I'd love to hear some sci-fi recommendations featuring authors with different backgrounds. Anything goes: non-westerners, refugees, deeply religious cultists who live in a hidden paradise underneath antarctica, whatever.
Arkady and Boris Strugatsky were white Soviet Russian men, famously wrote Roadside Picnic (among other works) which became the Andrei Tarkovsky film Stalker: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roadside_Picnic
They were trying to tell stories critical of the way things were, but set in a fantastic world so it could get past the censors. Part of a genre of Russian/USSR sci-fi: https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/22412.Russian_Science_Fi...
Possibly including Stanisław Lem writing in Eastern-bloc Poland https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanis%C5%82aw_Lem
Reddit thread on African sci-fi and fantasy book suggestions: https://old.reddit.com/r/suggestmeabook/comments/11zngrs/afr...
- Planetes (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetes) is a hard scifi manga with anime adaptation about daily life of astronauts cleaning up space debris. It feels pretty grounded, you can feel how its like living in Earth orbit and Moon
- Space Brothers / Uchuu Kyodai (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Brothers_(manga)) tells the story of a Japanese worker getting kicked out from his company and then he applied to JAXA, following his younger brother's footstep
Not manga/anime/books, but there's a Korean scifi movie at Netflix called Space Sweepers (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Sweepers), similar to Planetes. What I found interesting is that they have people speaking different language, and you can hear their universal translator translating their conversation to their own languages. Different than western scifi where everyone speaks English
* "The Green Bone Saga" by Fonda Lee
* "The Weirkey Chronicles" and "Street Cultivation" by Sarah Lin
See also:
* Middle East/Middle Eastern SFF: https://old.reddit.com/r/Fantasy/comments/128ozc6/the_2023_r...
* Set in Africa: https://old.reddit.com/r/Fantasy/comments/ttrhvf/the_2022_rf...
* Set in Asia: https://old.reddit.com/r/Fantasy/comments/mhz3k7/the_2021_rf...
And, while not SciFi, I think Haruki Murakami's books are worth a read and might scratch and itch you didn't realise you had. Start with Norwegian Wood if you want a light intro, but then Windup Bird Chronicle next. Possibly 1Q84 after that?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosewater_(Thompson_novel)
Midnight Robber by Nalo Hopkinson is also very good but set on a different planet so a bit more divorced from today. It is still afrofuturism, and still covers a lot of the topics you describe. It can be a bit tough to read, at least I found it to be, as the Caribbean accents are very strong.
Another Russian bonus, this 2014 short story[0] by Kremlin-insider Vladislav Surkhov[1] is, well, give it a read, a well spent five minutes. Make of it what you will.
[0] http://www.bewilderingstories.com/issue582/without_sky.html
[1] https://londonpolitica.com/europe-watch-blog-list/vladislav-...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We_(novel) - Written by a Russian. Allegedly inspired Orwell.
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5450488.Bryn_Hammond Bryn Hammond is an Australian woman who writes chiefly about mongols.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imaro Charles Saunders Imaro is one of my top all time reads.
For work that explicitly draws on other cultural backgrounds, Black Leopard Red Wolf by Marlon James is fantastic, and someone else mentioned Nnedi Okorafor, whose whole catalog is great. Ken Liu’s Dandelion Dynasty series is also worth a read.
Or, Xia Jia - start with "The spirit of the fox" for a huli jing shapeshifter in a steampunk world.
https://j-novel.club/series/last-and-first-idol
It's really 3x short stories (~200 pages each) but here's a synopsis for the first:
The story follows Mika Furutsuki's journey to become an idol. [...] After the Monopole Super Flares hit though, humanity is on the decline. Maori still tries to revive her idol friend and ultimately succeeds after 30 years. Mika may no longer human, but that doesn't stop her quest to become the #1 idol.
https://escapepod.org/people/s-b-divya/
Escape Pod had a strong Indian and other overseas author bend under SB Divya’s editorship. Not everything she hosted was non-western, but much was.
I’ll also throw in The Quiltbag by Ashok K Banker. Lightspeed runs plenty of foreign authors:
Written a few years ago from the perspective of an AI child companion.
You'll get a fascinating blend of psychological realism and eastern-euro science fiction, which I find fascinating (it is much more analog/mechanical, and also refreshingly real about scientific progress / knowledge creation vis a vi the human condition).
They are both rather short, also.
Yukikaze and Good luck Yukikaze by Chōhei Kambayashi it ends on a cliffhanger though since the later books did not get translated. https://www.amazon.com/Yukikaze-Chohei-Kambayashi/dp/1421532...
It deals with the invention of discovery of the method of transmission of malaria by Ronald Ross. The novel is set in late-1800s Calcutta.
There is science, conspiracy, and local occult involved in the story.
It is one of the most unique SciFi I have ever read. And Ghosh is not a SciFi writer.