My curiosity about underrepresented mythologies has led me down some odd rabbit
Holes, and when I look for novels that center a Nubian goddess as the protagonist I hit a wall of rarity—but that gap tells its own story.
The best-known literary work that sometimes gets pulled into this conversation is H. Rider Haggard’s 'She'. Its heroine, Ayesha, is an immortal, quasi-divine ruler of a lost African kingdom; readers and critics have long debated whether she’s meant to evoke Egyptian, Nubian, or purely fantastical archetypes. It’s colonial-era fantasy, so take it with a grain of salt: fascinating in concept but tangled in Victorian attitudes. Beyond that, mainstream fantasy usually leans on pan-Egyptian gods or on broadly West/
East African-inspired deities, rather than explicitly Kushite/Nubian goddesses.
If you want a deeper, more accurate dive, I’d chase out-of-print short fiction, indie novels, and scholarly retellings that focus on Kushite deities like Amesemi (a real Nubian goddess) or on historical kandakes (queens such as Amanirenas). Museums, journal essays, and specialty presses sometimes publish poetic or novelesque reinterpretations that never hit big shelves. Personally, I’d love to see modern fantasy authors give Amesemi or another Nubian goddess the full protagonist treatment—there’s so much rich iconography and history begging for a soulful, powerful retelling.