I hadn’t beforehand learn something by Nnedi Okorafor once I picked up Dying of the Creator, however after just a few pages in, I discovered myself making a psychological be aware so as to add all the things else she’s ever written to my To Learn pile. Okorafor coined the time period “Africanfuturism,” describing a subcategory of science fiction that is “extra immediately rooted in African tradition, historical past, mythology and point-of-view” than the extra “America-centric” Afrofuturism.
Dying of the Creator is sort of like two books in a single, following Nigerian American most important character Zelu’s meteoric rise to fame because the creator of an sudden hit novel, Rusted Robots, and bringing us into mentioned novel, set in a humanless future society inhabited by robots and AI.
Zelu, a disabled mid-30s author with a big prolonged household, goes by means of a tough patch when the guide begins, and has to battle to be taken significantly by the folks round her when she turns into profitable in a single day. She faces fixed pushback as she tries new issues, like self-driving automobiles and an exoskeleton mobility assist. The household dynamics and the world she lives in — on the cusp of main change pushed by technological developments — felt very actual, and I turned way more invested of their drama than what was taking part in out in Rusted Robots. But it surely’s all in there for a cause, and the 2 narratives weave collectively nicely to create an immersive and thought-provoking story.