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    I like Carson McCullers, Donna Tartt, Ali Smith, Delia Owens, Margaret Atwood, Barbara Kingsolver, Maggie O’Farrell… etc.
    I do this once every few years just to make sure I’m not getting stuck on male authors. Thanks!

    Edit: remembered Emily St John Mandel and Sun-Mi Hwang!

    by henryisonfire

    36 Comments

    1. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (My favorite)

      Jhumpa Lahiri

      Sayaka Murata

      Arundhati Ray

      Lauren Groff

      Helen Oyeyemi

      Isabel Allende (I haven’t read yet)

      Margaret Atwood

      Annie Prloux (My favorite)

      Yaa Gyasi (My fav)

      Ruta Sepetys

      Min Jin Lee

      Vandana Singh (My favorite)

      Alice Munro – read her short stories

      Mary roach – non fiction)

      Daphne Du Maurier

      Claire Keegan (My favorite)

      Sarah Waters

      Jennifer Egan

      The Luminaries by Eleanor Catton.

    2. There are many, many female (and some NB) authors writing romance novels, if you’re willing to go for that.

      A few science fiction possibilities for you: Ann Leckie, N. K. Jemisin, Becky Chambers, Mary Robinette Kowal.

    3. Hello_There666 on

      Jane Casey, I adore all her works. Her way of storytelling is 11/10

      Anni Taylor

      Cornelia Funke

      Emma Jameson

      Seraphina Nova Glass

      Kiersten White – specifically recommending Mister Magic.

      Minka Kent

      Harriet Steel

      Laura Purcell

      Sujata Massey – Perveen Minstry series. Based on India’s first female solicitor

      Adele Parks

      Kerry Fisher – the woman in my home is my top pick.

      Emma Rous – she has an interesting way of telling the story and I loved it

      Tana French – her best book imo is The Likeness

      Heather Gudenkauf

      Sue Watson – the Resort is my fave one from her

      Liane Moriarty – Apples Never Fall is my fave from her

      Helen Cooper

      Simone St James

      Lisa Jewell

      Dervla McTiernan

      Eva Gates – the lighthouse library series

      Catherine Ryan Howard

      Carola Dunn

      Anna Lee Huber

      Erin Morgenstern

      Rajasree Variyar

      Sarah A Denzil

      I accidentally made this long list 🫢

    4. Out of your list I have only read Margaret Atwood. Here are some of my favourites. These are mostly sci fi authors:

      * Sarah Pinsker, an easy to read writing style that does not compromise the sci fi elements by dumbing things down.

      * Hiron Ennes, nonbinary. So far has only written Leech, which was my favourite book I read last year.

      * Ursula K. Le Guin. She wrote a lot of sci fi and fantasy, and the more she wrote, the more she got into challenging things people take for granted about real world society and politics.

      * Margaret Killjoy. Similar in some ways to Margaret Atwood, but coming from the modern punk subculture.

      * Carmen Maria Machado. I have only read her short fiction, which is very dark, sexy, and feminist.

      * James Tiptree Jr. (pen name of Alice Sheldon). Wrote a mountain of short fiction and a couple of novels. I have only read her short fiction, and it’s all great.

      * Charlie Jane Anders. I read The City in the Middle of the Night by her, sci fi that explores some ideas uncommon in the genre.

      * I second the recommendation of Octavia E. Butler. She writes characters incredibly well.

      * Joan D. Vinge. My favourite thing by her is The Snow Queen trilogy.

      * Kameron Hurley writes grimdark sci fi and fantasy centered on morally ambiguous women.

      * C. L. Moore, and early weird fiction and space western author.

      * Julie E. Czerneda, sci fi and fantasy

      * C. J. Cherryh, slow paced character driven sci fi and fantasy.

      * Ann Leckie, sci fi and one fantasy novel about colonialism and cultural norms. I personally like Ancillary Justice and the stand alone book Provenance best.

    5. Justice for Animals –Martha Nussbaum

      Caste –Isabel Wilkerson

      Existential Physics: A Scientist’s Guide to Life’s Biggest Questions –Sabine Hossenfelder

      Bittersweet –Susan Cain

      Why Has Nobody Told Me This Before? –Julie Smith

      The Other Family Doctor: A Veterinarian Explores What Animals Can Teach Us About Love, Life, and Mortality –Karen Fine

      Plato at the Googleplex: Why Philosophy Won’t Go Away –Rebecca Goldstein

      Between You & Me: Confessions of a Comma Queen –Mary Norris

      Word by Word: The Secret Life of Dictionaries –Kory Stamper

      Give People Money: How a Universal Basic Income Would End Poverty, Revolutionize Work, and Remake the World –Annie Lowrey

      Animals Make Us Human: Creating the Best Life for Animals –Temple Grandin

      The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing –Marie Kondo

      Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail –Cheryl Strayed

      The Telomere Effect: A Revolutionary Approach to Living Younger, Healthier, Longer –Elizabeth Blackburn

      How to Drag a Body and Other Safety Tips You Hope to Never Need: Survival Tricks for Hacking, Hurricanes, and Hazards Life Might Throw at You –Judith Matloff

    6. Wild_Preference_4624 on

      – Jessica Townsend
      – Shannon Hale (I’m particularly fond of her YA fantasies)
      – Victoria Goddard (*highly* recommend The Hands of the Emperor)
      – Anne Lamott (Bird by Bird is my favorite nonfiction)
      – Tamora Pierce
      – Becky Chambers

    7. Scuttling-Claws on

      Let’s if I can do just nbs

      Sarah Gailey

      Akwaeke Emezi

      Rivers Solomon

      Dolki Min

      Nghi Vo

    8. neverlandishome on

      Great list of authors! We have similar taste. I’m limiting myself to three reccomendations, but I have more if you want them!!

      ​

      * If you’re comfortable with fantasy, Alix E. Harrow is one of my favorite authors that I’ve encountered in the past 5 years. She writes really clever, fantasy stories with well fleshed out main characters and lots of grappling with history and social issues. [*The Once and Future Witches*](https://www.npr.org/2020/10/17/924561383/the-once-and-future-witches-will-have-you-spellbound) got me out of a reading slump a few years ago, so I always like to recommend it as a start.
      * Ann Patchett is also great if you haven’t read her stuff yet. *Tom Lake* is the newest, which is getting a ton of (well deserved) buzz, but you can never go wrong with *Bel Canto*, in my opinion.

      * Finally, I have recently fallen in love with Rebecca Makkai. I read [*I Have Some Questions for You*](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/61053829-i-have-some-questions-for-you) last year, and now I’m devouring all of of her other work.

    9. HughHelloParson on

      The Autobiography of Red By Anne Carson

      Teh quick and the Dead by Joy Williams

      Pussy, King of the Pirates by Kathy Acker

      The lefthand of Darkness by Ursula Leguin

      Ice by Anna Kavan

    10. Mostly Sci-Fi/Fantasy:

      Martha Wells

      Jacqueline Carey

      Leigh Bardugo

      Sara Douglass

      Elizabeth Haydon

      Kate Quinn (historical fiction)

      Naomi Novik

      Christina Henry

      Kim Harrision

      Pip Williams (historical fiction)

      Rachel Gillig

      Maria Adelmann

      AJ Hackwith

      Louise Erdrich (indigenous fiction)

      Catherynne M Valente

    11. Remarkable_Inchworm on

      Going back through my “read recently” list:

      * Gabrielle Zevin
      * Natasha Pulley
      * Madeline Miller
      * Veronica Roth
      * Katy Hays
      * Kira Jane Buxton
      * Susan Walter
      * Annalee Newitz

    12. spooniemoonlight on

      I’ve been doing this too for the past 2 years and here are the ones I’ve read so far:

      – Sylvia Plath
      – Caroline Deyns
      – Julia Serano
      – Leah Lakshmi Piepzna Samarasinha
      – Mona Chollet
      – Alice Hattrick
      – Jane Austen
      – Maryse Condé
      – Virginia Woolf
      – Sarah Waters (<3)
      – Emily Brontë
      – Toni Morrison
      – Maya Angelou
      – Elizabeth Gaskell
      – Anna North
      – Lola Lafon
      – Angela Y. Davis

      I spend a lot of time digging through goodreads for other women/nb authors and love to do that! so I have many more on my to read list but can’t recommend them yet

    13. Ask_Me_What_Im_Up_to on

      OTTOMH

      The *Empire Trilogy*, co-written by Janny Wurts & Raymond E Feist is good fun.

      Robin Hobb’s very well respected, though I haven’t read her since I was a child, really must get back to it.

      Dame Agatha Christie’s books are good, uncomplicated fun.

    14. JuniorPomegranate9 on

      Alice Munro, Miriam Toews, Lauren Groff, Marilynne Robinson, Jennifer DuBois, Edan Lepucki, Alice Walker, Miranda July, Carmen Maria Machado, Lydia Davis

    15. Maggie Smith, Maggie Smith, Maggie Smith!

      And also Rachel Cusk, Sheena Patel, Catriona Ward, Coco Mellors, Claire-Louise Bennett.
      In the mystery genre Janice Hallett all the way.

    16. matilda_poindexter on

      Some of my faves:

      Sarah Waters

      Emma Donoghue

      Shirley Jackson

      Julia Alvarez

      Jane Austen

      Isabel Allende

      Caitlin Doughty [non-fiction]

      Yaa Gyasi

      Pat Barker

      Sue Monk Kidd

      Silvia Moreno-Garcia

      Gillian Flynn

      Sarah Vowell [non-fiction]

      Toni Morrison

      Mary Roach [non-fiction]

    17. anxiousanimosity on

      If you like nonfiction Mary Roach is a lovely,funny and intelligent writer. I cannot recommend the book Spook enough. Really thought provoking. Her other works are just as good, in my opinion, but Spook was the first I read and is still my favorite of hers.

    18. Old-Pomegranate17 on

      Flannery O’Connor. Great, dry short stories that reveal subtle evils inherent to the land.

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