"Speculative Wests projects two very convincing points. The first is the most intuitive: the western is a productive playground for storytellers from surprisingly disparate genres. The second is the more revelatory: "speculative" westerns and other intersecting genres provide a new discerning lens through which to view western history and the contemporary West. They offer surprising insights, and Johnson's analysis demonstrates that cultural historians are not the only ones who should be engaging with them."—Brenden W. Rensink, Western Historical Quarterly
"Speculative Wests proves what Jacques Derrida knew about genre, that one can use it, inhabit it, and play with it precisely because one can participate without belonging totally inside it."—Neil Campbell, Western American Literature
"This book will be of interest to readers from genre studies and beyond, notably those from ecocriticism, migration studies, Black studies, Indigenous studies, and even trauma studies."—Adrianna Michell, H-Environment
"Johnson manages to give form, and conceptual cohesion to what most current criticism has only examined in studies with a narrower focus. For this, scholars and readers of westerns, science fiction, and speculative fiction, owe him a debt of gratitude."—Christopher Conway, Journal of Popular Culture
"Johnson's book is eye-opening and could be useful for writers or readers who want to be challenged by perspectives on Western fiction that they might not have previously considered."—Jeffrey J. Mariotte, Roundup Magazine
"Speculative Wests should strongly appeal to graduate students and professional scholars studying the West or race and ethnicity in popular culture more generally—and, in doing so, it will provide them with a wealth of primary and secondary sources to pursue."—Travis Franks, Montana: The Magazine of Western History
“Michael K. Johnson’s Speculative Wests has a unique feel in its cogent analysis of the western motif in recent speculative fiction written by BIPOC authors between 2016 and 2020. He reinvigorates frontier mythology with politically charged genre critiques regarding time travel, alternate history, and future wars linked to the American West and its history.”—Isiah Lavender III, author of Race in American Science Fiction and Afrofuturism Rising: The Literary Prehistory of a Movement
“A timely and astute study that enlarges our understanding of U.S. ethnic futurisms through conceptualizing ‘speculative westerns’: new hybridized forms suturing the western and speculative genres. Through incisive close readings, Michael K. Johnson charts alternative spatial and temporal trajectories of the American West and U.S.-Mexico borderlands.”—Cathryn J. Merla-Watson, coeditor of Altermundos: Latin@ Speculative Literature, Film, and Popular Culture
“The deft analysis of race as it intersects with and challenges genre traditions—the western and speculative fiction—makes this an extremely timely and important book.”—Sara L. Spurgeon, author of Exploding the Western: Myths of Empire on the Postmodern Frontier
“By looking at speculative wests that ‘disrupt’ authenticity and truth claims latent in the mythos of the western, this book provides another example of the contemporary relevance of the western as part of a hybrid genre that enables meditations on past, present, and future.”—Rebecca M. Lush, professor of literature and writing studies at California State University–San Marcos