Written by: Nisi Shawl
First line: Lisette Toutournier sighed.
Why you should read this book: What if indigenous Africans had technological superiority over Europeans
at the turn of the last century, and what if this reality existed within a society that
allowed open discussion of race and sexuality in the same time period? This vast, populous steampunk alternate-history narrative follows an unlikely cast of Fabians, missionaries, escaped slaves, and oppressed native peoples in their attempts to build a socialist paradise in the wake of Leopold II's colonization of the Congo. Beginning with young Lisette Tourournier's love affair with a bicycle in France, the story criss crosses continents and decades, proposes complex love polygons among people with multiple loyalties, and introduces fabulous technologies and solutions in a dense and nuanced story that operates as science fiction and social commentary and a few other things.
Why you shouldn't read this book: I guess this book is not for unabashed racists, but they probably don't read interesting steampunk novels anyway.
Friday, July 5, 2019
Everfair
Posted by Dragon at 2:33 PM
Labels: africa, europe, fiction, gender, historical fiction, north america, novel, queer, racism, science, sexuality, speculative, steampunk, war
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