"Sanchez-Taylor provides a delectable sampling of alternative futures created by authors of color while examining the roots of race and ethnicity in science fiction. Real food for thought." --Isiah Lavender III, author of Afrofuturism Rising: The Literary Prehistory of a Movement
"Sanchez-Taylor's Diverse Futures is a love song to contemporary science fiction writers of color, exploring how their varied and multitudinous redeployments of such familiar tropes as alien invasion, mutation and genetic engineering, and apocalypse can help us take the future back from white supremacy." --Gerry Canavan, Marquette University
"[Diverse Futures] does impressive work to lay out its materials, introducing so many SF authors and critics (some of whom have never been written about in this way) and letting the texts speak for themselves along the way. It is an important index for SF scholars interested in thinking deeply about BIPOC SF authors, SF publishing, and SF criticism." --Brent Ryan Bellamy, Fafnir - Nordic Journal of Science Fiction and Fantasy Research
"By probing works of science fiction by authors of color, Joy Sanchez-Taylor's Diverse Futures addresses an incredibly necessary missing facet of science fiction literature and criticism. ... It should also be on the recommended reading list for any science fiction module, as it serves as a fantastic primer for any scholar of science fiction who wishes to approach the genre with postcolonial conscientiousness." --Charul Palmer-Patel, SFRA Review
"Joy Sanchez-Taylor's Diverse Futures: Science Fiction and Authors of Color hits a sought-after middle point between a work long overdue and a study that could not be more relevant to our current cultural moment. ... Every bit of it needs to be heard and heard again ... A love letter to what has been done, a literary study of what might be, and a survey of American race and [science fiction] in the twenty-first century." --Alexandria Nunn, Fantastika Journal
"Joy Sanchez-Taylor's contribution, Diverse Futures: Science Fiction and Authors of Color, is particularly important. It is wide-ranging in its coverage, dealing with works by Black, Latinx, Indigenous, and Asian Americans, and doing so in clear, jargon-free prose, always careful to define terms. It would be a suitable companion to a wide range of audiences: fans, scholars, undergraduates, graduate students, and stodgy old professors." --Joan Gordon, Science Fiction Studies