Overlapping book covers with vivid colors and bold titles, featuring fantasy and sci-fi themes. Mood is adventurous and intriguing.

About the Africanfuturist Genre

Curated by Librarian Allie McCormack


Africanfuturism is a genre incorporating elements of science fiction, fantasy, alternate history, horror, and magical realism. As first described by Dr. Nnedi Okorafor in 2019, it is “rooted by African culture, history, mythology and point-of-view”. Africanfuturist writers often present an optimistic vision of the future, show a deep interest in technology, and focus on community and connectedness as solutions to problems. Here are six novels to get you started in this exciting, innovative genre.

Cover of "Binti" by Nnedi Okorafor. A woman's face with hands featuring orange clay; background is a starry sky.

Binti
By Nnedi Okorafor

Binti is the first member of the Himba people to be accepted into a prestigious intergalactic university. When her transport ship is hijacked by a jellyfish-like alien species, she must combine her mathematical skills and ancestral knowledge to broker a tentative peace between worlds.

Cover of "Children of Blood and Bone" by Tomi Adeyemi. A girl with intense eyes, white hair, and a red headscarf. Text is bold and mystical.

Children of Blood and Bones
By Tomi Adeyemi

After a tyrannical king kills the maji of Orïsha, Zélie and other potential magic users live in fear of persecution. Joined by a group of unlikely allies, including her brother and a runaway princess, she embarks on a dangerous journey to restore magic and bring balance to the land.

Book cover for "Harmattan Season" by Tochi Onyebuchi shows a figure in a robe looking at another hovering in the sky, with dramatic clouds and a warm color palette.

Harmattan Season
By Tochi Onyebuchi

In a city rife with colonial violence and political tension, down-on-his-luck detective and former soldier Boubacar is surprised to find an injured woman on his doorstep. When she vanishes overnight, he must rely on fellow veterans, old flames, and a young streetwise hustler to seek justice for her – but only if he makes peace with his own past first.

Blue and gold book cover of "The Library of the Dead" by T.L. Huchu. Gothic cityscape above, with eerie, illuminated library below.

The Library of the Dead
By T.L. Huchu

Ropa Moyo is a ghostalker in Edinburgh, Scotland, who acts as a messenger between the living and the dead. After learning about a string of child abductions from a newly-dead mother, she must plumb the depths of an occult library to uncover secrets that could both save and destroy the city.

Alt text: Futuristic skyscrapers rise from the ocean under a vibrant sunset. Bold text reads "Lost Ark Dreaming" by Suyi Davies Okungbowa.

Lost Ark Dreaming
By Suyi Davies Okungbowa

Decades after rising sea levels flood the coast of West Africa, survivors live in the towering Pinnacle on floors strictly delineated by economic status. When Pinnacle leadership tries to cover up a breach in the tower’s hull, three residents with divergent goals must work together to unearth the history of the building and challenge its unfair hierarchies.

Cover of "The Old Drift" by Namwali Serpell. Bold red and yellow text over an abstract background of vertical lines in blue, yellow, and green tones.

The Old Drift
By Namwali Serpell

In a colonial settlement called The Old Drift, a settler’s actions set off a spark of violence and retribution that engulfs three Zambian families of different ethnic backgrounds. Traveling from historical past to imagined present, the story of their intertwining shines a light on how memory, technology, and chance shape both personal and national destinies.

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