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2019 Read Harder Challenge
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Task #8: An #ownvoices book set in Oceania
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Dec 17, 2018 09:36AM

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This is a category I'm going to save until later in the year, when BookRiot and the community have curated lists to pick from. I admit I don't know much about literature from Oceania, apart from having an enjoyment for contemporary Australian YA, which would not be appropriate for this category.

You could go beyond Australia/NZ although My Place and Whale Rider mentioned above are great choices, as well as The Swan Book or Carpentaria by Alexis Wright, an Australian Indigenous author.
I've found by Pavana Reddy from Fiji, or the Telesa series by Lani Wendt Young from Samoa. I think I'll read the Telesa one for this task.

Sister Heart
Carpentaria
Follow the Rabbit-Proof Fence
Swallow the Air
The Bone People

It's set somewhere in (on?) the Pacific Rim (check for the Oseania part), and the MC is lesbian, the same as the author (check for the #ownvoices)


I read The Bone People for this year's Read Harder and it was fantastic and heartbreaking. Recommended.



I'd second that recommendation. Also "Frangipani" by Celestine Hitiura Vaite. I think she would count - she is mixed race French/Tahitian but grew up solely with her Tahitian family. As Tahiti is technically part of France, I think she'd be #ownvoices (although I have to say this concept is new to me)?

I'll probably read The Shark Caller, a middle grade fantasy set in Papua New Guinea or The Light Between Oceans, a historical fiction set in Australia.

It seems that both the main character Lucy and the author Alice Pung are children of refugees who have fled to Australia (one from Vietnam, the other from Cambodia), and both families are ethnic Teochew Chinese. I think it counts!

And I did double check worldatlas.com, Hawaii is considered part of Oceania, even though it's part of the United States.


I'll probably read The Shark Caller, a middle grade fantasy set in..."
I don't know if The Light Between Oceans would work - I am pretty sure this is by a white author and about a white experience.

Indigenous Literature List
Indigenous Australian Literature
Think I'm going with The Swan Book.


Thank you! This prompt is going to be one of the harder ones for RH.

I think I'm going to read The Sea Is Ours: Tales from Steampunk Southeast Asia for this.

I'm sorry, I don't want to spoil The Sea Is Ours: Tales from Steampunk Southeast Asia, it sounds like a really nice book, but Southeast Asia and Oceania hardly overlap, only in West New Guinea and some smaller islands, if I interpret Wikipedia correctly.



No, the author is not indigenous.

No, the aut..."
There is no requirement that the author be indigenous just part of a marginalized group.

https..."
This list was very helpful. I am very interested in My Urohs. It is a book of poetry.

The Happiest Refugee - Anh Do (immigration, refugees, race)
The Family Law - Benjamin Law (race, LGBTQI)
The Hate Race - Maxine Beneba Clarke (race)
A Mother’s Story - Rosie Batty (domestic violence, violence against women)
The Trauma Cleaner - Sarah Krasnostein (feminism, trans rights)
Yassmin’s Story - Yassmin Abdel-Magied (race, Islamaphobia, feminism)
No Friend But the Mountains: Writing from Manus Prison - Behrouz Boochani (race, refugees, immigration)
The Swan Book - Alexis Wright (race, indigenous issues, environment)

Edited to add: I've just come across the perfect book for me, "The Imaginary Lives of James Poneke" by Tina Makereti. The book would not only work in this category, but also as a crossover with Alternate History:
I've just asked my local library if they will order it.

Interview with the author here implies it's #ownvoices (as Corinne Duyvis intended the hashtag to be used).
I read


Wind City is heavily based around Maori mythology and has LGBT+ characters.

I'd second that recommendation. Also "Frangipani" by Celestine Hitiura Vaite. I think she would count - she is mixed race French/Tahitian ..."
I'm not sure the Light between oceans would count. As far as I know both author and protagonists are white and the story doesn't explore lgbt ...

/list/show/1...


Somebody please correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm fairly certain Liane Moriarty is not a member of a marginalized group. Unless you count all women as marginalized, which I feel is a stretch for the spirit of this prompt. AFAICT, she's a straight white lady who writes about the straight white lady experience.
I enjoy her books, though, so if I'm wrong, and she *does* count, please tell me! :-)
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