So Long Been Dreaming

This has loose connections to the stuff I was talking about in the previous entry, but I think it deserves its own entry:

The anthology So Long Been Dreaming: Postcolonial Science Fiction and Fantasy, edited by Nalo Hopkinson and Uppinder Mehan, is now available in Canada.

(Note that that page has one inaccuracy: there's no Delany introduction.)

The book will be out in the US in October. If you live in the US and want the book before October, it looks like you can order it from the publisher, Arsenal Pulp Press. I'm hoping there'll be copies at WisCon.

One partial answer to my question in my previous entry about what editors can do is to familiarize themselves with traditions other than the ones they grew up with. (Um, note that in this entry I'm conflating plot and culture. I don't mean to suggest that different cultural traditions must of necessity have different plot traditions; but I think that anthologies devoted to stories from a particular cultural background or set of backgrounds are likely to be useful for someone wanting to familiarize themselves with plot structures and other storytelling conventions from those backgrounds.) Even if one is monolingual, one might, for example, read a bunch of relevant sf anthologies, such as Nalo's anthologies (this new one along with Mojo: Conjure Stories and Whispers from the Cotton Tree Root: Caribbean Fabulist Fiction), and Cosmos Latinos, and Strange Kaddish, and Dark Matter (I gotta remember to pick up the new volume, Dark Matter: Reading the Bones), and so on.

There was some interesting discussion in comments on Toby's journal a couple months ago between Nalo and Catherine S. and others, about the idea of having an anthology specifically limited to writers of color. Alan Lattimore posted some further comments on the subject in his own journal.

3 Responses to “So Long Been Dreaming”

  1. nalo

    Tks for the plug, Jed. I should note that Arsenal tells me that they won’t be able to ship copies to the U.S. until October. Which means there won’t be copies at Wiscon, either. But October will come soon enough, darn it. I like summer.

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  2. M. Hogarth

    Out of curiosity, just what is a writer of color?

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  3. Greg Beatty

    Hi Jed, Nalo–

    I had already requested my review copy (and been promised one by the publishers), so I’m looking forward to it.

    Nalo, you might be interested in knowing Nisi suggested it when I was talking with her as background for an article on Black to the Future.

    All the best,
    Greg

    reply

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