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Archive for 2016

Book Club: The Gilda Stories by Jewelle Gomez

TheGildaStories

Each year, Sirens chair Amy Tenbrink posts monthly reviews of new-to-her books from the annual Sirens reading list. You can find all of her Sirens Book Club reviews at the Sirens Goodreads Group. We invite you to read along and discuss!

In 2009, on the very first evening of the very first Sirens, Tamora Pierce presented our very first Guest of Honor keynote address. And for more than three hours – long after many of the East Coast Sirens attendees went reluctantly to bed – Tammy regaled Sirens with her personal history of women in feminist fantasy literature: books and authors that she loved and that had changed her perspectives as a writer.

I often think that, were I do give my version of Tammy’s speech, my personal history of women in feminist fantasy literature would start, with few exceptions, around the year 2000. I read young-readers fantasy as a kid: Mary Poppins, Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle, The Wizard of Oz. I encountered Narnia in junior high, stubbornly plowed my way through Tolkien in high school, and then more or less abandoned fantasy until after law school. I missed Tammy’s work for decades – not to mention the work of pretty much every other woman who published fantasy books before, give or take, the year 2000. I came back to fantasy through YA: Harry Potter, Tithe, and Tammy’s later work.

But it’s interesting, isn’t it? How reader preferences change over time? How reader expectations change over time? I am rather well-read in the women-in-fantasy space post-2000. I read widely, voraciously, across subgenres and categories. But I still haven’t gone back to pick up many of those fantasy works publishing prior to 2000. Which is challenging because, as any historian will tell you, how can you possibly understand where we are if you don’t understand where we were?

In 1991, most of the published fantasy works by women were high fantasy adventures, often with quasi-romance covers, about white heroines, with white male lovers, in often exclusively white fantasy worlds. And in 1991, Jewelle Gomez didn’t just storm into a breach in that history: she created an incredibly wide breach of her own.

The Gilda Stories features a protagonist that is black, a lesbian, and a vampire. It depicts slavery. It addresses racism and homophobia. It is unrepentantly feminist. It has a profound, prominent theme of found family. As Gomez explains, the book was rejected over and over again, including by a publisher who stated: “The character is black. She’s a lesbian. And she’s a vampire. That’s too complicated.”

I believe – and often proclaim at Sirens – that the very best thing about fantasy literature is the opportunity to create a world that addresses all the exclusionary issues so prevalent in our own: to allow women to rule, to allow lesbians to love, to allow heroes to have brown faces, to allow a variety of strengths and ambitions and powers. To center a novel around a black, lesbian vampire. And yet, Gomez says, “In the first round with Gilda, I had to convince people that it was a legitimate genre for me to use for the stories I had to tell.”

So let me tell you a bit about Gilda, in the hopes that you’ll add it to your own personal history of feminist fantasy literature:

Gilda opens in Louisiana in 1850. Our then-unnamed protagonist is found, having killed a man who tried to rape her, by Gilda: a powerful woman who runs a brothel. Our protagonist goes to work in the brothel, not as a sex worker, but as a sort of Girl Friday, doing odd jobs. She forms a powerful relationship both with Gilda and Bird, Gilda’s Native American lieutenant and lover. Not to give too much away, but Gilda and Bird are vampires and turn our protagonist into a vampire as well – almost simultaneously with Gilda’s deciding that she’s finished with life. She commits suicide, and somewhat strangely, our protagonist takes her name.

Gilda is told linearly, but not consecutively: a series of stories that depict Gilda’s unending life across both two centuries and much of the United States: from Louisiana to California to Missouri to New York City to New Mexico. Along the way, Gilda struggles to figure out, well, life – and the irony of a vampire figuring out life is half the beauty of the conceit. How to find family when you’re immortal? How to love? How to kill? Whether to bring anyone else into the vampire life? How to move past regret? What she hopes for the future? How to be something “other” in a world that values homogeny?

Where Gilda stumbles is the writing. While Gilda’s story is fundamentally fascinating – her hard-won wisdom, her evolution, her assembling her family – it’s hard to connect with Gilda. The book keeps the reader at a distance, often telling rather than showing, and sometimes moving at snail’s pace while we spend pages wrapped in Gilda’s head. The book could have used a stronger editing hand, to address both the aforementioned issues, but also to clean up the text: for example, almost every character in the book is a woman, and the feminine pronouns often lead to reader confusion.

But none of that diminishes Gilda’s place in the history of feminist fantasy literature: its profoundly intersectional approach twenty-five years ago. What do you think? Will you add it to your personal history of feminist fantasy literature?

Amy

 

Amy Tenbrink spends her days handling content distribution and intellectual property transactions for an entertainment company. Her nights and weekends over the last twenty years have involved managing a wide variety of events, including theatrical productions, marching band shows, sporting events, and interdisciplinary conferences. Most recently, she has organized three Harry Potter conferences (The Witching Hour, in Salem, Massachusetts; Phoenix Rising, in the French Quarter of New Orleans; and Terminus, in downtown Chicago) and six years of Sirens. Her experience includes all aspects of event planning, from logistics and marketing to legal consulting and budget management, and she holds degrees with honors from both the University of Southern California’s Thornton School of Music and the Georgetown University Law Center. She likes nothing so much as monster girls, Weasleys, and a well-planned revolution.

 

February Recap: Book Releases and Interesting Links

We’re excited to bring you a roundup of interesting links and February book releases of fantasy by and about women.

As always, we’d love to hear from you. If you’ve sold a fantasy work, read a great recently-released story, discovered a fantastic link that we missed, or if you’ve got a book or story review to share, please get in touch. Send news to (help at sirensconference.org).

 

YOU’RE EXCITED ABOUT…

Interesting Links:

 
Book Releases

2016FebruaryCollage

Click the image for a closer look at the covers.

February 1:
Baker’s Magic, Diane Zahler
The Sapphire Cutlass, Sharon Gosling

February 2:
Assassin’s Heart, Sarah Ahiers
A Criminal Magic, Lee Kelly
Games Wizards Play, Diane Duane
The Guardian Herd: Landfall, Jennifer Lynn Alvarez
Kingfisher, Patricia A. McKillip
Revenge and the Wild, Michelle Modesto
Unhooked, Lisa Maxwell

February 9:
The Abyss Surrounds Us, Emily Skrutskie
Blackhearts, Nicole Castroman
Bloom, Doreen Cronin, ill. David Small
The Extincts, Veronica Cossanteli, Roman Muradov
Fridays with the Wizards, Jessica Day George
Glass Sword, Victoria Aveyard
The Princess in Black and the Hungry Bunny Horde, Shannon Hale, Dean Hale, ill. LeUyen Pham
Ravenous, MarcyKate Connolly
Reign of Shadows, Sophie Jordan
These Vicious Masks, Tarun Shanker, Kelly Zekas
The Witches of Cambridge, Menna van Praag

February 16:
The Circle of Lies, Crystal Velasquez
The Girl From Everywhere, Heidi Heilig
The Immortals, Jordanna Max Brodsky
Riders, Veronica Rossi
The Shadow Queen, C. J. Redwine

February 23:
A Gathering of Shadows, V. E. Schwab
Behold the Bones, Natalie C. Parker
The Dastardly Deed, Holly Grant, ill. Josie Portillo
Dreamfever, Kit Alloway
Firstlife, Gena Showalter
The Forbidden Wish, Jessica Khoury
The Key to Extraordinary, Natalie Lloyd
Kingdom of Ashes, Rhiannon Thomas
Longbow Girl, Linda Davies
Titans, Victoria Scott

 

The Effect of Sirens Scholarships

By Gillian C. (@gnomes_g)

Receiving a scholarship to attend Sirens last year meant so much to me: I’m a grad student, and I live on a very small income. I have to plan very carefully to be able to afford any travel, and the scholarship made all of the difference for me. I look forward to Sirens all year, and it was a weight off my mind to know that I could go without having to worry as much about the cost.
 

Sirens Meet-Up: New York City

Once a year just isn’t enough, right? While nothing will replace the awesomeness of four days of Sirens in October, we thought some tea in New York City—and later some whiskey in Denver—might be a nice way for the Sirens community to connect in the meantime. Want to join us?

We’re hosting two casual get-togethers for the Sirens community—and you need not have attended Sirens in the past to join us. Are you new and curious? Heard of us but haven’t made it to Sirens yet? Wondering if our community is for you? Come on down! And bring your book recommendations, your friends, and your questions about Sirens.

New York City
Date: Sunday, May 22, 2016
Time: 2:00–4:00 p.m. Eastern Time
Location: Tentatively Radiance at 158 West 55th Street, NY between 6th & 7th Avenue –depending on how many people RSVP

Notes: Participants must pay for their own tea and afternoon snacks. And our Denver gathering will be later this summer, in July or August.

If you think you might join us, please RSVP to either @sirens_con on Twitter, here on Facebook, or to Faye at (faye.bi at sirensconference.org).

We can’t wait to see some new and familiar faces!
 

The Inclusiveness of Sirens Scholarships

By Shveta Thakrar (@ShvetaThakrar)

Sirens is a conference that means so much to me. I love fantasy, I love intersectional feminism, I love enchantment and wonder and ideas. Sirens has all these things. It is a place where people can go to discuss being queer, being brown, being disabled, being neuroatypical, being a woman or a nonbinary person in fantasy literature—all within a framework that actively seeks to include voices traditionally shut out or even silenced elsewhere.

But Sirens is also just plain fun. It’s a place to celebrate with fellow fans. People who love unicorns and nagas and epic series get together to geek out over the use of language and fashion in books, host workshops on fencing and sewing, trade book and author recommendations while wearing gorgeous costumes. They drink tea and laugh and make friends. They form community.

Not everyone can afford to attend, however, and I can say that Sirens really does make an effort to help ease the financial burden for those who wouldn’t otherwise be able to take part by providing scholarships. But it needs donations to do that. If you can, would you consider contributing toward a scholarship to allow another voice to be heard?
 

Sirens Newsletter – Volume 8, Issue 2 (May 2016)

In this issue:

 

WE’RE BACK!
Dear Sirens,

We’re so happy to be back and at it for Sirens 2016—and we welcome you to another full year of great books to read, heated debates to have, and brilliant people to meet. To get started, check out our Mission Post for this year, and find out more about the 2016 theme, lovers. And don’t forget, here are some important announcements with fast-approaching deadlines!

 

PROGRAMMING DEADLINE—MAY 9
Most programming for Sirens is conceived and presented by attendees. You create it, you propose it, and—when approved by our vetting board—you present it. That means we’d love to hear from you! There’s no requirement to become a presenter; anyone and everyone is welcome to propose and present programming.

Check out our Annual Programming Series (here’s Part One), our list of #SirensBrainstorm topics on Twitter, free for the taking, and everything you need to know on our Programming and Proposals pages on the Sirens website. The deadline for proposals is May 9, 2016.

 

SCHOLARSHIPS
Last year, the Sirens community raised almost $2,500 to help people of color, presenters, and those with financial hardships attend Sirens. In-person attendance requires funds—which means that not everyone who wishes to is able to join us. Their absence makes both our conference and our community less vibrant. At the time of this newsletter, we’re almost to 60% of our goal, more than halfway there! And if you’re wondering if Sirens scholarships make a difference, please read what Lisa M. Bradley, a 2015 scholarship recipient, has to say.
 

We’re accepting donations until May 9, 2016. Will you donate to help welcome more voices to Sirens?

 

AMY’S BOOK CLUB

TheGirlFromEverywhere

What is Sirens co-founder Amy Tenbrink reading this month? Check out her review of Heidi Heilig’s The Girl From Everywhere over on Goodreads. “Read it for: the world-building and the wonderfully diverse characters and the last act…You can totally read this as a stand-alone and be perfectly happy.”

 

READ ALONG WITH FAYE

Elysium

Introducing Read Along with Faye, a new series in which Sirens staff member Faye Bi reads her way through the 2016 Reading Challenge. First up, Jennifer Marie Brissett’s Elysium, which Faye found “parts emotional rollercoaster, ambitious post-apocalyptic world-building and, ultimately, a saga of love and loss.”

 

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT…

Our Annual Programming Series:

Testimonials:

 


Questions? Concerns? Please email general queries to (help at sirensconference.org) and questions about programming to (programming at sirensconference.org).

 

The Magic of Sirens Scholarships

By Lisa M. Bradley (@cafenowhere)

I’d heard great things about Sirens, but every time I checked the registration page, I thought, “No way can I swing that fee plus room, plus meals, plus flight.” (I didn’t realize how many meals were included in the registration fee!) But when I learned the 2015 theme was rebels and revolutionaries, I knew I had to go. I’ve always felt a bone-deep affinity with rebels.

But if I had to go, I had to get funds. My best bet was to earn a scholarship. While researching for a novel, I’d learned about Sara Estela Ramírez, a Mexican journalist-poet who helped spur the Mexican Revolution while living in exile in Texas. I couldn’t fit her into my novel, but I couldn’t get her out of my mind, either. Sirens seemed the perfect venue for sharing my passion for this all-but-forgotten revolutionary who’d also written fantasy poetry. To my delight, the vetting board approved my proposal and Sirens gave me the hoped-for scholarship.

At the conference, I was warmly welcomed by staff and fellow attendees. Still, I was nervous. What if my topic was too academic? Too regional to attract a wider audience? What if no one came to my presentation?! Happily, my worries were unfounded. I had a small but attentive audience, some of whom scribbled intensely the entire time I talked. People asked questions and offered new insights. Beyond my presentation, I connected with new friends and old, added to my teetering to-be-read pile, attended thought-provoking panels, and tried to absorb all the wisdom offered by the guests of honor. I might also have had a drink or two in the hotel bar.

I am so grateful for the scholarship that enabled me to attend Sirens. The aid demonstrated, in a very concrete way, that my perspective was valued. The conference itself reinforced that message of inclusion. I left invigorated and determined to return to my fellow Sirens.

January Recap: Book Releases and Interesting Links

We’re excited to bring you a roundup of interesting links and January book releases of fantasy by and about women.

As always, we’d love to hear from you. If you’ve sold a fantasy work, read a great recently-released story, discovered a fantastic link that we missed, or if you’ve got a book or story review to share, please get in touch. Send news to (help at sirensconference.org).

 

YOU’RE EXCITED ABOUT…

Interesting Links:

 
Book Releases

2016JanuaryCollage

Click the image for a closer look at the covers.

January 1:
Daughter of Destiny, Nicole Evelina

January 5:
Passenger, Alexandra Bracken
Truthwitch, Susan Dennard
Worlds of Ink and Shadow: A Novel of the Brontës, Lena Coakley
The Impostor Queen, Sarah Fine
The Last Dream Keeper, Amber Benson
Curio, Evangeline Denmark
Mr. Splitfoot, Samantha Hunt
The Night Parade, Kathryn Tanquary
Thief of Lies, Brenda Drake
City of Light, Keri Arthur
The Door by the Staircase, Katherine Marsh ill. Kelly Murphy
Only the Stones Survive, Morgan Llywelyn

January 12:
The Killing Jar, Jennifer Bosworth
The Drowning Eyes, Emily Foster
Traveler, Arwen Elys Dayton

January 16:
On the Meldon Plain, Pam Brondos

January 19:
Burn, Elissa Sussman
The Radiant Road, Katherine Catmull
Sword and Verse, Kathy MacMillan
Feverborn, Karen Marie Moning
Secrets of Valhalla, Jasmine Richards

January 26:
The Blue Line, Ingrid Betancourt
The Evening Spider, Emily Arsenault
The Morrigan’s Curse, Dianne K. Salerni
All the Birds in the Sky, Charlie Jane Anders
The Love That Split the World, Emily Henry
The Dark Days Club, Alison Goodman
Shallow Graves, Kali Wallace
The Siren, Kiera Cass
Arrows, Melissa Gorzelanczyk
Rise of the Wolf, Jennifer A. Nielsen
Night Study, Maria V. Snyder
The Case of the Fickle Mermaid, P. J. Brackston

January 28:
Daughter of Blood, Helen Lowe

 

December Recap: Book Releases and Interesting Links

We’re excited to bring you a roundup of interesting links and December book releases of fantasy by and about women.

As always, we’d love to hear from you. If you’ve sold a fantasy work, read a great recently-released story, discovered a fantastic link that we missed, or if you’ve got a book or story review to share, please get in touch. Send news to (help at sirensconference.org).

 

YOU’RE EXCITED ABOUT…

Interesting Links:

 
Book Releases

2015DecemberCollage

Click the image for a closer look at the covers.

December 1:
Crucible: All-New Tales of Valdemar, ed. Mercedes Lackey
Tinder, Sally Gardner, ill. David Roberts
A Daughter of No Nation, A. M. Dellamonica
Rise of the Titans, Kate O’Hearn
Sweet Ruin, Kresley Cole
Gateway to Fourline, Pam Brondos
The Rosemary Spell, Virginia Zimmerman
The Curse of Jacob Tracy, Holly Messinger
The Light Warden, Liz Williams with introduction by Kari Sperring
Ash and Silver, Carol Berg
Hawthorn, Carol Goodman
Ms. Marvel Vol. 4: Last Days, G. Willow Wilson, ill. Adrian Alphona

December 7:
The Sleeping Beauty Theatre, Su Blackwell and Corina Fletcher

December 8:
A Dream of Ice, Gillian Anderson and Jeff Rovin
Mercury Retrograde, Laura Bickle

December 11:
Boundary, Mary Victoria Johnson
The Spirit Trap, Veryan Williams-Wynn

December 15:
Frozen Tides, Morgan Rhodes
Warlords and Wastrels, Julia Knight

December 17:
Deadly Sweet Lies, Erica Cameron

December 19:
Shadow Wrack, Kim Thompson

December 22:
The Beatriceid, Kate Elliott
Grudging, Michelle Hauck

December 29:
Endure, Sara B. Larson
Escaping Peril, Tui T. Sutherland
Between a Vamp and a Hard Place, Jessica Sims
Vendetta, Gail Z. Martin

December 31:
A Fantasy Medley 3, ed. Yanni Kuznia

 

Read Along with Faye: Elysium by Jennifer Marie Brissett

Elysium

Read Along with Faye is a new series of book reviews and commentary by Faye Bi on the Sirens communications staff, in which she attempts to read 25 books and complete the 2016 Sirens Reading Challenge. The series will consist mostly of required “theme” books and will post monthly. We invite you to read along and discuss! Light spoilers ahead.

There is so much to talk about with Elysium. I will share, for instance, that I’ve never disliked a book I’ve committed to listening to on audio. Because spending a dozen-plus hours with a story and narrator is not something I take on lightly, and when I do, I’m all in. I knew absolutely nothing about Elysium going in, and it was so many parts emotional rollercoaster, ambitious post-apocalyptic world-building and, ultimately, a saga of love and loss.

Elysium begins with the banal scene of our main character, Adrianne, contemplating meeting a friend for lunch. Nothing is out of the ordinary, save for strange green dot. She gets injured by some falling scaffolding and goes home to her boyfriend, Antoine. Then, the narrative rug is pulled out from underneath. After a series of 1s and 0s and a system reboot, Adrianne is now Adrian, a man with an ailing boyfriend, also called Antoine, and it’s no longer summer, but fall.

Every few pages is a new scene, a new circumstance, bled from the corner of the last to the next, with motifs of deer and owls in the margins. Each new story grows progressively bleaker, with the same iteration of character names: Adrian, Adrianne, Antoine, Antoinette, Hector, Helen, the one who doesn’t talk too much, the two that were more than friends, and so on. Brissett keeps almost nothing else consistent–are the main characters female or male? What is their sexual identity or orientation? Are they lovers? Parent and child? Best friends? Siblings? Are they wealthy, or poor? Struggling to survive, or do they have privileges of birth?–except that in all of them, one character was loved, and subsequently lost.

And what a fearless, ambitious story Brissett tells. Upon listening, it was as if she starts off in one square of a chessboard, only to lift the reader slowly to see the whole game. There were a lot of WTF moments, but in the best possible way, like “WTF is happening, because wow she went there.” The constant shifting identities and circumstances in Elysium is integral to the story, and transitions are marked by code, diagnostic failures, system reboots, and 0’s and 1’s (try listening to this on audio!). Without giving away too much, there’s a super clever and excellent reason for this, and you’re reading a book that starts off as contemporary, I will tell you that it’s squarely and unabashedly science fiction.

Besides the fascinating structure of the book, the underlying theme for me is how love and loss tie into the human condition: because ELYSIUM is about lovers and soulmates and friendship and family, as well as survival and heartbreak and illness and grief, is the story of… people. The people we love, and how we mourn them when they’re gone. Because who are we if we don’t love?

Next Month: Bone Gap by Laura Ruby

 

Faye Bi works as a book publicist in New York City, and is a member of the Sirens communications team. She’s yet to read an immigrant story she hasn’t cried over, and is happiest planning nerdy parties, capping off a long run with brunch, and cycling along the East River.

 

Presented by Narrate Conferences, Inc.

 

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