October 28, 2008

Carl Brandon Society's recommendations

From an e-mail forwarded to me:The Carl Brandon Society recommends the following speculative fiction books by writers of First Nations/Native American heritage for American Indian Heritage Month:

THE WAY OF THORN AND THUNDER trilogy by Daniel Heath Justice

This trilogy speculatively re-imagines the Cherokee history of removal and relocation and redefines European fantastical tropes using Cherokee-centered imagery and worldviews.

GREEN GRASS, RUNNING WATER by Thomas King

One of the best books I've ever read: a funny, sad, gorgeous story that ties together a contemporary narrative about 
Indians living on Canada's prairies with slightly skewed creation myths and accounts of the historical horrors endured by First Nations people during the continent's European colonization.
THE BALLAD OF BILLY BADASS AND THE ROSE OF TURKESTAN by William Sanders

A wry love story that also incorporates critiques of nuclear testing and dumping on Native lands.

EAST OF THE SUN AND WEST OF FORT SMITH by William Sanders

A collection of short stories from Sanders' entire career. You can see some of his best here, including the alternate history "The Undiscovered," in which a shanghaied, shipwrecked Shakespeare is trapped in 16th Century Appalachia and must stage his plays among the Cherokee, and the near-future "When the World is All on Fire" when climate change and toxic waste have caused Indian reservations to become prime property again.
ALMANAC OF THE DEAD by Leslie Marmon Silko

Silko uses magical realism to chronicle numerous characters' journeys toward the prophetic, violent end of white dominance in the Americas.

TANTALIZE by Cynthia Leitich Smith

A departure from Smith's previous, realistic Indian YA stories, this YA novel jumps onto the vampire bandwagon, this time in a vampire-themed restaurant in Texas.

THE BONE WHISTLE by Eva Swan (Erzebet Yellowboy)

The Bone Whistle is about a woman who discovers her true heritage. She is the child of a wanaghi, one of the 
creatures of Native-American folklore.
THE NIGHT WANDERER by Drew Hayden Taylor

A gothic young adult vampire story.

THE LESSER BLESSED by Richard Van Camp

A coming-of-age story of a native Canadian boy obsessed with Iron Maiden. Has elements of magical realism.

BEARHEART: THE HEIRSHIP CHRONICLES by Gerald Vizenor

Perhaps the first Native American science fiction, this is a journey through a dystopian future United States destroyed by the collapse of the fuel supply.
Comment:  I haven't read any of these books. I haven't even heard of many of them. Since they lean toward science fiction and fantasy, I thought it was appropriate to list them here.

For more on the subject, see The Best Indian Books.

1 comment:

dmarks said...

I found this on a website:

"Exile’s Children and Exile’s Challenge – Angus Wells


Ok, so there are fantasies where the world resembles a Native American Culture, and fantasies where worlds resemble a Renaissance European culture, but there are very few that have BOTH of these interacting with each other. These two books do, (and hey, there are only two!) and the culture clash is both fun and interesting. "