The co-op bookstore for avid readers
Book Cover for: Cosmogramma, Courttia Newland

Cosmogramma

Courttia Newland

"Newland's second venture into science fictional territories is a rich, diverse collection of short stories." --The Guardian

"Newland easily engages readers with complex worldbuilding, well-shaded characters, and stories as entertaining as they are meaningful. It's no small feat to so immediately and repeatedly appeal to readers' hearts and minds, and Newland's mastery of short-format storytelling is sure to impress. Speculative fiction fans won't be able to put this down." --Publishers Weekly, Starred Review

In his exquisite first collection of speculative fiction, Courttia Newland envisages an alternate future as lived by the African diaspora.

Kill parties roam the streets of a post-apocalyptic world; a matriarchal race of mer creatures depends on interbreeding with mortals to survive; mysterious seeds appear in cities across the world, growing into the likeness of people in their vicinity.

Through transfigured bodies and impossible encounters, Newland brings a sharp, fresh eye to age-old themes of the human capacity for greed, ambition, and self-destruction, but ultimately of our strength and resilience.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Akashic Books, Ltd.
  • Publish Date: Nov 2nd, 2021
  • Pages: 300
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.06in - 5.83in - 1.18in - 1.00lb
  • EAN: 9781617759789
  • Categories: Science Fiction - Collections & AnthologiesShort Stories (single author)African American & Black - General

About the Author

Newland, Courttia: - COURTTIA NEWLAND is the author of seven books including A River Called Time, The Gospel According to Cane, and his much-lauded debut, The Scholar. In 2016 he was awarded the Roland Rees Bursary for playwriting. As a screenwriter, he has cowritten two episodes of the Steve McQueen BBC series Small Axe. Cosmogramma is his latest book.

Praise for this book

Newland's writing is in league with a host of SF subgenres, from pulpy space opera to N.K. Jemisin-style Afrofuturism to Jeff VanderMeer-esque eco-fiction. But his chief skill is weaving those tropes into stories that are both wildly speculative and on the news . . . Wide-ranging and deeply imaginative; Newland is equally at home in council flats and deep space.-- "Kirkus Reviews"
The collection's 16 stories interweave an unsettling familiarity with the strange, tackling themes such as the technological arms race, addiction, racism, state-sanctioned violence, and xenophobia, holding up a mirror to contemporary society and forbidding the reader to look away and take comfort in escapism . . . These visions of largely grim alternate realities and bleak futures will be appreciated by those who prize speculative fiction's ability to tell uncomfortable truths about our present.-- "Booklist"
A collection that pushes the edges of sci-fi and Africanfuturism. The stories in Cosmogramma deal with class, race, and power imbalance, and more than one of them ends in regime change and/or mass casualties at the hands of renegade robots and/or mutant children. Sound grim? It can be, but Newland's cinematic storytelling and sense for justice often leave you feeling like things turned out the way they should.-- "Philadelphia Inquirer, one of the Best New Books of November 2021"