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NK Jemisin: 'It’s easier to get a book set in black Africa published if you're white'

Written By Unknown on Saturday, May 2, 2020 | 6:27 AM

The three-time Hugo award winner is one of the biggest names in modern scifi. She talks about overcoming racism to rewrite the future

In 2018, NK Jemisin became the first writer ever to win three consecutive Hugo best novel awards for science fiction and fantasy. Her first award had been in 2016, for her novel The Fifth Season, and its two sequels, The Obelisk Gate and The Stone Sky, won in the following years. Yet speaking on the phone from her home in coronavirus-hit Brooklyn, Jemisin says she never thought she’d be published. “I honestly didn’t think I had a chance. You just didn’t see characters like me in fiction,” she says.

Growing up in Mobile, Alabama and New York, Jemisin was an avid reader, making up her own stories from the age of eight, but the lack of black women writing science fiction and fantasy, the genre she loved, made her believe it wasn’t for her. “We were all exposed to nothing but white dude fiction, occasionally young white women fiction, and if that’s how you’ve grown up, then that is what is normal.”

We were all exposed to nothing but white dude fiction and if that’s how you’ve grown up, then that is what is normal

A Nasa-sponsored workshop for writers about astronomy and her fascination with volcanoes fed into The Fifth Season

When you read HP Lovecraft books like The Horror at Red Hook he’s blatant about the racism

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via Science fiction books | The Guardian https://ift.tt/3aY0wqS

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