Usually, we'd introduce you to the Sirens planning team at the conference -- but since #SirensAtHome is taking place online, we thought we'd introduce you to them ahead of time. Check these hypercompetent, always creative, voraciously well-read rock stars out! 1/
First up: the Communications Team, tasked with creating year-round content and community, who writes all those posts and emails, crafts all that gorgeous art, and manages all our social media: sirensconference.org/news/2020/10/m… Image
Onto the Programming Team and the independent vetting board who selects programming proposals for presentation at Sirens. These folks are the brains--and the caretakers of the Sirens educational mission: sirensconference.org/news/2020/10/m… Image
Next: the Customer Service Team, who handles everything from creating custom intake and data systems to coding and editing for the Communications Team to answering alllll your questions and keeping all of us on track: sirensconference.org/news/2020/10/m… Image
And then: our Logistics Team, the team with a plan, a back-up plan, and a plan of desperation, which always seems to nevertheless work out. These folks handle venues, buses, food, safety, and accessibility: sirensconference.org/news/2020/10/m… Image
And finally, our Finance and Legal Team, comprised of researchers, analysts, data nerds, fundraisers and lawyers. This team runs on spreadsheets: budgets, financials, reports, databases -- and they're the force behind the Sirens bookstore and auction: sirensconference.org/news/2020/10/m… Image
This team of not-quite-20 dedicated volunteers made #SirensAtHome possible, and they'll be around this weekend, so if you see them, please thank them. They found a way to make Sirens happen, even in a trash-fire sort of year! ❤️❤️❤️

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More from @sirens_con

24 Oct
We're back again! @amytenbrink welcomes everyone and notes that we're in a liminal space in this very strange year of 2020, which falls between *our* years of discussing Heroes (2019) and Villains (2021).

#SirensAtHome
In 2020, we all feel like we're failing, not doing enough, not being enough -- "Like we've become the villains in our own stories."

But Amy thinks we're all heroes.

#SirensAtHome
In classic Amy style, she says "fuck that" to the traditional definition of heroism.

What we're doing for ourselves, our loved ones, and our communities -- that is heroic.

#SirensAtHome
Read 44 tweets
23 Oct
2021: Sirens will challenge what it means to be a villain—and especially of what it means for people of marginalized genders and other identities to so easily be cast as villainous. Here are 10 wicked works (with more books/info here: sirensconference.org/news/2020/10/s…): 1/

#SirensAtHome Image
1. A FEAST OF SORROWS by Angela Slatter: “My father did not know that my mother knew about his other wives, but she did. It didn’t seem to bother her, perhaps because, of them all, she had the greater independence and a measure of prosperity that was all her own.” #SirensAtHome Image
2. AMERICAN HIPPO by Sarah Gailey: “Winslow Remington Houndstooth was not a hero. There was nothing within him that cried out for justice or fame. He did not wear a white hat—he preferred his grey one, which didn’t show the bloodstains.” #SirensAtHome Image
Read 11 tweets
23 Oct
2019: Sirens considered heroes in all their forms, and explicitly rejected the hypermasculine notions of heroism—and discussed a pantheon of more revolutionary heroes. Here are 10 magnificent heroes works (with more books/info here: sirensconference.org/news/2020/10/s…): 1/

#SirensAtHome Image
1. A PALE LIGHT IN THE BLACK by K.B. Wagers: “Commander Rosa Martín Rivas pasted another smile onto her face as she wove through the crowds and headed for her ship at the far end of the hangar. She and the rest of the members of Zuma’s Ghost...” #SirensAtHome Image
2. A SONG BELOW WATER by Bethany C. Morrow: “It feels redundant to be at the pool on a rainy Saturday, even though it’s spring, and even though it’s Portland, but maybe I’m just more of a California snob than I want to be.” #SirensAtHome Image
Read 11 tweets
23 Oct
2017: Sirens deconstructed magic and those of marginalized genders who want it or wield it—and how magic is so often an analog for power. Here are 10 magical books of witches, sorcerers, enchanters and more (with more books/info here: sirensconference.org/news/2020/10/s…): 1/

#SirensAtHome Image
1. A DARKER SHADE OF MAGIC by V.E. Schwab: “Kell wore a very peculiar coat. It had neither one side, which would be conventional, nor two, which would be unexpected, but several, which was, of course, impossible.” #SirensAtHome Image
2. LABYRINTH LOST by Zoraida Córdova: “The second time I saw my dead aunt Rosaria, she was dancing. Earlier that day, my mom had warned me, pressing a long, red fingernail on the tip of my nose, ‘Alejandra, don’t go downstairs when the Circle arrives.’” #SirensAtHome Image
Read 11 tweets
23 Oct
2016: Sirens examined lovers and representations of romantic and erotic ideas in speculative spaces, including the notion of taking those things—or not—on your terms. Here are 10 beautiful stories of love (with more books/info here: sirensconference.org/news/2020/10/s…): 1/

#SirensAtHome Image
1. ANCIENT, ANCIENT by Kiini Ibura Salaam: “Sené. Pregnant Sené. Sené of the tired skin. Sené whose face held a million wrinkles, each one etched deeply as if carved over the course of forty years. Sené whose blood was only twenty-four years young.” #SirensAtHome Image
2. EMPIRE OF SAND by Tasha Shuri: “Mehr woke up to a soft voice calling her name. Without thought, she reached a hand beneath her pillow and closed her fingers carefully around the hilt of her dagger. She could feel the smoothness of the large opal...” #SirensAtHome Image
Read 11 tweets
23 Oct
2015: Sirens analyzed stories of rebels and revolutionaries—and cast a wide net, seeking both traditional fantasy uprisings and more revolutionary rebellions as well. Here are 10 world-shattering tales (with more books/info here: sirensconference.org/news/2020/10/s…): 1/

#SirensAtHome Image
1. ALIF THE UNSEEN by G. Willow Wilson: “The thing always appeared in the hour between sunset and full dark. When the light began to wane in the afternoon, casting shadows of gray and violet across the stable yard below the tower where he worked...” #SirensAtHome Image
2. AN ACCIDENT OF STARS by Foz Meadows: “Sarcasm is armour, Saffron thought, and imagined she was donning a suit of it, plate by gleaming, snark-laden plate...’” #SirensAtHome Image
Read 11 tweets

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