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Ken Liu's Reading List

Ken Liu is an American author of speculative fiction. A winner of the Nebula, Hugo, and World Fantasy awards, he wrote The Dandelion Dynasty , a silkpunk epic fantasy series (starting with The Grace of Kings ) , as well as The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories . He also authored a Star Wars novel, The Legends of Luke Skywalker . Prior to becoming a full-time writer, Liu worked as a software engineer, corporate lawyer, and litigation consultant. Liu frequently speaks at conferences and universities on a variety of topics, including futurism, cryptocurrency, history of technology, bookmaking, th

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The Best of Speculative Fiction (2020)

Scraped from fivebooks.com (2020-03-16).

Source: fivebooks.com

Tochi Onyebuchi · Buy on Amazon
"Oh, yeah. Riot Baby by Tochi Onyebuchi, a Nigerian-American writer, is such a powerful, powerful book. It is amazing. It is, in some ways, a superhero story that literalizes power, powerlessness, and anger, and allows us to understand and view racial injustice in America in a way that I think few works have been able to do for me, at an emotional level. Tochi is an incredible writer. I’ve followed his writing for years, and it’s been amazing to see him grow and experiment, and try out different things. One of the things about Riot Baby that particularly amazed me is just the creativity and beauty that Tochi puts into using language. The characters have superpowers, and we’re talking about very spiritual concepts. So rather than just using a standard, conservative style to describe these experiences, Tochi chose to really experiment and stretch language, to describe and encompass experiences and sensations that we otherwise cannot experience. He embraces the limitations, as well as the strengths of the medium we’re working in. “To me, speculative fiction is generally the type of fiction that uses the technique of literalizing some aspect of reality that we usually speak of as metaphorical” Tochi, of course, is a very skilled screenwriter as well. But for Riot Baby , he chose to use experimental language in a lot of places, using prose to do things that film and TV cannot. I love novelists who embrace that aspect of prose writing, and make us think, and use language in ways that weren’t possible before, or that we hadn’t thought of. I just love this book. It’s wonderful. Oh, it’s inspiring. It really is. It makes you, as a writer, to want to do more, up your game, because it’s just so good."
Peter Tieryas · Buy on Amazon
"Right. I think Peter himself describes it as a kind of spiritual sequel to The Man in the High Castle by Philip K Dick. It’s an alternate history in which the Axis powers won World War II , and Japan has conquered parts of the United States. And it’s a book in which there are giant mechas, and there are references to gaming culture—a lot of nerdy, geeky references that we love to see in science fiction. But more than that, what really made me just sit up and take notice is the way Peter uses this novel to confront some of the darkest episodes of World War II in the Pacific theater. Here in the US especially, fictional explorations of World War II tend to be very focused on the European theater, and don’t pay enough attention to the horrors committed by Imperial Japan, the terrible suffering and the incredible bravery and sacrifices the Allies made in the Pacific theater. Peter’s book, using alternate history, explores these episodes of injustice and how do you seek freedom and liberty and remain human in the face of unspeakable atrocities and oppression? I found the lens through which he did this to be emotionally wrenching. Overall, the novel is a deeply moving, powerful cry for freedom in the face of darkness and atrocity. Yeah. It gives you a new lens to see the history we have in this timeline. No, no, absolutely not. I wouldn’t say that. I think Peter’s point was: The Man in the High Castle is an alternate history in which the Axis powers won, and so this is similar in that sense, but no, it’s not at all similar to Philip K Dick in other ways."
Sarah Pinsker · Buy on Amazon
"Sarah Pinsker is one of the most lauded writers of short-form speculative fiction. She’s won many awards, and gotten a great deal of recognition for her work. A Song for a New Day , I believe, is her debut novel, her first long-form piece of fiction. The novel is in the subgenre of post-apocalyptic fiction , and imagines a world in which a plague has caused all of us to become isolated, particularly relevant in light of the current COVID-19 virus outbreak. In the world of the novel, everyone is living like a hermit, working from home, eating at home, studying at home, and there are no large-scale gatherings anymore, and entertainment is usually done through virtual reality. So, the very visceral experience of going to a live concert, of that connection between the performer and the audience, of being part of an audience, and performing for an audience—these experiences are no longer possible. And because Sarah is a musician herself, she is able to talk about music and these music-mediated shared experiences in a way that few others can. “This is a story about why live music and shared experiences are critical to the formation of social consciousness” This is a story about why that kind of experience is critical to the formation of social consciousness, and of the fight for freedom. The post-apocalyptic world is corporate controlled, and music is completely dominated by corporate interests who want to maintain the status quo, but individual independent artists still want to perform and write rebellion anthems, and awaken the people to the possibilities of collective action rather than just virtual crowds. Sarah draws on her experiences as a professional musician to portray why that matters, and to give people a sense of the potential of resistance in live music. It’s not a subject that I had thought a lot about or knew much about, and once again, this book allowed me to see reality through a different lens. Corporate totalitarianism. Yes, I think that’s right."
S L Huang · Buy on Amazon
"Yeah, that’s right. I like that. Zero Sum Game has an action hero whose superpower is math. The hero is an expert in mathematics , and has the ability to see the math behind everyday things, and she uses that to perform superhuman feats. We don’t really get a lot of speculative fiction in which the thing that allows the heroine to do wondrous feats is math! It’s fresh, it’s exciting, it’s fun, and it’s so moving. You care about her. So, if you like action-packed stories that feature a strong, clever, wonderful protagonist who uses math as her superpower, this is the book for you. That’s right. A lot of books to explore, once you’ve been through the first one. I think the perception that speculative fiction is inaccessible is largely based on the idea that it deals with experiences and references the nontechnical reader may not be familiar with. But any kind of fiction, whether it’s about people falling in love on college campuses or a small-town murder mystery , requires some knowledge about the particular world that it takes place in. It’s all about the writer’s skill to make you want to learn about that world so that you can appreciate why characters care about the things they do. It’s true that Huang makes a lot of jokes about math that you’ll love if you have some knowledge of higher math, but Huang does a masterful job of making you care about the things that Cas cares about so that if you don’t care about math, you end up getting her view of the world and why it’s beautiful and compelling."
Amal El-Mohtar & Max Gladstone · Buy on Amazon
"Yes. Both Amal and Max are extremely lauded and well-recognized authors in their own right. So it’s amazing to see the two of them come together and produce something that’s even grander than the sum of both parts: they’re both already fantastic authors, and combined together they become a super author. I suppose you could call it a time travel story. It takes place across all history, and features two protagonists, two women who are essentially spies—saboteurs for rival visions of the future, who are trying to twist the timeline to lead to their respective faction’s visions. But then they fall in love with each other, and it becomes a story about how love drives us to resist the oppressive, all-encompassing worldviews of all totalitarian visions. How do individuals carve out their own timeline in the face of impersonal authority? Support Five Books Five Books interviews are expensive to produce. If you're enjoying this interview, please support us by donating a small amount . The story is incredibly beautiful and moving, and the language is so poetic. You get such a great sense of the two protagonists, their distinct personalities, their distinct ways of viewing the world, of seeing time. You traverse across all history; episodes that are often not well-known to your standard Western historical education are highlighted. So I think this is just an incredible book to pick up. It’s also short. The two of them packed so much into so little space. It is just a concentrated dose of beauty that explodes in your brain and overwhelms everything. That I do not know. I haven’t specifically spoken with the authors about their composition process. That seems like a very natural way of doing it, but I don’t believe that’s in fact what they did. Amal, at least, specifically has said repeatedly that the book is by the both of them, with the implication that every word in the book represents the effort of both. So I’m going to follow her lead and imagine it that way. My theory is that every good book has its ideal audience, and the entire apparatus of publishing, of publicity, of book tours, and book blogging, BookTubing, and the conversation that we’re having right now—all of these efforts are geared towards connecting the right book with the right reader. The discovery problem is actually surprisingly hard to solve. A lot of times, books that should do well don’t do well, just because it somehow failed to reach the ideal audience, its ideal readers just didn’t know that the book existed. So all of us have to try harder at boosting the books that we love, in the hopes of somehow bringing them to the attention of the right readers. There’s a large measure of luck and randomness in how this happens, but it’s not just luck. The only way we can make luck work better is to all work harder on recommending books. Having said all that, I do myself try to open myself up to as many channels of recommendations as possible. I listen to other readers whose taste I trust. I do a lot of outreach and participate in fandom. I talk to other authors and try to be of service to new authors. I pay attention to what other writers I admire are working on. I follow new book releases and industry news to see what’s popping up. I try to build buzz for books that I think are wonderful, and hope that in that effort, I can make everyone’s lives a little richer by connecting the right books to the right audiences."

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