"Books are all the same now."
Wronggggggg.
Now, we can have a conversation about how publishing house conglomerates and the trend-led mass-market led by an overwhelming white, straight, etc, majority creates a homogeneity of stories...sure. We can talk about that all day long.
But if we do, we also need to talk about how consumers drive that market, and how our choices -- on social media feeds, on review platforms, at the bookstore -- make an impact on those publishing trends. That, I think, is a more interesting conversation.
Because if we put in the effort to follow book reviewers from a diversity of perspectives, to support indie and underrepresented authors, to review the books we read with critical self-reflection, to support our local book vendors, libraries, etc...then we will find a huge, wide world of weird and wonderful literature just waiting for its audience. And in doing so, we can make an impact on publishing as a whole, too.
So, here are a few unique books that I think you might love, featuring cannibalistic nuns, Faustian bargains, shape-shifting mermaids, talking animals, alternate futures, parasitic aliens, swampcore haunted cabins, cryptids, and more.
Herculine by Grace Byron: an all Trans girls commune haunted by demons.
The Reformatory by Tanarive Due: a segregated reform school and the evil inside.
Wife Shaped Bodies by Laura Cranehill: the trad wives are sprouting mushrooms.
A Dark and Drowning Tide by Allison Saft: a dark academia quest for a magic spring.
Sky Full of Elephants by Cebo Campbell: a new world where all the white people have disappeared.
The Buffalo Hunter Hunter by Stephen Graham Jones: A Blackfeet vampire seeking vengeance.
The Starving Saints by Caitlin Starling: a medieval castle under siege and the cannibalistic fever dream that unfolds inside.
What We Feed to the Manticore by Talia Lakshmi Kolluri: a collection of compelling short stories all told from the perspectives of animals.
After Love by Tanya Byrne: a fantastical lesbian love story that literally transcends death itself.
Green Fuse Burning by Tiffany Morris: a grief-stricken Indigenous artist who arrives at a cabin in a remote, swampy forest, before strange things start to happen.
Fate's Bane by CL Clark: sword-wielding, star-crossed lovers from rival clans, inspired by Celtic folklore.
As Many Souls as Stars by Natasha Siegel: a Faustian Bargain between a witch and a demon, and their game of cat-and-mouse that spans multiple lifetimes.
A Feast for the Eyes by Alex Crespo: four teenagers hunting the local cryptic that feeds on secrets.
They Bloom at Night by Trang Thanh Tran: a red algae bloom causes strange mutations in a small Louisiana town.
The Seep by Chana Porter: a parasitic alien invasion that creates a strange utopia, and one woman's quest to stop its spread.
The Gloaming by Kirsty Logan: a hungry sea, a family beset by grief, and a strange woman who climbs up from the water.
Happy reading!
-B
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