Rosarium Publishing, ISBN 9780996769259, February 2017
One of the fun things about reviewing books is that you can be offered a book for review that you might never have noticed on your own. For me, this is one such book.
It's a collection of short stories with settings ranging from ancient Africa to the slave trade, to the Jim Crow era in the US to alternate histories and the far future. Some are clearly science fiction or fantasy, while others have the barest possible fantastic content. Even those with little to no fantastic content, though, are written from s background and viewpoint that is outside my cultural background or usual reading experience. It's as challenging as any "unknown world" in science fiction, the more so because of the knowledge that it reflects the experience and cultural background of someone really living in the same world I do, and living that alien life here.
The protagonists here are men and women, young and old. There's even one white viewpoint character--the captain of a slave ship, who expects to make his fortune on his one distasteful journey, and go back home to his wife and child. There's a woman cast out from her tribe, but determined to right one terrible wrong. A woman becomes a soldier in the service of a new imperialism, and a young man who thinks he's just out for his weekly night on the town, who discovers he's destined for something much more momentous, and so is the music he loves. The settings feel real and palpable, and if the characters are not people I know, they certainly feel like characters Broaddus knows.
This isn't a collection to be rushed through; it's best savored more slowly and thoughtfully. But read it you definitely should.
Highly recommended.
I received a free electronic galley of this book and am reviewing it voluntarily.
One of the fun things about reviewing books is that you can be offered a book for review that you might never have noticed on your own. For me, this is one such book.
It's a collection of short stories with settings ranging from ancient Africa to the slave trade, to the Jim Crow era in the US to alternate histories and the far future. Some are clearly science fiction or fantasy, while others have the barest possible fantastic content. Even those with little to no fantastic content, though, are written from s background and viewpoint that is outside my cultural background or usual reading experience. It's as challenging as any "unknown world" in science fiction, the more so because of the knowledge that it reflects the experience and cultural background of someone really living in the same world I do, and living that alien life here.
The protagonists here are men and women, young and old. There's even one white viewpoint character--the captain of a slave ship, who expects to make his fortune on his one distasteful journey, and go back home to his wife and child. There's a woman cast out from her tribe, but determined to right one terrible wrong. A woman becomes a soldier in the service of a new imperialism, and a young man who thinks he's just out for his weekly night on the town, who discovers he's destined for something much more momentous, and so is the music he loves. The settings feel real and palpable, and if the characters are not people I know, they certainly feel like characters Broaddus knows.
This isn't a collection to be rushed through; it's best savored more slowly and thoughtfully. But read it you definitely should.
Highly recommended.
I received a free electronic galley of this book and am reviewing it voluntarily.
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