To Be Translated

These works of speculative fiction need to be translated into English. Translators, you know what to do!


French

Mon frère l’ombre (Tyranaël 3) (1997) by Élisabeth Vonarburg

The third volume of Élisabeth Vonarburg’s grand saga: Tyranaël. The inhabitants of Virginia have had no contact with Earth for centuries. In the cities and villages of the main continent, a new order and an apparent peace prevail. Yet this in no way precludes the existence of ghettos where “Stoneheads”—descendants of the Earthlings who long ago attempted to reconquer the planet—struggle to survive. Mathieu, who believes himself to be one of them, has escaped from a “School” where he was held captive and drugged. Feigning amnesia, he manages to integrate himself into this Virginian society—a place where, he hopes, he will finally come to understand why he was treated in such a manner. His relentless quest leads him to take sides in the secret war that has pitted two factions of mutants—the “Greys” and the “Rebbims”—against one another for centuries, and, above all, to discover the bridge leading to the world of the Ancients…

L’autre rivage (Tyranaël 4) (1997) by Élisabeth Vonarburg

The fourth volume in the *Tyranaël* series. The adventures continue… Since Mathieu crossed over into the world of the Ancients two centuries ago, many Virginians have followed in his footsteps. Yet while the two races have intermingled, their descendants—over the course of generations—have lost their psychic faculties. Such is the case with young Lian, much to his mother’s despair; for to a Rani, there is no greater tragedy than to be forever cut off from the Sea. For Lian, however, the true misfortune lies in feeling alienated from a society he cherishes above all else. Would he be better off on the other side—on Virginia? But until now, the passage has always been a one-way journey…

La Mer allée avec le soleil (Tyranaël 5) (1997) by Élisabeth Vonarburg

*The Sea Gone with the Sun*: the astonishing conclusion—and the resolution to every enigma—of a grandiose saga: that of Tyranaël. After centuries of conflict, peace finally reigns over Virginia, and—thanks to the Sea—communication is now possible with Atyrkelsaõ and the people of the Ancients. The granddaughter of a “Crosser” who arrived from the Other Side, Taïriel has nonetheless never manifested any powers and plans to go into exile aboard the Lagrange orbital station. However, a brief affair with Samuel—a young telepath with a mysterious past—will upend her plans for the future. Who is he, really? What connection exists between him and Ktulhudar, the legendary demigod of the Ancients? And why does Taïriel suddenly begin experiencing these “absences”—these “waking dreams” that leave her drained of strength and horrified by the violence of the visions?


Korean

A Broken Bridge (2019) by Cheon Seon-Ran

A nuclear rocket falls onto the US continent, eventually making it unlivable for any beings. Androids are sent to cleanse the contaminated area, and there they make their independent advancement. The main character, “Ain,” was a former astronomer who lost his body to an accident and put his brain into an android. Won the excellence prize for full-length novels at the 7th SF Awards 2020.


Dutch

The Future of Yesterday (1972) by Harry Mulisch

A justification for an unwritten novel about Europe after 1945, following a German victory during the Second World War.

[read M. O. Orthofer’s review here]


Hebrew

Chelm – A Tale of One City (2023) by Yaniv Hagbi

Chelm. We see only its broad back, unable to discern where its gaze is directed. Chelm is a city unlike all others, for beyond it lies nothing: it physically separates us from the void. Chelm is known in Jewish folklore as a city of fools. But the truth of Chelm is much darker—its inhabitants harbor an ancient and fearsome metaphysical wisdom beneath a facade of folly. If we dare to look directly at this wisdom, we risk being blinded. Yaniv Hagbi’s novel weaves the stories of Chelm into a dizzying plot. It focuses on the tale of the son of the Chelm blacksmith, who seeks to save his soul from the city’s grotesque logic. He is exiled to the neighboring city of Z, where logic and practical reasoning prevail. But the city of Z cannot endure life alongside the spiraling spectacle of folly for long, and the blacksmith’s son is forced to return to Chelm one last time— this time as the leader of Z’s inhabitants, to fight against his birthplace and destroy it.

Frost (Rose of Judea #1) (2010) by Shimon Adaf (Kinneret, Zmora-Bitan)

In five hundred years’ time, in Tel Aviv, a number of Jewish religious seminary students begin showing signs of mysterious body changes. A genius in Torah and science, Yehezkel Ben Grim is rushed to the scene, asked to diagnose the strange disease and find a cure. In his search for a remedy, he travels to the lands of the Gentiles, and when he returns to Tel Aviv he is followed by a young Gentile woman who clings to him like a shadow. Meanwhile, the works of an anonymous poet are heard in the city and he is denounced as a rebel, for poetry is forbidden to those who have not been ordained as poets. The investigation into the poet’s identity and the arrival of the Gentile woman in Tel Aviv undermine the stability of the city and seal the fate of many characters in the story.

Mox Nox (Rose of Judea #2) by Shimon Adaf

In this novel, Adaf deals with major issues in contemporary Israeli experience: secularism and religion, outlying areas versus the center of the country, authenticity and puritanism versus the phony and debauched. And as always with Shimon Adaf, the fantastic permeates reality and undermines it.

About the Undercities (Rose of Judea #3) by Shimon Adaf

During a stay in Berlin, a young Israeli – the narrator – sees a symbol that makes him feel anxious and he decides to look into its history. At the same time, we meet a brother and sister, Tveria and Akko Asido, whose childhood and adolescence are marked by their father’s attraction to an unknown, occult Jewish belief. Between the narrator’s story and that of the two siblings, the reader is led to make certain connections, leading to possible answers, but they are not accessible to the characters. This is a mesmerizing novel about a passion to understand the world, and about the distortions that are bound up with that passion. Like all great tragedies, it grows out of the most important questions: Are we doomed to take on an identity that has come down to us through family heredity, even though it is clear to us that certain aspects are flawed or coincidental? Or should we try to develop an identity based on an alternative system offered to us by human culture?


Hungarian SF


Italian SF [click here for more]

 



Spanish SF

 


Bulgarian

Worm in an Autumn Wind by Valentin Ivanov

Fantastika 2009, ed. Atanas P. Slavov and Lakin Nenov

The Kindness Factor by Kancho Kozhuharov


Chinese

My Homeland Does Not Dream by Han Song

2066: Red Star Over America (2000) by Han Song

Red Ocean (2004) by Han Song

Subway (2010) by Han Song

Cheng Jingbo

Crane Iron Pentalogy by Wang Dulu (1938 to 1942)


Czech

Express Train 24.12 by Jan Poláček

The Masters of the Universe, ed, Ivan Adamovic

Labyrinth by Pavel Rensin

Black Frost by Stepan Kopriva

Capricorn 70 anthology, edited by Robert Pilch

Mycelium by Vilma Kadlečková

Last Watch by Tomáš Petrášek

Konstantyn’s Effect by Karolina Francová

Puzzle by Chaim Cigan

The Listener by Petra Stehlíková

Atschul’s Method by Karol Efraim Sidon


Danish

Mount Copenhagen by Kaspar Colling Nielsen

Marskens Konge by Alex Uth

De underjordiske by Thomas Stromsholt

Drommetid by Richard Ipsen

Diget by Teddy Vork


Finnish

En tunne sinua vierelläni (I don’t feel you beside me) (Teos, 2010) by Tiina Raevaara

The Explorer and Other Stories (1999) by Jyrki Vainonen

Pimeä maa (Out of the Land of Darkness) (1995) by Maarit Verronen

Bright and Clear by Maarit Verronen

Dream Releaser Florian by Jani Saxell


Flemish

The Straggler by Yves Petry


French

Plaguers by Jeanne A. Debats

Druid by Olivier Peru

Forets Noires by Roman Verger

Rosee de feu by Xavier Maumejean

Janua Vera by Jean-Philippe Jaworski

Gagner la guerre by Jean-Philippe Jaworski

Sacra 1 and 2 by Léa Silhol

Latium by Romain Lucazeau

Les Nefs de Pangée by Christian Chavassieu

Dans les veines by Morgane Caussarieu

Je suis ton ombre by Morgane Caussarieu

Rivage des intouchables by Francis Berthelot

La saga d’Illyge by Sylvie Bérard

Rêves de Gloire by Roland C. Wagner’s

Le Goût de l’immortalité by Catherine Dufour

La Horde du Contrevent by Alain Damasio

Le Rituel du mépris by Antoine Volodine

Laurent Genefort’s Omale books

Ayerdhal and Jean-Claude Dunyach’s Étoiles mourantes

Suprématie by Laurent McAllister

L’homme a rebours by Philippe Curval

Le ressac de l’espace by Philippe Curval


German

Schatten über Fraterna by Andreas Hesse

Schaumschwester by Thor Kunkel

Hinterland, ed. Karla Schmidt

Ende der Nacht by Ralph Doege


Hebrew

Vered Tochterman

Sequoia Children by Gon Ben-Ari

Mesopotamia—Silence of the Stars by Yehuda Israely and Dor Raveh

Herzl Said by Yoav Avni

Demons in Agripas Street by Hagay Dagan

Every Story Is a Sudden Cat by Gabriela Avigur-Rotem

Broken Skies by Keren Landsman

Tzong Li’s Fifth by Yoav Avni

Hydromania by Asaf Givron

Eshtonot (The Book of Disorder) by Ofir Touché Gafla

Etsba’ot shel pesantran (Piano Fingers) by Yali Sobol

Alma by Roni Eshkol

Kesheha-meitim hazru (When the Dead Returned) by Ilan Sheinfeld


Japanese

Moribito novels (3-10) by Nahoko Uehashi

Unbroken Arrow (final book in Yukikaze trilogy) by

more from Noriko Ogiwara’s Magatama trilogy

治療塔 by Ōe Kenzaburō


Korean

The Big Wolf Blue by Yun I-Hyeong

Love Replica by Yun I-Hyeong


Maori

The Chronicles of Rehua by Katerina Te Heikoko Mataira


Norwegian

Terms of Life by Ingeborg Arvola


Polish

Uprawa roślin południowych metodą Miczurina (Growing Southern Plants the Michurin Way) by Weronika Murek (Wydawnictwo Czarne, 2015)

“Wody głębokie jak niebo” (Waters as deep as the sea) by Anna Brzezińska

Extensa by Jacek Dukaj

Inne Pieśni by Jacek Dukaj

Vertical by Rafał Kosik

Holocaust F by Cezary Zbierzchowski

Perfekcyjna niedoskonałość by Jacek Dukaj

Limes inferior by Janusz A. Zajdel


Portuguese

Cristina Lasaitis

Liquid Paradise by Luiz Bras

Guerra Justa by Carlos Orsi

Cyber Brasiliana by Richard Diegues

Varadero y Habana maravillosa by Hernán Vanoli (Caballo de Troya, 2011)

—- Pinamar (Interzona, 2010)

—- Castores (Random, 2013)

La Construccion by Carlos Godoy

Kryptonita by Leonardo Oyola

Plop by Rafael Pinedo

El loro que podía adivinar el futuro by Luciano Lamberti (Nudista, 2012)

Fade Out by Tatiana Goransky

El jardin de las maquinas parlantes by Laiseca

Algazarra by Santiago Santos


Romanian

Marian Coman

Michael Haulica


Russian

Wolfhound by Maria Semyonova


Spanish (Chile)

Elena Aldunate

Juana y la cibernética” [Juana and the Cybernetic] (1963)

El señor de las mariposas [The Lord of the Butterflies] (1967)

Angélica y el delfín [Angélica and the Dolphin] (1976)

Del cosmos las quieren vírgenes [The Cosmos Wants Them to Be Virgins] (1977).


Spanish (Cuba)

Daína Chaviano

Los mundos que amo [The Worlds that I Love] (1979)

El abrevadero de los dinosaurios [Dinosaur Trough] (1980)

Amoroso planeta [Loving Planet] (1983)

Historias de hadas para adultos [Fairytales for Adults] (1986)

Fábulas de una abuela extraterrestre [Fables from an Alien Grandmother] (1989)

El hombre, la hembra, y el hambre [Man, Woman, and Hunger] (1998)

País de dragones [Country of Dragons] (2001)

Extraños testimonios [Strange testimonies] (2017)


Spanish (Spain)

Rafael Marin

Akasa-Puspa series


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