🎁 Final Month Special: 15% OFF + Free Shipping on Most Items! Don't Miss Out - Shop Now! ✨

Shopping Cart

Sub Total: $0.00
Total: $0.00
Checkout

Search Products

How Long 'til Black Future Month? Image 1
View Media Gallery
How Long 'til Black Future Month? Nav Image 1

How Long 'til Black Future Month?

$10.99 $12.00


Tags:

DEC23 Fantasy-en-anglais HBG IN22 IN23 MHN Orbit science-fiction-en-anglais
Estimated Delivery:
0 people are viewing this right now
Guaranteed Safe Checkout
Trust
Trust
  • Description

Three-time Hugo Award winner and NYT bestselling author N. K. Jemisin challenges and delights readers with thought-provoking narratives of destruction, rebirth, and redemption that sharply examine modern society in her first collection of short fiction, which includes never-before-seen stories.

"Marvelous and wide-ranging." -- Los Angeles Times"Gorgeous" -- NPR Books"Breathtakingly imaginative and narratively bold." -- Entertainment Weekly

Spirits haunt the flooded streets of New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. In a parallel universe, a utopian society watches our world, trying to learn from our mistakes. A black mother in the Jim Crow South must save her daughter from a fey offering impossible promises. And in the Hugo award-nominated short story "The City Born Great," a young street kid fights to give birth to an old metropolis's soul.

"The true breadth of [Jemisin's] talent ... comes through to grand effect in her first collection of short fiction... Jemisin is an essential voice in modern-day SFF."

--- B&N Sci-Fi & Fantasy Blog


"A brilliant example of how we in the present are making the future with our actions and how the future may exist in our past... What is also evident in this short story collection is that Ms. Jemisin can write anything. Her prose, sometimes pulsing, encourages you to read at different tempos as if she is conducting an orchestra. Slow moving tension and suspense make you fearful, but then entices you into reading the next sentence. Lush descriptive passages conjure cinematic vistas."

--- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette