Readercon schedule
Jun. 26th, 2018 07:52 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I have such a great schedule for this Readercon that even though all five panels of it are on Friday, I couldn't bear to give up any of them.
It consists of:
Reading and Life Stages, Part 1: 30s and 40s, Salon 5, Fri 1:00 PM
Our notion of who readers are is often built on the image of readers in their teens and 20s, but as people age, their reading habits change. In this intimate and personal two-part panel, panelists will discuss their age-related shifts in reading speed and ability to focus, time for reading, interest in reading, book acquisition and deacquisition, use of print, digital, and audio books, and other related topics. Part 1: readers in their 30s and 40s.
Kate Nepveu (m), Danielle Friedman, Bart Leib, KJ Kabza, Natalie Luhrs, Veronica Schanoes
Character Identity and Story Shape, Salon 5, Fri 2:00 PM
Writers trying to subvert stereotypes will sometimes take a common story shape—the quest adventure, the mystery investigation—and give it an uncommon protagonist. But once the protagonist changes, the story also has to change. How can writers integrate a character's identity into the very fabric of a story? If one begins by wanting to write a certain type of character, how does that influence the choice or creation of a setting, a plot, and a supporting cast?
Kate Nepveu (m), Gemma Files, John Chu, Scott H. Andrews
Futures That Feel like Home, Blue Hills, Fri 4:00 PM
Our panelists will discuss the fictional futures they find most appealing and would be happy to live in (maybe with some caveats). Does the work that depicts these futures provide a path or hints as to how humans might get there? What makes these futures worth rooting for and aspiring to?
Kate Nepveu (m), Francesca Forrest, J.R. Dawson, José Pablo Iriarte, Matthew Kressel
The Works of Nisi Shawl, Salon C, Fri 5:00 PM
Nisi Shawl has worked a warehouse job, has sold structural steel and aluminum, and has been in a band. Most notably, she writes. Her short story collection, Filter House, was a finalist for the World Fantasy Award and was one of two winners of the Tiptree Award as well one of Publishers Weekly's Best Books of 2008. Her debut novel, Everfair, was a finalist for the Nebula Award. She is also a noted lecturer and teacher on speculative fiction, gender, and race, and Writing the Other, which she coauthored with Cynthia Ward, remains essential reading for all writers. We are overjoyed to welcome her to Readercon and to celebrate her work.
Terence Taylor (m), Samuel R. Delany, Kate Nepveu
Dorothy Dunnett, Literary Legend, Salon C, Fri 8:00 PM
Alaya Dawn Johnson called Dorothy Dunnett "the literary equivalent of the Velvet Underground": not many people read her, but everyone who did wrote a book. A painter, researcher, and opera lover, she wrote what she wanted to read: epic historical drama. Come learn what our panelists and many other writers learned from Dunnett.
Kate Nepveu (m), Alexander Jablokov, Lila Garrott, Victoria Janssen, Nisi Shawl
And now the usual:
It consists of:
Reading and Life Stages, Part 1: 30s and 40s, Salon 5, Fri 1:00 PM
Our notion of who readers are is often built on the image of readers in their teens and 20s, but as people age, their reading habits change. In this intimate and personal two-part panel, panelists will discuss their age-related shifts in reading speed and ability to focus, time for reading, interest in reading, book acquisition and deacquisition, use of print, digital, and audio books, and other related topics. Part 1: readers in their 30s and 40s.
Kate Nepveu (m), Danielle Friedman, Bart Leib, KJ Kabza, Natalie Luhrs, Veronica Schanoes
Character Identity and Story Shape, Salon 5, Fri 2:00 PM
Writers trying to subvert stereotypes will sometimes take a common story shape—the quest adventure, the mystery investigation—and give it an uncommon protagonist. But once the protagonist changes, the story also has to change. How can writers integrate a character's identity into the very fabric of a story? If one begins by wanting to write a certain type of character, how does that influence the choice or creation of a setting, a plot, and a supporting cast?
Kate Nepveu (m), Gemma Files, John Chu, Scott H. Andrews
Futures That Feel like Home, Blue Hills, Fri 4:00 PM
Our panelists will discuss the fictional futures they find most appealing and would be happy to live in (maybe with some caveats). Does the work that depicts these futures provide a path or hints as to how humans might get there? What makes these futures worth rooting for and aspiring to?
Kate Nepveu (m), Francesca Forrest, J.R. Dawson, José Pablo Iriarte, Matthew Kressel
The Works of Nisi Shawl, Salon C, Fri 5:00 PM
Nisi Shawl has worked a warehouse job, has sold structural steel and aluminum, and has been in a band. Most notably, she writes. Her short story collection, Filter House, was a finalist for the World Fantasy Award and was one of two winners of the Tiptree Award as well one of Publishers Weekly's Best Books of 2008. Her debut novel, Everfair, was a finalist for the Nebula Award. She is also a noted lecturer and teacher on speculative fiction, gender, and race, and Writing the Other, which she coauthored with Cynthia Ward, remains essential reading for all writers. We are overjoyed to welcome her to Readercon and to celebrate her work.
Terence Taylor (m), Samuel R. Delany, Kate Nepveu
Dorothy Dunnett, Literary Legend, Salon C, Fri 8:00 PM
Alaya Dawn Johnson called Dorothy Dunnett "the literary equivalent of the Velvet Underground": not many people read her, but everyone who did wrote a book. A painter, researcher, and opera lover, she wrote what she wanted to read: epic historical drama. Come learn what our panelists and many other writers learned from Dunnett.
Kate Nepveu (m), Alexander Jablokov, Lila Garrott, Victoria Janssen, Nisi Shawl
And now the usual:
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 16
Will you be at Readercon?
View Answers
Yes, and we should schedule a get-together
3 (33.3%)
Yes, we'll wave at each other in passing
2 (22.2%)
Maybe
4 (44.4%)
Ticky?
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Ticky!
8 (66.7%)
Mr Slowcake
1 (8.3%)
The Jovial Contrarian
3 (25.0%)
The Captivating Princess
4 (33.3%)
no subject
Date: 2018-06-27 05:09 am (UTC)Please put up a pointer to the notes on the Dunnett panel! And have a great time!
no subject
Date: 2018-06-28 04:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-06-28 01:51 am (UTC)Either way, KY and I would probably be up for lunch or dinner.
no subject
Date: 2018-06-28 04:07 am (UTC)