“The heaviness of loss in her heart hadn't eased, but there was room there for humour, too.”
Fuente: Brown Girl in the Ring
Nalo Hopkinson es una escritora canadiense adscrita a los géneros de la ciencia ficción y fantasía que combina las tradiciones orales del Caribe y el arte narrativo escrito.
Ha recibido diversos reconocimientos, entre ellos el premio Locus a la mejor ópera prima por Brown Girl in the Ring y el premio Mundial de Fantasía a la mejor colección de historias con Skin Folk en 2002,[1] mientras que recibió una nominación al premio Hugo en 2001 por Midnight Robber [2] y al premio Nébula por el mismo libro, cuestión que repetiría en 2007 por The New Moon's Arms.[3]
“The heaviness of loss in her heart hadn't eased, but there was room there for humour, too.”
Fuente: Brown Girl in the Ring
Fuente: Brown Girl in the Ring (1998), Chapter 13 (p. 232)
Fuente: Brown Girl in the Ring (1998), Chapter 12 (p. 220)
Fuente: Brown Girl in the Ring (1998), Chapter 4 (p. 62)
Fuente: Brown Girl in the Ring (1998), Chapter 13 (p. 230)
“Desire makes us all babies again.”
Fuente: The Salt Roads (2003), p. 180
“Children,” I said to her. “For the first little while, they not exactly human, you don’t find?”
Fuente: The New Moon's Arms (2007), Chapter 4 (p. 192)
“Come in peace to my home, Tan-Tan. And when you go, go in friendship.”
Section 4 (p. 179)
Midnight Robber (2000)
Fuente: The New Moon's Arms (2007), Chapter 4 (p. 191)
“Just being Tan-Tan, sometimes good, sometimes bad, mostly just getting by like everybody else.”
Section 4 (p. 326)
Midnight Robber (2000)
Fuente: The New Moon's Arms (2007), Chapter 1 (p. 40)
Fuente: The New Moon's Arms (2007), Chapter 2 (p. 72)
“She was hiding in the best possible way, masquerading as herself!”
Section 4 (p. 314)
Midnight Robber (2000)
On her comparing of science fiction and fantasy in “Nalo Hopkinson: Multiplicity” https://www.locusmag.com/2007/Issue06_Hopkinson.html in LocusMag (June 2007)
On the author having the right to reveal anything personal that’s significant to them in “Interview: Nalo Hopkinson” http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/nonfiction/interview-nalo-hopkinson/ in Lightspeed (June 2013)
And those of us who live in racialized bodies feel that lack, we feel that erasure, so yes, there was something quite deliberate in my doing half the speech as an alien.
On race still being a taboo topic in the world of science fiction in “Interview: Nalo Hopkinson” http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/nonfiction/interview-nalo-hopkinson/ in Lightspeed (June 2013)