Infinite Constellations
Infinite Constellations
An Anthology of Identity, Culture, and Speculative Conjunctions
Various AuthorsA gathering of fresh, innovative, speculative fiction by writers of color, both established and emerging.
The innovative fictions in Infinite Constellations showcase the voices and visions of 30 remarkable writers, both new and established, from the global majority: Native American/First Nation writers, South Asian writers, East Asian writers, Black American writers, Latinx writers, and Caribbean and Middle Eastern writers. These are visions both familiar and strange, but always rooted in the mystery of human relationships, the deep honoring of memory, and the rootedness to place and the centering of culture.
The writers in this anthology mirror, instruct, bind and unbind, myth-make and myth-invert, transform and transmute, make us belly-laugh or hum our understanding, gasp or whisper gently, and remember that sometimes we need to holler and fight as we grieve. Any dangers herein, imagined or observed in poem and story, transport us: moving from latent to extant, then unleashed.
This work does not presume; it presents and blossoms, creating a constellation of appearances, a symphony of belonging.
“In collecting this work,” note editors Khadijah Queen and K. Ibura, “we felt humbled by the love threaded throughout the voices speaking to us in stories and poems that vault beyond expectation and settle in our consciousness as an expansion of what’s possible when we tend to one another with intention. We felt lifted, held aloft in these arrangements of language. We hope that as you read each story and poem, you will find the same sense of empowerment and celebration that we know has sustained us over countless generations, and in their beauty and humor and intelligence and complexity, continue to enrich us still.”
Khadijah Queen is author of six books, including I'm So Fine: A List of Famous Men & What I Had On, praised in O Magazine, The New Yorker, Rain Taxi, and elsewhere as "quietly devastating," and "a portrait of defiance that turns the male gaze inside out." An essay about the pandemic, "False Dawn," appears in Harper's magazine. Her latest book, Anodyne, won the William Carlos Williams Award for poetry. She holds a PhD in English from the University of Denver.
K. Ibura is a writer, editor, and artist from New Orleans--the original home of the Chitimacha Tribe. She writes essays about identity and gender, and fantastical fiction about ancient histories and future imaginings. She is author of two speculative fiction collections--Ancient, Ancient, winner of the James Tiptree Award, and When the World Wounds--and a novel for children When the World Turns Upside Down. Her ebooks examine the emotional underpinnings of the writing life. Learn more about her at kiburabooks.com and kibura.com
- Publisher: Fiction Collective 2 (March 7, 2023)
- Language: English
- Paperback: 286 pages
- ISBN-10: 1573661988
- ISBN-13: 9781573661980
- Item Weight: 9.6 ounces
- Dimensions: 6 x 1 x 9 inches