple Grandin
On Web Typography, Jason Santa Maria
The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, Marie Kondo (trans. Cathy Hirano)
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Fantasy Recs:
The Book of Jhereg by Steven Brust (Dragaera) Black God's Kiss by C.L. Moore (Jirel of Joiry) Waylander by David Gemmell (Waylander) The Blacktongue Thief and Between Two Fires by Christopher Buehlman (Blacktongue) Assassin’s Apprentice by Robin Hobb (Realm of the Elderlings) The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie (The First Law) A Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin (A Song of Ice and Fire) The Curse of Chalion by Lois McMaster Bujold (World of the Five Gods) The Dragonbone Chair by Tad Williams (Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn) Chronicles of the Black Company by Glen Cook (The Black Company) The Dragon’s Path by Daniel Abraham (The Dagger and the Coin) The Traitor Baru Cormorant by Seth Dickinson (The Masquerade) Johannes Cabal the Necromancer by Jonathan L. Howard (Johannes Cabal) The Folding Knife by K.J. Parker The Devourers by Indra Das Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell and Piranesi by Susanna Clarke A Country of Ghosts by Margaret Killjoy The Colour of Magic by Terry Pratchett (Discworld) City of Bones by Martha Wells The Alchemy of Stone by Ekaterina Sedia A Woman of the Sword by Anna Smith Spark Those Above by Daniel Polansky (The Empty Throne) The Spear Cuts Through Water by Simon Jimenez The Dragon Waiting by John M. Ford Books of Blood by Clive Barker Tigana by Guy Gavriel Kay The Chatelaine by Kate Heartfield The Etched City by K.J. Bishop The Saint of Bright Doors by Vajra Chandrasekera Gormenghast by Meryn Peake Viriconium by M. John Harrison Black Leopard, Red Wolf by Marlon James (The Dark Star)
Horror Recs:
North American Lake Monsters by Nathan Ballingrud The Marigold by Andrew F. Sullivan The Beautiful Thing That Awaits Us All by Laird Barron The Wingspan of Severed Hands by Joe Koch A Collapse of Horses by Brian Evenson The Immeasurable Corpse of Nature by Christopher Slatsky Negative Space by B.R. Yeager A Natural History of Hell by Jeffrey Ford We Have Always Lived In The Castle by Shirley Jackson Furnace by Livia Llewelyn Manhunt by Gretchen Felker-Martin The Salt Grows Heavy by Cassandra Khaw Tell Me I'm Worthless by Alison Rumfitt Queen of Teeth by Hailey Piper Leech by Hiron Ennes
Sci-Fi Recs:
An Unkindness of Ghosts by Rivers Solomon The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin Rosewater by Tade Thompson (Rosewater) Ammonite by Nicola Griffith Dawn by Octavia E. Butler (Xenogenesis) A Scanner Darkly by Philip K. Dick Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer Dhalgren by Samuel R. Delany Bang Bang Bodhisattva by Aubrey Wood
AHHHHH!!! THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! All go on The List!! Can't wait to check all of them out!
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15 Comedic Science Fiction & Fantasy by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, & People of Colour) Authors
Every month Book Club for Masochists: A Readers’ Advisory Podcasts chooses a genre at random and we read and discuss books from that genre. We also put together book lists for each episode/genre that feature works by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, & People of Colour) authors - to help readers to diversify their reading and library professionals to diversify their readers' advisory. All of the lists can be found here.
Undead Girl Gang by Lily Anderson
One for the Morning Glory by John Barnes
Waypoint Kangaroo by Curtis C. Chen
The Law of Love by Laura Esquivel
The Coyote Kings of the Space-Age Bachelor Pad by Minister Faust
From the Notebooks of Dr. Brain by Minister Faust
Tears of the Trufflepig by Fernando A. Flores
The Regional Office is Under Attack! by Manuel Gonzales
Severance by Ling Ma
Popisho by Leone Ross
Motorcycles & Sweetgrass by Drew Hayden Taylor
Chilling Effect by Valerie Valdes
Bang Bang Bodhisattva by Aubrey Wood
Super Extra Grande by Yoss
How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe by Charles Yu
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