Prime Produces First Audiobook

Prime Books has produced its first in-house audiobook: Once Upon A Time: New Fairy Tales.

Read by Hugo Award-winning Kate Baker—who has already provided narration for over 130 stories (500,000+ words) with her work with the Clarkesworld Podcast downloaded over 1.8 million times, as well as receiving nominations for a Parsec Award and a World Fantasy Award—the audio version of Once Upon A Time: New Fairy Tales runs about ten hours and 41 minutes in length.

It is available through Amazon, Audible.com, and iTunes.


Conservation of Shadows : A “Best” of the Year

Conservation of Shadows by Yoon Ha Lee
named one the of the best SF/F Books of the Year by Publishers Weekly!

Congratulations to Yoon Ha Lee.


Okorafor on The Spark

Nnedu Okorafor blogs on KABU KABU at Lauren Beukes’ The Spark, a series of guest blogs highlighting new African fiction with authors writing about what lit up their book in their heads.


Rave Advance Reviews for Kabu Kabu

Praise so far for Kabi Kabu:

[Starred Review] In this vibrant collection of speculative fiction, Okorafor proves yet again that she is among the 21st century’s most significant and noteworthy Science Fiction authors. The American-born author features her parents’ Nigerian homeland in many of her stories, casting a sympathetic but informed eye on that nation. With such oil-rich land, Nigeria’s mineral wealth continues to attract exploiters. Within these 20 stories we visit various takes on the future of Africa, many of which are equally as bleak as the past. Each story is as carefully crafted as the last; robots serving shadowy foreign interests find common cause with artists, women fall victim to their society’s brutally patriarchal order while others find less bitter fates, and assassins ponder the effects of their efforts to provoke reform. With a knack for dialogue and an ambitious imagination, Okorafor effortlessly blends original characters with fantastical elements into the vivid scenery of Africa to create stories worth reading again and again.—Publishers Weekly

The stories in Kabu Kabu are trippy, fun, far-fetched, laugh-out-loud funny, and enlightening. Okorafor’s writing is a welcome, fresh distraction from much of the fantasy that I tend to read and a reminder that there are writers out there who focus on other mythologies and traditions – that fantasy does not have to be about some blond-haired knight who is stuck between a savage and a cliff to jump off of. (Read the book, you’ll understand.) I don’t know if Kabu Kabu will get the buzz it deserves. I know that I have given out Okorafor’s name more times than I can count to various fantasy lovers. I wish I could force people to read her works – but since I can’t, I’ll just say here in this public setting that Okorafor is an author to be praised and Kabu Kabu is just another strong notch in her belt of great works.—The Lost Wife

I would definitely recommend this book. It’s powerful, emotional and beautifully written… Every story is fun or powerful (or both, which is hard to do) with some strong lessons and some truly amazing emotional impact. And rarely have I come across short stories that so readily and completely transport me to their works.[5/5 stars]—Fangs for the Fantasy

Nnedi Okorafor’s storytelling is constantly engaging, beautiful and evocative, and she’s one of those rare writers who can make you feel like you’re right there in the story without bogging you down in too much detail. Though each of the stories is distinct and a standalone, many relate to other works of hers, and I think nearly all of them have some connection, however small, to each other. She tells stories of magic and death and hope and oil and the past and future all rolled into one wondrous collection. Kabu Kabu gives you insight into a culture and place that’s frequently overlooked in most fiction in general, let alone genre fiction… If you’re a fan of anything else Okorafor has written, then you will like Kabu Kabu. If you’re a fan of speculative short stories, you will like Kabu Kabu. If you’re a fan of expanding your mind and seeing non-white characters in non-Western settings, you will like Kabu Kabu. This is a book that should not be missed, not by anyone who’s reading this review, not by anyone who loves SFF stories. Jump into the worlds that Okorafor creates, and witness the stories woven and told by a master.[5/5 Stars]—Bibliotropic

The twenty-one short stories in this collection tackle some serious subjects: intolerance, genocide, stereotyping, war including the civil war, persecution of the other, and the environmental and social destruction wrought by Western oil companies. Foremost is the treatment of strong women who dare to break with the patriarchal society in which they live… Some of the stories are very definitely magic realism, others are closer to fantasy and/or science fiction… I found Okarafor’s work fascinating. I have only limited knowledge of the African heritage that inspires her work, but I can see how she is forging an African/American approach to magic realism.—Magic Realism


ONCE UPON A TIME: NEW FAIRY TALES Goodreads Giveaway

Goodreads Book Giveaway

Once Upon a Time by Paula Guran

Once Upon a Time

by Paula Guran

Giveaway ends November 11, 2013.

See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.

Enter to win


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