(Note: I think I can squeeze in some Canadian authors too, under North American, but South American definitely falls into a different category. Strange are the ways of the academy.)
These are the texts I was using before:
Cosmos Latinos, ed. Andrea L. Bell
The Apex Book of World SF, ed. Lavie Tidhar
So Long Been Dreaming (Mehan / Hopkinson)
Midnight Robber, Nalo Hopkinson
Half-World, Hiromi Goto
Tales of Neveryon, Samuel R. Delany
Dawn, Octavia E. Butler
The Arrival, Shaun Tan
Dark Matter, ed. Sheree Thomas
I'm probably keeping the Goto, Delany, Butler, and Tan, along with Dark Matter, all of which worked really well last time. I'll have to lose Cosmos Latinos, I think all my selections from the Apex Book, and possibly the ones from So Long Been Dreaming (will have to check carefully to see where each story is from). I'm not certain about Midnight Robber -- they liked it, but I'm not sure it spoke to them quite as strongly as some of the others, and the main complaint the students had about the course was that the reading load was too heavy; I may use Nalo's "Ganger Ball Lightning" story instead of one of her novels.
Other suggestions? Stories in particular would be very helpful; if I find them early enough, I can have the bookstore put together a course packet, which helps with the 'not-yet-anthologized' difficulty.
Which Ted Chiang story would you include, for example? ("Story of Your Life" is my favorite, but it's long.) Which Nnedi Okorafor? (Or is it worth cutting one of the other texts, so I can include her World Fantasy-award-winning novel _Who Fears Death_?) Ugh. Also, once I lose Cosmos Latinos, I am really short on Latino writers, so could really use help seeking those out.
In general, I would prefer writers who are solidly grounded in the genre for this course, as opposed to mainstream-published writers who come in under magical realism, etc. Although I might make them read some excerpts from Rushdie, Borges, Marquez, etc. to start the course, just to give them some context and a transition from the kind of literature they're more used to. (This is a 400-level class, so mostly seniors and English majors.)
Sherman Alexie’s “The Sin Eaters,” from The Toughest Indian in the World, is a stunning short story.
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Sean Tan is actually Australian, I’m sad to say — and that’s the first time I’ve been sad to say that. 🙂