The Africanfuturist world Nnedi Okorafor launched in Who Fears Death—a e book at present in improvement for an HBO sequence executive-produced by George R.R. Martin—grows with her new trilogy, She Who Knows. Novella Firespitter kicks off the brand new sequence with its launch August 20, and io9 has an unique look at the quilt and the primary chapter to share at this time.
Here are extra particulars concerning the e book’s story, described as “part science fiction, part fantasy, and entirely infused with West African culture and spirituality.”
When there’s a name, there’s usually a response.
Najeeba is aware of.
She has had The Call. But how can a 13-year-old woman have the Call? Only males and boys expertise the annual name to the Salt Roads. What’s simply occurred to Najeeba has by no means occurred in the historical past of her village. But it’s not a horrible factor, simply unusual. So when she leaves together with her father and brothers to mine salt at the Dead Lake, there’s neither fanfare nor protest. For Najeeba, it’s a dream come true: journey by camel, open skies, and a likelihood to see a spectacular place she’s solely heard about. However, there will need to have been one thing to the rule, as a result of Najeeba’s presence on the street adjustments every thing and her household won’t ever be the identical.
Small, intimate, up shut, and deceptively quiet, that is the start of the Kponyungo Sorceress.
Here’s the complete cowl—illustration by Greg Ruth, design by Jim Tierney—adopted by the excerpt!
Onye Fulu Mmo Di?
[Who Sees a Spirit and Lives?]
If I stood there lengthy sufficient, I used to be certain I’d see one of many Old Ones dancing in the gap. That’s how sizzling it was that day. I introduced my transportable from my pocket and appeared at it. At the highest of the display screen, it introduced it was the most popular day of the 12 months. Then it determined to close itself down for the subsequent hour to maintain from overheating.
It was nightfall, but nonetheless boiling sizzling outdoors. Not uncommon, however a little disturbing nonetheless. A skinny bathe of rain started to fall and a massive brown hen squawked after which took to the air from the neighbor’s roof throughout the street. The desert is unusual.
I used to be standing there as a result of this was the second. The starting. I shut my eyes and took a deep breath, inhaling all of it, the actual fact of it. Through my mouth, to my lungs, to the remainder of my physique.
I’d simply come from my brother’s home, the place I’d spent some hours with their new child who was so fats and cute and comfortable. I’d been fascinated by what it will be like for me in a few years. Now I wasn’t fascinated by any of that at all. My thoughts was stuffed with a new information.
I circled, opened the door, and went inside to search out my dad and mom. I used to be 13 years outdated and I used to be a woman. Yet I used to be certain. Absolutely optimistic. I opened my eyes and paused, rubbing my brow.
“I can’t believe this,” I whispered. I went inside and located my mom in the kitchen, the place she normally was at this time of day.
“Fry those yams, Najeeba,” she mentioned, her again to me. The spherical slices had been on the reducing board and the deep pan of oil on the range was simply beginning to warmth up. On the opposite burner was one other massive pan of scorching chopped tomatoes, olive oil, smoked aku, sautéed onions, curry, smoked mushrooms, and chili peppers. On the counter behind her, sitting in its personal sunbeam on its royal blue ornate plate with the gold flecks embedded into the shiny porcelain was a massive dice of salt. The bowl of a number of stirred eggs was on the counter beside the range. Mama was making egg stew. I joined her, my coronary heart pounding exhausting. I opened my mouth to talk. To ask.
Then my father entered the kitchen, grinning. He put his arms round my mom.
“Papa, I want to go this year, too,” I blurted.
My dad and mom stared at me after which my mom turned and appeared at Papa. “You’ve told our daughter before me?” she requested.
“No,” he mentioned, trying questioningly at me. “I haven’t told anyone. I was about to tell you right now.”
Mama appeared exhausting at me together with her near-black piercing eyes. “What does it feel like?” she requested.
I assumed for a second. I’d by no means requested Papa, so I had no context to attract from. I mentioned the very first thing that got here to thoughts: “Like . . . like the wind is blowing me toward the door.”
Mama’s eyes grew extensive and he or she appeared at papa, who additionally appeared shocked. Then she grinned. “I’ve given birth to three boys, not two.”
“Apparently so,” Papa agreed.
Mama hugged me tightly, kissed my cheek, after which she shoved me again towards the now-sizzling yams. But I observed her eyes had grown moist. She liked her solitude, however she didn’t need me to go. She stepped to the dice of salt and picked it up.
“Salt is life,” the three of us softly recited as she grated some into the bowl of eggs.
My father and I held out our fingers and my mom grated some onto them. We rubbed our fingers collectively after which pressed them to our chests. Salt has at all times been necessary to humanity, sure. Even right here in Jwahir, it’s value greater than most issues. But again in my village, salt was sacred to my folks. It was life but in addition tradition, self-worth, our objective for current.
My mom poured the egg into the scorching greens and commenced to slowly flip it. Papa sat at the desk, trying exhausting at me as he continued to rub his fingers. “You’re sure?”
“Yes, Papa.”
“It’s a week there, a week to the market, a week back.”
“I know,” I mentioned.
“The way is not easy.”
“I know, Papa.”
“The Okeke at the market are camelshit people,” Mama added. “They see us as abominations, even if you are kind. Doesn’t matter that we are all Okeke people. It is the plight of being Osu-nu.”
“I know, Mama.”
“You’ll still have to be kind, but strong.”
I nodded. “Yes, Mama.”
“Is your Abdul strong enough?” Papa requested. Abdul was my camel.
“I will make him so,” I mentioned.
I turned to look at the frying yam as Mama appeared to my father and my father to my mom they usually did that silent factor they at all times did. My dad and mom may have a complete difficult dialog with out opening their mouths.
My oldest brother Rayan mentioned they spoke via their eyes, however it was greater than that. When they talked like this, I at all times wished to go away as a result of it simply made me really feel so . . . not there. Like they’d already shoved me out of the room and shut the door and my physique simply needed to meet up with my spirit. But I stayed the place I used to be, letting the yams brown after which flipping them over. I fastidiously took them out, stacking them on the cloth-covered plate.
Mama gave the egg stew a few extra turns and ladled all of it into a massive bowl. The stew was fluffy and sizzling and I had little question that it was tasty. With the yams, it was the right meal. “Who will maintain our vegetable garden while you’re away, Najeeba?” my mom requested me, making ready a plate of the stew and yams for my father.
“You will, Mama,” I mentioned.
“No,” she mentioned, smirking. “I will pay someone to do it.”
The three of us laughed. Of course she would.
She Who Knows: Firespitter by Nnedi Okorafor excerpted by permission of DAW Books.
She Who Knows: Firespitter by Nnedi Okorafor will publish August 20; you’ll be able to pre-order right here and on Amazon.
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