In case you are interested in a recent example, I wrote an NIO.2 based Riak 
client in Clojure without Netty.
https://github.com/bluemont/kria

It uses callback functions, so the consumer can do whatever they want; such 
as core.async.

I agree with Timothy, above. My take-away from the experience is that 
core.async does not need to be *baked into* a library. It is better if it 
is not; for testing the library, I use 
atoms: 
https://github.com/bluemont/kria/blob/master/test/kria/test_helpers.clj#L45

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