Every year, the Ignyte Awards honor the best in science fiction, fantasy, and horror literature from the previous year. Reading from the Ignyte Awards nominees, whether they ended up being winners, shortlisted, or longlisted, is sure to be a treat. After all, these books represent the best of the best in a wide variety of categories.
The Ignyte Awards were established in 2020 by writers L. D. Lewis and Suzan Palumbo. With the goal of celebrating diversity and inclusion in the speculative fiction genre, the annual awards honor works in fifteen different categories; the categories include Best Novel (Adult), Best Novel (YA), Best in Middle Grade, Best Novella, Best Novelette, Best Short Story, Best in Speculative Poetry, Best Anthology, Best in Creative Nonfiction, and Best Comics Team, just to name a few. So yes, even though the awards have only been around for a few years, there are still so many works to choose from for this Read Harder Challenge.
So how to narrow it down? Here are a couple of Ignyte Award nominees/winners I personally recommend. But if you want to check out the full list of past nominees/winners, you can find it here!
Root Magic by Eden Royce
Root Magic won the award for Best in Middle Grade in 2022. The novel is set in 1963. Jezebel Turner’s grandmother just passed away, and and school integration is coming to South Carolina. But the biggest change for Jez and her twin brother Jay? Their uncle begins to train them in rootwork. Suddenly, a whole world of magic opens up to Jez. And just in time, too, because a dark, supernatural force has come to town. Jez will need every bit of her magic to fight against the evil — both natural and supernatural — that’s all around her.
Gods of Jade and Shadow by Siliva Moreno-Garcia
Gods of Jade and Shadow was chosen as Best Novel in 2020. In this fairy tale-like novel inspired by Mexican folklore, the Mayan god of death meets Casiopea Tun, a young woman living in a small town Mexico during the Jazz Age. Casiopea longs for an adventurous life, and that’s what she gets when the god of death sends her on a journey deep into the darkness of the underworld.
Legendborn by Tracy Deonn
In 2021, Legendborn won the award for Best YA novel. This book, based on Arthurian legend, tells the story of Bree Matthews, a teen who joins a residential program for bright high schoolers at UNC–Chapel Hill and stumbles upon something extraordinary. When a flying demon attacks the campus, a secret society of “Legendborn” students hunts the creature down. Because Bree wasn’t meant to see any of this, a mage called “Merlin” attempts to wipe Bree’s memory. But in doing so, he instead unlocks dormant powers within her.
Elatsoe by Darcie Little Badger
While it’s Darcie Little Badger’s second novel A Snake Falls to Earth that won the Ignyte Award in 2022, Elatsoe is my personal favorite, and it was a finalist in 2021. Elatsoe is set in an America that is similar to the one that exists today. The only difference is that this America is shaped in no small part by the magic, monsters, knowledge, and legends of all its people, Indigenous and not. This is the world in which young Elatsoe lives. Through the lineage of her Lipan Apache family, she has learned how to raise the ghosts of dead animals. Elatsoe’s cousin has been murdered, and she will stop at nothing to find out the truth of what happened. And she will use her smarts and her special skills to get the answers she needs.
Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse
In 2021, Black Sun won for best novel. In the holy city of Tova, the winter solstice usually signifies renewal, but this year the winter solstice also coincides with a solar eclipse, which the Sun Priest warns signifies an unbalancing of the world. Xiala is a disgraced Teek who is sailing a ship towards Tova, set to arrive on the solstice. With her is a young man named Serapio. He seems harmless enough, but his need to arrive in Tova before the eclipse suggests there’s more to him than meets the eye.
Riot Baby by Tochi Onyebuchi
Riot Baby won for Best Novella in 2021. Ella has a gift of premonition, and her brother Kev is sworn to protect her. The dystopian America they live in, however, is cruel. And perhaps not that different than the America we live in now. In this novella, Onyebuchi’s world reflects the issues that affect contemporary America, namely racism and prejudice and the systems that work against minorities.
And This is How to Stay Alive by Shingai Njeri Kagunda
This book was the winner for Best Novella in 2022. After her brother Baraka’s death by suicide, Nyokabi’s world is falling apart. So when her aunt gives her a potion that can send Nyokabi back in time, she comes up with a plan. She will go back to when her brother was still alive, and she will do everything in her power to keep him that way.
A Master of Djinn by P. Djèlí Clark
This final book was the winner for Best Novel in 2022. This book is set in an alternate version of Cairo in 1912. Fatma el-Sha’arawi may be the youngest woman working for the Ministry of Alchemy, Enchantments, and Supernatural Entities, but she’s no novice. When someone murders a secret brotherhood dedicated to al-Jahiz, one of the most famous men in history, it’s Fatma they call upon to solve the case. Al-Jahiz disappeared 40 years ago, but now the murderer claims to be the al-Jahiz, returned to condemn the modern age.
Looking to learn more about the Ignyte Awards and/or about Fantasy and Science Fiction Awards in general? Check out this very helpful guide, and good luck with your Read Harder Challenge, friends!
Click here for the full Read Harder 2023 task list, and for previous recommendations, click here.