How Long 'til Black Future Month?

How Long 'til Black Future Month? is a collection of science fiction and fantasy short stories by American novelist N. K. Jemisin. The book was published in November 2018 by Orbit Books, an imprint of the Hachette Book Group. The name of the collection comes from an Afrofuturism essay (not included in the book) that Jemisin wrote in 2013.[1] Four of the 22 stories included in the book had not been previously published; the others, written between 2004 and 2017, had been originally published in speculative fiction magazines and other short story collections. The settings for three of the stories would later be developed into full-length novels.

How Long 'til Black Future Month?
AuthorN. K. Jemisin
Genrescience fiction, fantasy
PublisherOrbit Books
Publication date
November 2018
Media typePrint, ebook, audiobook
Pages432
ISBN978-0-316-49134-1
OCLC1061287995

Background

At the time of publication in 2018, the 46-year-old author, N. K. Jemisin, had just won that year's Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards for her latest novel The Stone Sky, the third novel in her Broken Earth series. While Jemisin had become better known as a novelist since her 2010 debut novel The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms,[2] she had short stories published since 2004 and had "Non-Zero Probabilities" nominated for the 2010 Hugo Award and Nebula Award for Best Short Story. Since then, she worked on short stories only between her work on novels.[3] Being active in the American science fiction and fantasy writing community after having experience the industry as an African American fan and aspiring writer, and believing the publishing industry was stagnating by producing predominately self-reassuring "comfort fiction" for its core audience, she advocated more representation for minorities in literature and being critical of portraying harmful stereotypes.[4] To this end, she wrote an essay, in 2013, titled "How Long 'Til Black Future Month? The Toxins of Speculative Fiction, and the Antidote that is Janelle Monae" and she edited the 2018 edition of the short-story anthology series The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy, purposefully selecting stories that she found revolutionary, innovative, or provided alternative perspectives.[5] While the essay was not included in the book How Long 'Til Black Future Month?, many of its points were included in the book's introduction section. In line with the essay, and as Jemisin explained in the book's introduction, the short story format allowed her to write many of the protagonists as persons of color which she otherwise finds makes full length novels less likely to be published or read.

Style and themes

With the title itself invoking afrofuturism,[6] the stories include a range of sub-genres of speculative fiction. For example representative stories and sub-genres include "The Effluent Engine" as an alternate history steampunk story set in 19th century New Orleans, "Cloud Dragon Skies" as climate fiction, "Too Many Yesterdays, Not Enough Tomorrows" as a time travel story, "The Storyteller's Replacement" sword and sorcery, "On the Banks of the River Lex" post-apocalyptic fiction, and "The Trojan Girl" cyberpunk. Referencing older fiction, Jemisin includes a pastiche of Ursula K. Le Guin's "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas" with "The Ones Who Stay and Fight" and an alternative take on Robert A. Heinlein's The Puppet Masters with "Walking Awake". Three of the short stories, described by Jemisin as "proof-of-concept" stories would later be used as a basis for future novels: "The Narcomancer" for The Killing Moon, "Stone Hunger" for The Fifth Season, and "The City Born Great" for The City We Became.[7] Based on these approaches, science fiction editor Gary K. Wolfe describes Jemisin as "someone who enjoys playing with the possibilities of the plotted tale".[8]

While the stories in the collection cover a range of topics and themes, reviewers noted many of the stories portray protagonists that are not members of the story's dominant society and are written to display compassion.[9] Many of the stories illustrate the power dynamics of those societies and see characters seeking an escape or otherwise asserting themselves. As the reviewer in the Los Angeles Times states, "As in most of the stories here, the protagonist of "Stone Hunger" refuses to accept the sectarian role dictated by those who rule, or seem to rule, the broken world she inhabits."[10]

Synopsis and format

The book is a collection of 22 short stories with an introductory section all written by Jemisin.[11]. All but four of the stories were previously published between 2004 and 2017. The stories are:

Title Year
originally
published
Synopsis
"The Ones Who Stay and Fight" 2018 The narrator contrasts the near-utopia of Um-Helat with Omelas and America.
"The City Born Great" 2016 A homeless person in New York City believes he is being taught by his friend Paulo to become the city.
"Red Dirt Witch" 2016 A practitioner of magic in Alabama confronts a fairy woman who seeks to take one of her children.
"L'Alchimista" 2004 A chef is challenged by a stranger to prepare a recipe he provides.
"The Effluent Engine" 2011 A Haitian spy in New Orleans seeks to recruit an engineer to invent an airship engine powered by effluent from sugar distillation.
"Cloud Dragon Skies" 2005 A girl interacts with a scientist from people who live in the sky as they seek to correct effects accidentally made to the atmosphere.
"The Trojan Girl" 2011 Beings of artificial intelligence in a simulated world seek to incorporate the computer code of a new being.
"Valedictorian" 2012 A graduate must decide whether she will allow herself to be taken away by transhumans who remove the most intelligent people from her society.
"The Storyteller's Replacement" 2018 The narrator tells the story of a king who hunted dragons believing that eating their heart would allow him to sire a son.
"The Brides of Heaven" 2007 A woman tampers with the water treatment system on a planetary colony where only the women have survived.
"The Evaluators" 2016 By reading through communication logs, the fate of a first contact team on an alien world is assessed.
"Walking Awake" 2014 After working for years to assist members of a parasitic species to transition into new human bodies, a woman worker decides to rebel.
"The Elevator Dancer" 2018 In a repressive society, a security guard seeks a woman who he witnesses, on a surveillance camera, dancing in an elevator.
"Cuisine des Mémoires" 2018 An unbelieving man visits a restaurant that can re-create any meal from history.
"Stone Hunger" 2014 A girl tracks the stone-controlling man responsible for destroying her town.
"On the Banks of the River Lex" 2010 Death travels across a post-apocalyptic New York City and interacts with other personifications, such as Sleep and Nursery Rhymes.
"The Narcomancer" 2007 A religious leader is pressured to procreate with a woman though he does not wish to break his vow of celibacy.
"Henosis" 2017 A writer interacts with a fan before and after an award ceremony.
"Too Many Yesterdays, Not Enough Tomorrows" 2004 In a vastly depopulated world that resets every day, survivors maintain social interactions via electronic communication.
"The You Train" 2007 A woman encounters mysterious subway cars in New York City.
"Non-Zero Probabilities" 2009 After the laws of probabilities abruptly change, effecting only New York City, a woman learns to accept the new reality.
"Sinners, Saints, Dragons, and Haints, in the City Beneath the Still Waters" 2010 A man stranded in New Orleans during its 2005 flooding event seeks supplies but is being followed by spirits.

Publication and reception

The book was published by Orbit Books, a speculative fiction imprint of the Hachette Book Group. It was released as a hardcover on November 28, 2018, and then as a paperback a year later. An audio book version, narrated by Shayna Small, was published by the Hachette Audio imprint. The book was nominated for the 2019 World Fantasy Award—Collection.

Both Booklist and Library Journal noted the book was suitable for general science fiction and fantasy fans, in addition to admirers of Jemisin's novels.[12][13] The reviewer for the Los Angeles Times wrote that "some of Jemisin's strongest stories [such as Red Dirt Witch] deal explicitly with the horrors of racism in a world that is recognizably our own."[10] In her review for NPR, speculative fiction writer Amal El-Mohtar found that "Jemisin's strengths lie at the intersection of character and setting ... [and] I especially loved how beautifully and effectively Jemisin writes food and cooking", citing "The Narcomancer", "Stone Hunger" and "Cuisine des Mémoires" as among the best, with "Those Who Stay and Fight" and "The Brides of Heaven" as leaving her dissatisfied.[14] Writing for Locus magazine, Gary K. Wolfe states "Jemisin's fiction can be angry or funny or dreamlike or bitter, sometimes all at the same time, but it keeps bringing us back to that observation of a character from "Walking Awake": all the monsters we really need are right here already."

gollark: "Hmm, people are annoyed at getting up times they do not like. Maybe we should just tell them to wake up and sleep at different times. Or change working hours. No, the best solution is clearly to meddle with the fabric of time itself."
gollark: It's not, though. It's such a *government* solution to a problem which isn't there.
gollark: <@!151391317740486657> GMT bad, has daylight saving time.
gollark: Time zones bad, UTC good.
gollark: Macs are definitely not that good. MacBooks have horrendous thermal throttling issues because they add moar coar and stuff without improving already inadequate fanless cooling.

References

  1. "How Long 'til Black Future Month?". Epiphany 2.0. 2013-09-30. Retrieved February 22, 2019.
  2. Miller, Laura (November 30, 2018). "The Fantasy Master N.K. Jemisin Turns to Short Stories". The New York Times.
  3. Bereola, Abigail (December 3, 2018). "A True Utopia: An Interview With N. K. Jemisin". The Paris Review.
  4. Mason, Everdeen (December 3, 2018). "Even though we are in the darkest timeline,' N.K. Jemisin still thinks humanity is worth saving". The New York Times.
  5. N. K. Jemisin; John Joseph Adams, eds. (October 2018). The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy. Mariner Books. pp. xvvii–xxi. ISBN 978-1328834560.
  6. Isen, Tajja (February 12, 2019). "Afrofuturism: The Radical Genre Imagining a Future for Black People". Vice (magazine).
  7. Brown, Jera (March 29, 2019). "The WD Interview: Author N.K. Jemisin on Creating New Worlds and Playing with Imagination". Writer's Digest.
  8. "Gary K. Wolfe Reviews How Long 'til Black Future Month? by N.K. Jemisin". Locus Online. 2018-11-28. Retrieved 2019-02-22.
  9. Cahill, Martin (November 27, 2018). "Community, Revolution, and Power: How Long 'til Black Future Month? by N. K. Jemisin".
  10. Hand, Liz (November 28, 2018). "'How Long 'Til Black Future Month?' collects the marvelous short fiction of N.K. Jemisin". Los Angeles Times.
  11. Jemisin, N. K. (2018). How Long 'til Black Future Month. Orbit. ISBN 978-0-316-49134-1.
  12. Grey, Idris (November 15, 2018). "How Long 'til Black Future Month? Stories". Library Journal. 143 (19): 68.
  13. Keep, Alan (November 2018). "How Long 'til Black Future Month? Stories". Booklist. 115 (5): 31-32.
  14. El-Mohtar, Amal (November 29, 2018). "Gorgeous 'Black Future Month' Tracks A Writer's Development". NPR.
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