We’ve run by our favourite video games, films, and TV exhibits of 2022, and now it’s time to speak about our favourite science fiction and fantasy books of the yr.
2022’s greatest SFF books really feel like an apt reflection of the previous few years, as a lot has modified. It could come as no shock that this yr ushered in a tidal wave of terrifying gothics and hauntings — books the place protagonists have been trapped in by the areas round them. Science fiction gave us visions of the long run, from white flight and area exploration to hopeful philosophical ramblings in regards to the nature of being alive to post-pandemic technofuturism. On the identical time, a lot of this yr’s greatest fantasy seemed backward, retelling mythologies and critiquing establishments of energy.
This listing has a variety of titles from beloved authors, spectacular debuts, and short-story collections, that every one share one factor in frequent: We completely beloved the time we spent with them. And we hope you do too. The listing is in reverse chronological order of launch, so probably the most just lately launched books can be on the high — with honorable mentions on the finish.
Africa Risen edited by Sheree Renée Thomas, Oghenechovwe Donald Ekpeki, and Zelda Knight
Africa Risen showcases a few of the most proficient modern speculative writers — starting from established writers to debut authors — whose works are set in Africa and throughout the African diaspora. This massive quantity reimagines fantasy and science fiction with tales about capturing misplaced reminiscences and minds, these of local weather disaster, and interpretations of folklore and delusion. Tales vary from whimsical and imaginative to hefty and contemplative, and every is the right dimension to learn over a morning commute or earlier than mattress (which is how I’ve been slowly savoring this e-book). The breadth of this anthology harkens again to the seminal Darkish Matter: A Century of Speculative Fiction From the African Diaspora. Africa Risen’s editors take care, of their introduction, to say quite a few different publishers and collections of quick speculative fiction set within the African diaspora and written by Black authors — together with impartial presses, zines, and different short-story collections. Because the editors write of their introduction: “Africa isn’t rising — it’s already right here.” —Nicole Clark
Sue Lynn Tan’s debut, Daughter of the Moon Goddess, took the world by storm earlier this yr. And he or she revealed the second within the duology this yr as effectively, gifting us with a brief wait and one other romance- and action-packed journey. Within the first e-book, Xingyin, daughter of the moon goddess Chang’e, labored her approach into the palace’s military so as to guarantee her household’s survival — falling for Liwei the prince, son of the Celestial Emperor, within the course of.
Coronary heart of the Solar Warrior picks up proper the place the earlier e-book left off, throwing Xingyin again into motion. The Celestial Emperor as soon as once more discovered motive to punish the moon goddess and her daughter, forcing them to flee for his or her lives. Wenzhi makes an attempt to curry Xingyin’s favor, even after his betrayals. It’s unwise to aim to outsmart the gods, however that is as soon as once more the selection our heroine is given. This sequel packs a powerful, near-breathless quantity of plot into its pages, telling a story of affection for one’s household, and the quiet dignity of by no means giving up. —NC
New York Metropolis will be the fifth character in Intercourse and the Metropolis, nevertheless it’s all six essential characters in The World We Make. The conclusion to Jemisin’s Nice Cities duology finds 5 of the town’s avatars nonetheless struggling to determine how one can cease the R’lyeh — a feat made tougher with out the help of Staten Island, who stays allied with the enemy regardless of idly watching her borough’s boroughness be leached out of existence. The remainder of the town is equally threatened by a well-liked mayoral candidate whose marketing campaign constructed on hateful rhetoric and gentrification threatens the very material — and existence — of the town. The battle for New York is thus fought throughout two planes in The World We Make, with a few of the avatars specializing in the multidimensional combat for survival towards an eldritch terror, and others standing off towards Proud Males chanting “Make New York nice once more.” Refined, this e-book will not be. Although not as robust as the primary installment within the duology, The World We Make nonetheless has sufficient grit, coronary heart, and humor to propel you thru to the very finish. Although possibly I’m biased. I’m a New Yorker, in any case. —Sadie Gennis
Bliss Montage is a departure from Ling Ma’s bestselling debut, Severance, in the most effective of how. I used to be sucked into this assortment of quick tales from the very first web page as Ma melds the fantastical with actuality, serving all of it in a witty deadpan. The opening paragraph from “Los Angeles” instantly units the tone:
The home during which we reside has three wings. The west wing is the place the Husband and I reside. The east wing is the place the kids and their attending au pairs reside. And lastly, the biggest however ugliest wing, extending behind the home like a gnarled, damaged arm, is the place my 100 ex-boyfriends reside. We reside in L.A.
Tales deftly blur the strains between actuality and satire, borrowing from speculative fiction conventions to create one thing fully new and satisfyingly odd. It’s a must-read. —NC
The Spear Cuts By means of Water is many issues. At its core, it’s the story of Jun and Keema, two strangers who assist a fallen god escape her captivity by the hands of her merciless husband, the emperor, and their sons, aptly dubbed the Three Terrors. However Jun and Keema’s journey is really being acted out in a magical theater in one other dimension a whole bunch of years later, with the e-book’s narrative winds between Jun and Keema’s story, the efficiency of it, and the expertise of 1 man watching from the viewers — although he’s fated to overlook what he’s witnessed as quickly as he leaves the theater.
The Spear Cuts By means of Water recollects Gabriel García Márquez with its surreal fluidity, although the way in which Jimenez weaves collectively first-, second-, and third-person views creates an immersive type simply his personal. And his determination to persistently disrupt the first story with the flowing ideas of surrounding characters provides you the sense that you simply’re floating by this world, each tethered to and let loose by Jimenez’s mesmerizing prose.
So, as I mentioned, The Spear Cuts By means of Water is many, many issues. It’s a spellbinding tribute to oral storytelling and folklore. It’s a considerate exploration of id and household. However greater than something, The Spear Cuts By means of Water is a love story, and one in contrast to something you’ve learn earlier than. —SG
Whereas the primary Burning Kingdoms e-book was a superbly lush piece of world-building and slow-burn romance, The Oleander Sword is a brutal epic that relentlessly builds towards utter devastation. The Jasmine Throne ends with Malini’s and Priya’s paths diverging, as Malini wages her vengeful battle towards her brother to assert the throne and Priya steps into her position as an Elder of Ahiranya. However when the 2 girls see a possibility to come back collectively to assist every of their folks, the lovestruck pair leap on the likelihood to reunite and finish Parijatdvipa’s reign. Malini’s brother will not be the one risk going through the dominion, although. The rot continues to unfold all through the dominion, and new revelations in regards to the Yaska depart Priya and Bhumika reevaluating their folks’s historical past and relationship to their religion. A sequence already beloved for its thorniness, Suri muddies the dynamics additional in The Oleander Sword as political plots, romantic needs, and non secular beliefs intertwine and conflict in in engrossing and sometimes heartbreaking methods. —SG
On this masterful, prolonged e-book, R.F. Kuang sharply critiques British imperialism and the bureaucratic establishments that maintain it up — significantly tutorial scholarship and monarchy. Historic fiction intertwines with fantasy, as a cohort of 4 college students pursue translation research at Oxford’s Babel. The top objective of their tutorial pursuits is to make magic-imbued silver for the crown. These magical silver bars are created by a means of translation — specifically, that little bit of which means that’s misplaced between phrases in several languages, or as they’ve advanced over time.
One such instance comes early within the e-book: the gulf between triacle and treacle, the previous from Outdated French and Center English with herbalist connotations of curing poisons and illnesses. The modern in English is a sort of candy and bitter syrup. This creates a silver bar with the facility to heal, and that leaves a candy aftertaste within the mouth. Additionally it is the bar that Professor Lovell makes use of to avoid wasting Robin Swift (that is the English title the boy chooses) from cholera in 1828, earlier than whisking him from his house in Canton.
Whereas learning at Babel, Robin and his cohort are given entry to plentiful sources they might have by no means dreamed of. On the identical time, they see the ugly agenda of Oxford, and the way even their mom tongues change into instruments of British imperialism. Their professors and classmates see the worth within the silver they might produce, with their information of such “unique” languages, however view those that reside in international international locations as lower than human and in the end expendable. Robin and his pals should select between two paths set earlier than them: consolation and wealth within the bosom of the crown, or just burning all of it down. —NC
Shutter by Ramona Emerson
The Nationwide E-book Award-winning novel follows a forensic photographer who — sadly for her — can see ghosts. The traumatized spirits hang-out Rita in any respect hours, refusing to let her sleep and purposefully sabotaging her life. These hauntings are additionally what pushed her out of the Navajo reservation she grew up on, the place even discussing dying was seen as taboo. However no ghost has given her as a lot hassle as an alleged suicide sufferer, whose crime scene Rita is shipped to {photograph} at first of the novel. The rageful ghost is insistent that she was murdered and gained’t cease terrorizing Ramona till her case is solved. Quickly, Rita is in deep over her head as she finds herself immersed in an online of crime and corruption involving one in every of New Mexico’s high cartels.
An exhilarating but melancholy learn, Shutter delivers on all ranges. However be warned: If you happen to can’t abdomen an excessive amount of gore, you would possibly have to skim by the crime scene descriptions the place Emerson’s personal expertise as a forensic photographer shines by in her grisly prose. —SG
Silvia Moreno-Garcia’s latest novel is a retelling of the 1896 basic by H.G. Wells. However Moreno-Garcia units it in 1871 in Yucatán, in the course of the Caste Warfare — a time when the Mayan folks fought again towards their Mexican and European oppressors.
As in her different works, this Gothic story is advised by the angle of the younger girl at its middle. Sequestered in her father’s property within the Yucatán Peninsula, Carlota Moreau lives alongside hybrid creatures, shaped of animal and human DNA. She grows up alongside these hybrids, treating them as siblings, although the skin world would see them in any other case. She has lengthy suffered from a “illness of the blood” that her father has handled with a daily injection of jaguar “gemmules.” To maintain their work non-public, her father claims that he runs a sanatorium — making an attempt to cover the Lovecraftian horrors that lie inside.
Carlota loves her house, and feels as if no different place would comprise such pure magnificence — although she begins to suspect all will not be effectively. When Eduardo Lizalde, son of the physician’s benefactor, visits the property, her doubts solely intensify. The Daughter of Physician Moreau explores themes of colonization, class, and what it means to be human, all whereas being a suspenseful web page turner. —NC
Becky Chambers’ latest installment of her Monk and Robotic sequence follows Sibling Dex and Splendid Speckled Mosscap’s journey by the wilds of future human civilization. A Psalm for the Wild-Constructed, the primary within the sequence, particulars the context of this world. Sooner or later, AI has gained sentience — and in response, people determined to allow them to kind company and depart to construct their very own civilization within the wilderness.
Sibling Dex had been a Tea Monk, a occupation that led them to human settlements; they’d put together tea and chat or supply steering to those that sought their varied brews. However at some point the monk selected to eschew this path, abandoning their occupation to wander within the wilderness — the place they stumbled upon Mosscap, a robotic on a quest to study people and their wants. Within the first e-book, the 2 wander by uninhabited lands, discussing philosophical questions in regards to the nature of being alive. On this second slim quantity, the 2 lastly enter a settlement of people.
Chambers builds an alternate, gentler world than the one we reside in — although it has its justifiable share of melancholy, sorrow, and prejudice. By means of their questions forwards and backwards, Dex and Mosscap get nearer to the tender marrow of what retains them going, and what their friendship would possibly appear to be as soon as their “quests” have come to an in depth. Chambers’ work has been referred to as “hopepunk” by varied critics, and this small novel continues on this theme. —NC
I used to be dreading having to jot down this blurb as a result of it’s extremely intimidating — and I feel, frankly, unattainable — to do justice to Talking Bones in a number of hundred phrases or much less. Although, my wrestle is thematically aligned with one of many Dandelion Dynasty sequence’ bigger factors: that folks’s truths are too difficult and contradictory to ever be totally captured. Usually, the intricacies of individuals’s hearts, minds, and relationships change into stripped of context, simplified, misinterpreted, or erased till what’s left is a cohesive, neatly wrapped-up historical past that’s simple to digest. However even inside these tales, there’s reality and there’s energy. And studying how one can wield the facility of storytelling is simply as necessary in Talking Bones as the power to wield a sword, the would possibly of a garinafin, or the grace of kings.
Talking Bones is a detail-rich, multigenerational saga with a scope and ambition that will be unwieldy if not helmed by somebody of Liu’s masterful expertise. There are gods and battle, political crafty and philosophical debates, pages upon pages of technical specs for innovations, and dialogue that reads extra like poetry. The questions the e-book raises and the empathy it extols will not be issues simply forgotten. However what has stayed with me probably the most is the hole between the characters’ tales that I learn and the methods these tales get retold — inside the e-book, but in addition outdoors it, as I attempt to share my love for this story with others. There’s a lot that will get misplaced in that translation, nevertheless it doesn’t make both model any much less true. —SG
This epic fantasy remixes tropes to create one thing fully new and unattainable to place down. As in different dystopias, society is separated by a strict class system — this time by blood shade. Embers have purple blood, which affords them the powers and privileges of blood magic. Dusters, the center lessons, have blue blood, whereas Ghostings, the servant class who’re maimed at beginning, have clear blood.
Sylah was raised as a Duster and skilled to overthrow the Embers by successful the Wardens’ annual trials. However when the revolt was quashed — killing her household, or so she believed — she coped by turning to different vices, hoping to fade into the background. All of this adjustments when she sneaks into an Ember princess’s quarters and will get roped proper again in. The Last Strife units its bureaucratic squabbles and a gripping love triangle towards the backdrop of a lethal competitors. It’s thrilling and entertaining from begin to end. —NC
If you happen to beloved Mexican Gothic, then The Hacienda can be proper up your (haunted) alley. This Gothic is ready on the lavish Hacienda San Isidro, within the aftermath of the Mexican Warfare of Independence. Beatriz faces dire prospects — her father had been executed, and she or he and her mom are close to penniless. When Don Rodolfo Solórzano proposes marriage, she feels as if her issues have been solved. She’ll flip Hacienda San Isidro into the house she and her mom have lengthy craved, with vibrant home windows and delightful gardens.
However the Hacienda will not be what it first seems. It’s profoundly haunted, projecting visions of blood-soaked flooring and partitions caved in, blacking out the lights and rattling doorways. On this story, the monster is in the home — however the monster additionally is the home. Beatriz is deserted with out allies: Rodolfo has left on a enterprise journey and his sister, who lives on the property, turns her nostril at Beatriz at each flip. Who will save her from this home? And who will give her and her mom a spot to reside if she can’t make this work? Solely Padre Andrés, the younger priest — with different secrets and techniques of his personal — is there to assist. —NC
The Architects, an alien species of moon-sized planet destroyers, are again, and the one factor that used to ward them off is now not efficient. So, how does humanity reply? With infighting, energy grabs, and petty squabbles. On the middle of all that is Idris Tellemier, the one individual to ever talk with an Architect, who spends the vast majority of Eyes of the Void being bargained over, used, and kidnapped for political acquire and safety. However whereas Idris is the one burdened with saving the world, his pals on the Vulture God are tasked with saving Idris. Eyes of the Void finds Solace, Kris, Equipment, and Ollie (who rightfully will get her personal POV chapters this time round) navigating the tense political environment and going through down enemies starting from the Architects to cultists to their very own folks so as to shield their uncommon household.
Adrian Tchaikovsky has constructed a dizzyingly difficult narrative, and his creative world-building will get an opportunity to shine in Eyes of the Void, because the Vulture God crew turns into additional entangled with new characters, species, and cultures — most of whom the crew finds varied methods to piss off. And although the e-book raises extra questions than solutions, the compounding mysteries elevate the stakes to heart-pounding heights as Idris’ quest to learn to cease the Architects unravels startling truths in regards to the very make-up of the universe. —SG
In its second outing, The Bloodsworn Saga stays a cruel and brutal sequence full of graphic motion, impeccable world-building, and an ever-growing ensemble of characters who straddle the strains of morality. Solely now, it’s now not nearly mortals combating for energy, revenge, or household. Gods have returned to Vigrið, throwing the stability of society into chaos. As many scramble to seek out footholds of energy within the shifting world order, our authentic protagonists — Okra, Elvar, and Varg — proceed resolutely down their paths to rescue and avenge these taken from them, even when meaning combating (or enslaving) a god. Whereas characters’ storylines have been largely separate within the first novel, right here they weave out and in of one another’s lives as destiny and (mis)fortune reveal how intricately their paths intertwined. Tightly paced and with invigorating motion all through, The Starvation of the Gods is the epic payoff to the muse Gwynne meticulously laid down in The Shadow of the Gods and an exciting setup for the sequence conclusion. —SG
Like A Go to From the Goon Squad earlier than it, The Sweet Home, the most recent novel from Jennifer Egan, is written within the mode of its subject material. Whereas the 2010 outing’s connected-yet-discrete quick tales functioned very like a mixtape, or an experimental album from a band that had gotten sick of releasing catchy singles, The Sweet Home features extra just like the omniscient, hyper-reactive type of communication that defines social media, and the web writ massive.
Following ancillary characters from Goon Squad, the sort-of sequel focuses on a groundbreaking consciousness-sharing app, its movie star creator, and the multifarious solid that gave rise to its existence. As in Goon Squad, and even Manhattan Seashore, Egan is above deploying the ramifications of such a godlike know-how for soapbox diatribes — as a substitute, she explores her personal winding maze of characters and conflicting pursuits with disgust, empathy, and a few of the yr’s greatest prose: ”My drawback is identical one had by everybody who gathers info: What to do with it? How you can kind and form and use it? How you can maintain from drowning in it? Not each story must be advised.”
Above all, The Sweet Home explores each the hazard and the chic in people’ compulsion to share their lives with others. Weaving tales from dozens of factors of view in New York, the redwood forests, and the deserts of the American Southwest, amongst many others, it’s a sobering reminder that the connective know-how — the “social media” — that might both save or break us is already right here. —Mike Mahardy
Emily St. John Mandel has demonstrated her expertise for penning interlacing tales, with each Station Eleven and The Glass Lodge introducing their casts in piecemeal style, slowly revealing how every of those characters know one another. Sea of Tranquility is much more sprawling, stretching from the 1910s and into the additional future, a time when folks reside in moon colonies. The e-book additionally creates an official Mandel multiverse, if that’s your factor, with characters from The Glass Lodge serving as a few of the novel’s major focuses.
My favourite a part of Sea of Tranquility is its wholesale embrace of one in every of my favourite science fiction tropes. It’s a time journey story with quite a few well-plotted turns, all in Mandel’s fluid, introspective writing type. It’s a terrific learn for anybody who loves The Matrix films or loved Disney’s Loki (however possibly wished it caught the touchdown a bit higher). —NC
Budapest is the place Csilla’s household has lived for a whole bunch of years. It’s additionally the place they died. In 1956, seven years after her dad and mom have been executed by the Soviet police, Jewish newspaper typist Csilla and her aunt are making ready to flee to Israel. However after likelihood encounters with a pupil revolutionary and an angel of dying, Csilla begins questioning what means extra to her: combating to outlive or combating for a greater life.
With its richly drawn characters and gutting depictions of post-Holocaust trauma and antisemitism, This Insurgent Coronary heart is a grounded, typically heartbreaking account of Jewish life below Russian occupation. As Csilla finds herself on the forefront of the Hungarian revolution, she navigates the dueling realities which have formed her — remembering and forgetting, survival and freedom, and loving a metropolis that has by no means beloved her again. Elegantly mixing historical past with magical realism and Jewish folklore, Katherine Locke has created a profound tribute to these keen to threat every thing for hope. —SG
Chinese language science fiction has change into more and more in style in america, as Ken Liu (an completed creator in his personal proper) translated Liu Cixin’s groundbreaking Three-Physique Downside into English. Since then, Chinese language speculative fiction has gained recognition, making approach for different literary expertise.
The Method Spring Arrives is a set of 17 Chinese language science fiction and fantasy tales — and all of them have been written, translated, and edited fully by girls and nonbinary writers. Curated by Yu Chen and Regina Kanyu Wang, the wonderful assortment spans matters and tropes. —NC
Goliath by Tochi Onyebuchi
Within the close to future, a mass white flight to area colonies has left the largely poor, BIPOC inhabitants to eke out an existence on Earth, which has change into uninhabitable after ecological and human-made disasters. However although the highly effective and privileged deserted the planet, the system they revenue off of stays intact. Now, years later, the area colonists have begun to return — some to gentrify the neighborhoods their ancestors abandoned and others as trauma vacationers looking for to gawk at those that’d been left behind. A nonlinear sequence of vignettes, Goliath switches between a number of characters’ views, however the primary focus is on a gaggle of stackers, a Black and brown crew of staff who scrape by salvaging bricks from demolished buildings to ship to the colonies. With no hope of circumstances enhancing, they’ve way back come to simply accept that grief would be the major fixed of their inevitably quick lives — if the cancerous air doesn’t kill them, the automated drone police will. However whereas a lot of their lives are outlined by ache, the stackers maintain transferring ahead, looking for which means and fleeting moments of pleasure in a world designed to destroy them.
Spectacular in its scale, ambition, and vary of voice, Goliath is a shattering work that’s a lot greater than the sum of its components. Along with the stackers, Tochi Onyebuchi weaves in tales of a homosexual white couple leaving the colonies to play pioneer on Earth, a journalist hoping to inform the stackers’ story (however actually, hoping to assuage her white guilt), an incarcerated Yale grad who turns into a negotiator in a jail protest, and a Black marshal dragging a slaver throughout the West to retrieve the physique of a murdered boy. Goliath is concurrently sprawling and intimate, exploring racism, classism, gentrification, the jail system, and the local weather disaster by temporary moments in these largely disconnected lives. However taken collectively, these small moments add as much as a strong take a look at America’s damaged system and the harrowing trajectory we discover ourselves on. —SG
If the primary two installments in The Nsibidi Scripts sequence have been about Sunny discovering and exploring her id, Akata Girl is about her defining it. The creative, adventurous novel follows Sunny throughout a interval of nice development as she and Chichi are pressured to uphold their discount with the enormous spider Udide to return her stolen ghazal. With Orlu and Sasha tagging alongside, the coven’s treacherous journey to retrieve the traditional scroll leads them to find breathtaking new worlds and the rising limits of their juju talents. However as Sunny strains to maintain up along with her quickly evolving powers, she should additionally face the rising fracture in her relationship along with her spirit face, Anyanwu.
Being doubled and being a free agent each carry heavy burdens in Leopard tradition, however all through Akata Girl, Sunny discovers a energy and luxury in who she is and what she will do. It’s one more lovely leg in Sunny’s coming-of-age journey, made all of the extra impactful by Nnedi Okorafor’s rhythmic prose. —SG
Sequoia Nagamatsu’s How Excessive We Go within the Darkish is definitely the most effective books I’ve learn this yr up to now — and I wouldn’t be stunned if it’s my absolute favourite by the top of the yr. Tender and dystopian, the pandemic novel is advised in a sequence of vignettes, every exposing a distinct pocket of future society — and ultimately connecting by characters and circumstances.
Nagamatsu sharply paints an image of society inevitably constructing business out of grief, as folks combat for fundamental human dignity and wrestle to carry onto reminiscences of family members. It’s an formidable critique of late-stage capitalism, wrapped up in a sequence of household dramas that sound wild out of context: a robo-dog toy that comprises recordings of a deceased mom’s lullabies, a euthanasia state park for youngsters whose dad and mom need them to have joyful ultimate reminiscences, and tech-bro-created funereal currencies are just some of the situations. —NC
This heartfelt, lyrical fantasy follows Xingyin, a younger immortal raised in secret by her mom Chang’e, the moon goddess exiled to a lifetime of solitude by the merciless Celestial Emperor. However when Xingyin’s existence is found, she should flee the one house she’s ever identified and carve a brand new path for herself whereas hiding the reality of who she is.
Daughter of the Moon Goddess sweeps by the years of Xinglin’s journey with environment friendly, easy velocity, chronicling her evolution from a sheltered little one to the Celestial prince’s unlikely however dearest companion and a embellished archer serving the very emperor she despises. All of the whereas, Xingyin should juggle the needs and duties she develops in her new life along with her long-held dedication to free her mom from below the emperor’s thumb. A narrative about how far we go for love and the painful decisions we should make alongside the way in which, Daughter of the Moon Goddess weaves collectively Chinese language mythology, court docket intrigue, romance, motion, and betrayal into one of many yr’s most enjoyable debuts. –SG
Runners-up:
- Home of Starvation by Alexis Henderson
- The Genesis of Distress by Neon Yang
- The Final White Man by Mohsin Hamid
- What Strikes the Useless by T. Kingfisher
- Fruiting Our bodies: Tales by Kathryn Harlan
- Stroll the Vanished Earth by Erin Swan
- Fevered Star (Between Earth and Sky #2) by Rebecca Roanhorse
- The Reminiscence Librarian by Janelle Monáe
- Girl, Consuming by Claire Kohda
- Scattered All Over the Earth by Yōko Tawada, translated by Margaret Mitsutani
- Useless Silence by S.A. Barnes
- The Faculty for Good Moms by Jessamine Chan