Extra Credit
Besides what you have to read, are you currently face deep in some fun-reading?
Of all the fiction I have read recently, my Postmod faves are:
There, There by Tommy Orange, a novel that weaves Radiohead, Joyce Carol Oates, and Native American cultures together powerfully. It's a mystery around a pow pow in Oakland. It tells stories of displacement - of being exiled from your home and community, forcing you to create new communities of your own, because if you try to return home, there is no there, there. It's gone.
Uzumaki, by Junji Ito, definitely the top Manga that I read this year. I'm relatively new to this genre, so I went with a 2013 classic. It takes place in a Japanese sounding town that has been invaded by spirals. The shape, in Postmodernist Magical Realist style, becomes a fixation, then a menace that deforms the entire community. Nobody raises an eyebrow even though people are bending themselves into spirals or growing new body parts shaped as spirals. It is a deeply unsettling tale. I couldn't sleep for a while after I finished it.
"I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream" by Harlan Ellison, an old short story from 1967 that was pitched to me on YouTube as the most optimistic post-apocalyptic story of humanity ever. The singularity has occurred, and the new master of the cosmos is "AM," an artificial intelligence that HATES humanity. AM takes it out on the few remaining people left. This is a smorgasbord of Postmodern treats.
The Murderbot Diaries, by Martha Wells, the most fun I had with a book series. These are hilarious Postmodern romps through the psyche of a "murderbot" who swears it/she/he/they have no human qualities, then proceeds to demonstrate more humanity than any of the homo sapiens in the story. This is the perfect blend of Postmodern paranoia, black humor, and parody.

I finally finished the "Wheel of Time" series. Hey, it's 14 books. Thanks, KB! I really needed to know how Robert Jordan's The Eye of the World was going to resolve! It's a postmodern blend of fantasy, gritty reality, futuristic dystopia, and folksy love stories. Fabulism was where my postmodern heart was right then...
I also read The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store, by James McBride. This is a mash-up of secret lives, secret wells, and generational joy. I'm still not over the ending. Thank you, Monkey Pants. IYKYK.

Last year I read The Water Dancer, by Ta-Nehisi Coates. He's a well-known nonfiction writer, but this book is a Postmodernist paella of temporal distortion, historiographic metafiction, hyperreality, and black humor. This has magic, Harriet Tubman, and some of the most beautiful prose I have read.

Another book I recently read, coincidentally similar in setting, is The Underground Railroad, by Colson Whitehead. This one does with the legends surrounding America's Underground Railroad what Quentin Tarantino does with the Manson murders in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. It's part gritty history, part fabulism, lots of wish-fulfillment, and all terrific.

Superpurplepoo 5th Period
I have been recently reading the second book to a series that I started last summer. The book is called House of Sky and Breath by Sarah J. Maas. I love this author so much. She is one of the best YA/fantasy authors that I have read. Her writing is very detailed and refined in such a way that makes it seem as if she is writing for adults rather than young people. This book however is filled with endless amounts of postmodern elements. I see a lot of fragmentation in the storyline in which the author will stop a storyline and switch to another storyline. I usually do not like when writers do this as it can make the story seem jumpy, however, her use of transitions and interesting plots make them seem necessary. The magical realism that takes place in this book is out of this world. I mean come on how are you not gonna appreciate the power that a human has to cause the world to crumble and fall or prosper just as the hands of the main character.
The amount of satisfaction I get from reading this book is insane. The main character's universally chaotic world is often subdued by her inner emotions and friends. Seeing her deal with many problems I see today in society (i.e. drugs, anxiety, isolation, etc.) is a hard topic to touch on but Maas does it without crossing boundaries. These types of books are the ones that will stay in my mind for a long time.
This is the book. I highly highly highly recommend. The first book is also really good.