Can’t Wait Wednesday: 3 Fantasy books by Black authors coming out in 2021

3:41 pm | | Comments 6

Can’t-Wait Wednesday, aka Waiting on Wednesday, is a weekly meme originating from Jill at Breaking the Spine and now hosted by Wishful Endings. If you’re interested in participating, stop by Wishful Endings to link up your posts.

For Black History Month I’m participating in Blackathon I’ve already read A Wish After Midnight by Zetta Elliott (review to come soon) and greatly enjoyed it, and now I’m in the middle of Dawn by Octavia Butler and The Lesson by Cadwell Turnbull. But I also wanted to dedicate a post to the old TBR.

I did two previous similarly themed posts Can’t Wait Wednesday: Black Speculative Fiction Month edition and Can’t Wait Wednesday: Tarot Black Lives Matter Bingo edition and noticed this morning that I’ve already read 4/8 of the books I’d mentioned (only 1 other, The Gilded Ones, is out at this point, it was published yesterday). Here are my reviews for those: Legenborn by Tracy Deonn, Raybearer by Jordan Ifueko, Maya and the Rising Dark by Rena Barron and The Conductors by Nicole Glover.

Bacchanal by Veronica Henry 

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Evil lives in a traveling carnival roaming the Depression-era South. But the carnival’s newest act, a peculiar young woman with latent magical powers, may hold the key to defeating it. Her time has come.

Abandoned by her family, alone on the wrong side of the color line with little to call her own, Eliza Meeks is coming to terms with what she does have. It’s a gift for communicating with animals. To some, she’s a magical tender. To others, a she-devil. To a talent prospector, she’s a crowd-drawing oddity. And the Bacchanal Carnival is Eliza’s ticket out of the swamp trap of Baton Rouge.

Among fortune-tellers, carnies, barkers, and folks even stranger than herself, Eliza finds a new home. But the Bacchanal is no ordinary carnival. An ancient demon has a home there too. She hides behind an iridescent disguise. She feeds on innocent souls. And she’s met her match in Eliza, who’s only beginning to understand the purpose of her own burgeoning powers.

Only then can Eliza save her friends, find her family, and fight the sway of a primordial demon preying upon the human world. Rolling across a consuming dust bowl landscape, Eliza may have found her destiny.

Son of the Storm by Suyi Davies Okungbowa 

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A young scholar’s ambition threatens to reshape an empire determined to retain its might in this epic tale of violent conquest, buried histories, and forbidden magic.

In the thriving city of Bassa, Danso is a clever but disillusioned scholar who longs for a life beyond the rigid family and political obligations expected of the city’s elite. A way out presents itself when Lilong, a skin-changing warrior, shows up wounded in his barn. She comes from the Nameless Islands–which, according to Bassa lore, don’t exist–and neither should the mythical magic of ibor she wields. Now swept into a conspiracy far beyond his understanding, Danso will have to set out on a journey that reveals histories violently suppressed and magic only found in lore.

Witches Steeped in Gold by Ciannon Smart 

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Divided by their order. United by their vengeance.

Iraya has spent her life in a cell, but every day brings her closer to freedom – and vengeance.

Jazmyne is the Queen’s daughter, but unlike her sister before her, she has no intention of dying to strengthen her mother’s power.

Sworn enemies, these two witches enter a precarious alliance to take down a mutual threat. But power is intoxicating, revenge is a bloody pursuit, and nothing is certain – except the lengths they will go to win this game.

This Jamaican-inspired fantasy debut about two enemy witches who must enter into a deadly alliance to take down a common enemy has the twisted cat-and-mouse of Killing Eve with the richly imagined fantasy world of Furyborn and Ember in the Ashes.

Image by hudsoncrafted from Pixabay 

Comments

  1. Tammy says:

    These all sound so good, especially Baccanal which is new to me😁

  2. Lisa Mandina says:

    That first one is new to me, but I love carnival stories! Going to add that to my TBR now!
    Lisa Loves Literature

  3. Literary Feline says:

    I’m practically drooling over Witches Steeped in Gold, although all of these sound good! I hope you enjoy them when you read them!

  4. Dianthaa says:

    I only learned about it this week but is sounds so intersting it went straight to the TBR.

  5. Dianthaa says:

    I’m always a little worried carnival stories would turn out a bit too creepy for me, but I’ve started to have more interest in creepy stories so I think I’ll be ok if it does.

  6. Dianthaa says:

    Thank you! Witches Steeped in Gold does look amazing.

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