FIYAH Magazine Of Black Speculative Fiction
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''FIYAH Magazine of Black Speculative Fiction'' is an American-based quarterly electronic magazine of Black speculative fiction. Also referred to as ''FIYAH'', the magazine was announced in September 2016, inspired by the 1920s experimental periodical ''FIRE!'' created by Wallace Thurman. It was developed by a group of writers led by Troy L. Wiggins, L.D. Lewis, and Justina Ireland. The first edition of the magazine was published in 2017. ''FIYAH'' has been nominated for the Best Semi-Prozine Hugo Award five times, most recently in 2023, and it won the Hugo Award for Best Semi-Prozine in 2021.


Publication history

Announced in 2016, ''FIYAH Literary Magazine'' was inspired by ''
Fire!! ''Fire!!'' was an African-American literary magazine published in New York City in 1926 during the Harlem Renaissance. The publication was started by Wallace Thurman, Zora Neale Hurston, Aaron Douglas, John P. Davis, Richard Bruce Nugent, Gwen ...
'', an African-American literary magazine created by Wallace Thurman in the 1920s. The expressed goal of ''FIYAH'' was to create a publishing space for Black science fiction and fantasy (SFF) writers, who had been marginalized out of the mainstream SFF market. Seeking work by both native and diasporic Africans "that reject regressive ideas of blackness, respectability politics, and stereotype," ''FIYAH'' was developed by a group of writers led by Troy L. Wiggins and L.D. Lewis, as well as Justina Ireland, the magazine's first editor. The first edition of the magazine was published in 2017. Produced quarterly, 25 issues had been released as of February 2023. Items published include prose stories, essays and poetry, and many of the issues are themed (e.g. "Hair", "Chains", "Haunting and Horrors", "Food and Cuisine", and "Palestinian Solidarity"). While the magazine originally compensated authors with flat rates, in 2020 ''FIYAH'' began paying $.08 per word, considered a "professional" rate by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association. 2020 was also the year ''FIYAH'' saw a dramatic increase in readership: subscriptions rose from 204 in 2019 to 1,769, continuing to rise through 2021 with 2,122 subscribers. The trend reversed, however, in 2022 with subscriptions plummeting to 1,115 subscribers, in part reflecting a genre-wide recession.


Reception

By 2018, ''FIYAH'' had already distinguished itself as a magazine of notable quality: six of the 17 stories published that year were on '' Locus Magazine's'' recommended reading list, one of the highest ratios of any SFF magazine, professional or otherwise. FIYAH has maintained this record throughout its publication, with seven of 24 stories making the recommended list in 2021, and five of 19 getting recommended in 2022. Tade Thompson's "Yard Dog", which appeared in the Summer 2018 issue, was anthologized in ''The Best Science Fiction & Fantasy of the Year: Volume Thirteen'' in 2019.


Related projects

In 2017, the magazine launched its Presence of Blackness Score Project to track the progress of short SFF markets in improving their accessibility to and publication of Black authors. In 2020, ''FIYAH'' produced the inaugural FIYAHCON, a virtual convention held 17-18 October to "celebrate the perspectives and contributions of BIPOC in speculative fiction". ''FIYAH'' also created the
Ignyte Awards The Ignyte Awards are an annual literary award for the best science fiction, fantasy, and horror works and achievements of the previous year. Established in 2020 by writers L. D. Lewis and Suzan Palumbo Suzan may refer to: * Suzan, Iran (disam ...
to celebrate efforts towards inclusion and diversity within speculative fiction, the first 15 of which were awarded at FIYAHCON. A second virtual FIYAHCON was held 18-19 September, 2021, at which a second round of Ignyte Award winners was announced. In 2022, the third round of Ignyte Awards were given at a dedicated ceremony hosted by Brett Lambert on 17 September. In August 2020, Tor.com announced the production of an SFF flash fiction anthology by Black authors in collaboration with ''FIYAH''. Called ''Breathe FIYAH'', it was co-edited by Lambert and DaVaun Sanders and released for free on the Tor.com website in October 2020. In 2022, ''FIYAH'', Tor.com, and the
LeVar Burton Reads ''LeVar Burton Reads'' is a podcast hosted by LeVar Burton, where he reads a piece of short fiction and shares his thoughts on it. Reception ''LeVar Burton Reads'' has been well received by both ''USA Today'' and ''The New Yorker''. The podc ...
podcast collaborated in producing an "Origins and Encounters"-themed SFF contest. Three finalist short stories were selected for publication on the Tor.com site.


Awards

The 2018
World Fantasy Special Award—Non-professional The World Fantasy Awards are given each year by the World Fantasy Convention for the best fantasy fiction and art published in English during the preceding calendar year. The awards have been described by sources such as ''The Guardian'' as a "pre ...
was awarded to Ireland and Wiggins for their work on the ''FIYAH''. The same year, Issue No. 1 cover artist Geneva Barton won the Hugo Award for Best Fan Artist. The magazine has been nominated every year since 2019 for the Hugo Award for Best Semiprozine, winning in 2021.2020 Hugo Awards
at TheHugoAwards.org; retrieved November 22, 2021
2021 Hugo Awards
at TheHugoAwards.org; retrieved November 22, 2021
In 2022, the following staff were listed as co-finalists: *Publisher Troy L Wiggins *Executive editor DaVaun Sanders *Managing editor Eboni Dunbar *Poetry editor B. Sharise Moore *Reviews editor and social media manager Brent Lambert *Art director L. D. Lewis *Web editor Chavonne Brown *Non-fiction editor Margeaux Weston *Guest editors Summer Farah and Nadia Shammas *Acquiring editors Kaleb Russell, Rebecca McGee, Kerine Wint, Joshua Morley, Emmalia Harrington, Genine Tyson, Tonya R. Moore, Danny Lore *Technical assistant Nelson Rolon


See also

* List of science fiction magazines *
List of literary magazines A ''list'' is any set of items in a row. List or lists may also refer to: People * List (surname) Organizations * List College, an undergraduate division of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America * SC Germania List, German rugby union ...


References


External links


Official website
{{CurrentAmericanSFMagazines Speculative fiction magazines published in the United States Science fiction magazines published in the United States Speculative fiction websites Hugo Award-winning works Mass media companies established in 2016 African-American magazines