Books That Shatter Traditional Notions of Genre

A PEN Out Loud Booklist

Strand Book Store
7 min readFeb 18, 2019

In anticipation of February’s PEN Out Loud event for Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah’s satirical short story collection Friday Black, here is a list of works that foreground those who have been deliberately placed in socio-economic and historical peripheries. Largely speculative or shattering traditional notions of genre, this collection aims to highlight authors who push past constraints in both society and literature.

Join us February 21 at 7 PM for PEN Out Loud: Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah and Isaac Fitzgerald

Friday Black by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah (2018)

These twelve stories take readers on a probing and unforgettable journey through the extraordinary racism and political assailments of our times. From school shootings to zombie wastelands, the mundane to the outlandish, these are horror stories that prioritize a hopeful future without sacrificing any of our present pain. A finalist for the 2019 PEN / Jean Stein Book Award, Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah delivers an original and impactful piece.

American Sonnets for My Past and Future Assassin by Terrance Hayes (2018)

Utilizing the rigid form of the sonnet, Hayes investigates what it means to be a Black American missing a homeland. A book which reinvigorates both a confined form of writing and a persecuted identity, this is an essential read for anyone living in present-day America.

Some Trick by Helen Dewitt (2018)

A smart and skillful collection of thirteen stories, Some Trick proves that fiction can act as a microscope for investigating any system of life. Informative, elucidating, and exciting, this 2019 PEN Awards Finalist is not to be overlooked.

The Sellout by Paul Beatty (2015)

A hilarious and witty satire which exploits and deconstructs fundamental principles of legal justice and the criminal justice system. As relevant as ever, this is a biting book which is sure to make you laugh while scrutinizing the impulse to do so.

Her Body and Other Parties by Carmen Maria Machado (2017)

This is a collection of stories which lays the female body bare: a vessel by which things ooze in and out of, a center for birth and destruction, a house with no walls. A necessary read, and a 2018 PEN Awards Finalist, this is contemporary fiction at its finest. These stories nestle inside the grotesque, intellectualize and understand it, then arrange a distorted but undoubtedly valid picture of inhabiting the world in the body of a woman.

Fox 8 by George Saunders (2018)

A spectacular adventure told from the perspective of a fox named Fox 8 prompts readers to redefine perimeters of language and step into a world which plays with the nuances of linguistics, provoking our innermost emotions. As playful as this book may be, it is also disturbing, awakening, and insightful: or an animal, Fox 8 is as utterly human as any of us can hope to be.

Freshwater by Akwaeke Emezi (2018)

Nonlinear and multiplicitous, this outstanding novel is told from the perspective of Ada, who experiences the world through multiple identities, a “we” as opposed to an “I.” Ada is fragmented, with histories that challenge present realities and feelings that seem irreconcilable. A 2019 PEN Awards finalist, this is a fantastic, animating, and relatable read.

Black Leopard, Red Wolf by Marlon James (2019)

An epic fantasy novel, Black Leopard, Red Wolf opens our senses to the pages, and then flips them inside out. Layered with mystery, mythology, and romance in an African setting, this book will captivate, entrance, and alter the scope of your literary world.

We Cast A Shadow by Maurice Carlos Ruffin (2019)

Set in a painfully recognizable future wherein whiteness is attainable through expensive surgical alterations, this is the story of a father grappling with his son’s multiracial identity in a world which preys upon any semblance of otherness. We Cast a Shadow is a gripping speculative tale that investigates traditional notions of family dynamics and redefines the limits of the lengths one will go to protect his beloved.

A People’s Future of the United States edited by Victor LaValle & John Joseph Adams (2019)

Featuring twenty-five different sci-fi stories, this collection emboldens readers to foster a new political imagination. From debut to established voices, each author’s story holds the same level of urgency, importance, and drive towards a future imagined by the people, for the people.

The Vegetarian by Han Kang (2016)

This is a fascinating and philosophical account of a Korean woman who becomes a vegetarian. With hues of Franz Kafka in its ambiguities for the speculative reader, this is an unsettling and dazzling book that wrestles with essential questions of humanity. The Vegetarian posits a series of unsettling questions and its answers evoke a hallucinatory experience.

Severance by Ling Ma (2019)

A 2019 PEN Awards finalist, Severance is a piece of dazzling new fiction, which brings a new vitality into the post-apocalyptic genre. Reinvigorating our imagination of the end of the world, this novel renders capitalism both the problem and the solution, a vicious and inescapable cycle. A brilliant and unique inquiry into the intricacies of consumerism, memory, and identity.

How Long ’til Black Future Month? by N.K. Jemisin (2018)

How Long ’til Black Future Month? is a series of stories that play with the tropes of speculative fiction in a fresh and exciting way, offering a new face and dimension to the genre. Jemisin’s stories are discerning, thought-provoking, and beautifully crafted, showcasing a master at work.

Heads of the Colored People by Nafissa Thompson-Spires (2018)

Thompson-Spires’ short story collection Heads of the Colored People is crafted with precision and often tremendous levity. This collection of short stories scrutinizes our political imagination in a supposedly post-racial era, juxtaposing stories of heart-wrenching tragedy with those that display dark humor with a fresh and tender voice. Imaginative, compelling, and witty, this is an essential read and is a 2019 PEN Open Book Award finalist.

The Shape of the Ruins by Juan Gabriel Vasquez (2018)

The Shape of Ruins explores questions of identity, querying whether the political and historical are capable of interfering with the manifestation of the personal. A beautiful inquiry into the virtual wounds of memory and violence which persevere across generations and boundaries, Vasquez has created a compelling thriller and an immersive novel you will find impossible to put down.

The Lonesome Bodybuilder by Yukiko Motoya (2018)

Offering a fascinating and insightful dimension into the intricacies of human paranoia, the eleven stories in The Lonesome Bodybuilder study extremes and absurdities rooted in the mundane. A hopeful exploration of things that appear outlandish or foreign, these stories are deft, courageous, and written with intense honesty and clarity.

If you like what you read,👏 👏 👏 so other readers can enjoy it too!

Follow Strand on Instagram 📷, Twitter 🐥, Facebook 👤, Tumblr, and Pinterest. Sign up for our 📩 Strand Insider Newsletter 💌!

--

--

Strand Book Store

Independent NYC bookstore since 1927. Where books are loved.