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Zumas, Leni

(1972-    ) US academic and author whose first book, Farewell Navigator: Stories (coll 2008), contains relatively few outright examples of Fantastika but (see Postmodernism and SF) often admixes an almost suburban mundanity with prescient flashes of the exorbitance of the world. Her first novel The Listeners (2012) slightly less successfully conflates elements of Horror in SF with the disintegrating psyche of a rock star in crisis, with the conventions of the latter mode controlling the mix. Zumas is of specific sf interest for Red Clocks (2018), set in a Dystopian Near Future America where the overwhelming power of Christian fundamentalism (see Religion; Women in SF) has led to the sexual repression of women. Necessary echoes of Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale (1985) have been noted, though the Oregon world here depicted, though unremarkably tied to the central premise, is marginally less prison-like: a "Pink Wall" has been built, all the same, to prevent females from escaping to Canada. [JC]

Leni Zumas

born Washington, District of Columbia: 1972

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Entry from The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (2011-current) edited by John Clute and David Langford.
Accessed 02:55 am on 27 July 2024.
<https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/zumas_leni>