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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230518T173000
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DTSTAMP:20260404T082129
CREATED:20230514T015356Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230516T183159Z
UID:17453-1684431000-1684436400@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:Storytelling As Advocacy In The Beloved Community at A Room of One's Own
DESCRIPTION:Madison-based author Tegan Nia Swanson’s 2022 debut novel\, Things We Found When The Water Went Down\, starts with the basic elements of a murder mystery: a body\, the cops\, a suspect. From there\, Swanson spirals into the tangled lore of a family and a place. The decaying mine town of Beau Caelais and the Inland Sea it sits on are familiar stand-ins for any number of post-industrial places along the Great Lakes. The map Swanson provides in the book will also remind Madisonians of a less-great but still beloved lake.  \nSwanson fills this setting with an uncanny blend of small-town grudges and righteously wrathful magic. As teenage protagonist Lena Abernathy tries to understand why her mother was arrested for the murder (then escaped from jail and disappeared)\, she uncovers her share of petty human secrets\, but connects with forces far more vast and terrible and beautiful. Swanson’s non-linear storytelling approach lets the reader get richly immersed in the book’s overlapping themes: deep-seated cultures of misogynist violence\, environmental degradation\, and the resilient chosen families queer people build in a hostile world. \nThat’s all just a hint of the depths\, and the depths beyond the depths\, that the novel explores. Things We Found When The Water Went Down reads like a scrapbook of its own mythology. Between passages that Lena narrates in first-person\, other characters leave behind interview transcripts\, newspaper clippings\, cryptic notes\, stately poetic declarations. It’s an approach that may gradually draw in readers who enjoy fantasy novels\, or immersive piece-together-the-story video games like Gone Home and What Remains Of Edith Finch.  \nAt this event\, a fundraiser for Freedom Inc. and UNIDOS (a Madison non-profit serving Latino survivors of domestic violence)\, Swanson will take part in a panel discussion with Freedom Inc.’s Jessica Williams\, UNIDOS’ Virginia Gittens Escudero\, and City of Madison Poet Laureate Angela Trudell Vasquez. Swanson and Vasquez also both work at End Domestic Abuse Wisconsin. The panel\, titled “Storytelling As Advocacy In The Beloved Community\,” will likely draw connections between the novel’s exploration of violence against women and all the panelists’ day-to-day work.  \nOn May 18\, a Room of One’s Own will also be donating 10 percent of all its in-store and online sales to Freedom Inc. and UNIDOS. \n—Scott Gordon \n \nWORT 89.9FM Madison · Madison Book Beat: Tegan Nia Swanson on “Things We Found When The Water Went Down”
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/storytelling-as-advocacy-in-the-beloved-community-at-a-room-of-ones-own/
LOCATION:A Room of One’s Own\, 2717 Atwood Avenue\, Madison\, 53704\, United States
CATEGORIES:Books,Culture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://tonemadison.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/belovedcommunity_header.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230525T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230529T180000
DTSTAMP:20260404T082129
CREATED:20230512T194608Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230512T194608Z
UID:17451-1685037600-1685383200@tonemadison.com
SUMMARY:WisCon 46 at Madison Concourse Hotel and Central Library
DESCRIPTION:WisCon launched in 1977\, with the goal of tackling “feminist and pointedly left-leaning topics” in science fiction\, that other sci-fi gatherings barely acknowledge. Over the years\, it has welcomed to Madison several of the all-time great sci-fi and fantasy writers: Octavia E. Butler\, Samuel R. Delany\, Nnedi Okorafor\, Kim Stanley Robinson… and the list really does go on. Just as importantly\, WisCon has become a community in and of itself. Attendees from all over gather in Madison annually over Memorial Day Weekend for readings\, panels\, workshops\, and the bestowing of the annual Otherwise Award. It was abundantly clear just how many people in how many places care deeply about WisCon when\, in 2021\, organizers held an emergency fundraising campaign. The fundraiser succeeded\, with vocal support from across the diverse ranks of SFF writers working today. \nSince then\, convention organizers have worked to make the convention more inclusive. They’ve also announced that the con will take a break in 2024 to let its all-volunteer leadership recharge for the future. But for 2023\, the schedule is packed with sessions in the Madison Concourse Hotel’s conference rooms. This year’s WisCon will also keep up the tradition of an opening-night reading\, featuring two guests of honor\, that is free and open even to those who aren’t registered for the con proper. That’s Thursday\, May 25 at 6 p.m. at the Central Library.  \nThis year’s guests are Rivers Solomon and Martha Wells\, and I’m particularly excited to finally get to hear Solomon read. Their 2017 debut novel\, An Unkindness Of Ghosts\, takes place on a generation ship where theocratic tyrants rule over a stratified society of rich whites and a brutally exploited Black underclass. It’s very explicitly the antebellum South in space—humanity recommitting to hierarchy\, cruelty\, and control even as it seeks a second chance among the stars. Its protagonist\, Aster\, is a queer\, neurodivergent outsider among the oppressed\, rebelling against the ship’s viciously regimented social order. It’s devastatingly powerful. So are the two novels that followed An Unkindness Of Ghosts\, 2019’s The Deep (great as a standalone book\, also great as part of a multi-media collaboration with hip-hop group clipping.) and 2021’s Sorrowland. Wells’ body of work spans dozens of sci-fi and fantasy novels\, including the Murderbot Diaries series\, whose 10th installment\, System Collapse\, is due out in November. \n—Scott Gordon \n \nPhoto of Rivers Solomon by Wasi Daniju.
URL:https://tonemadison.com/event/wiscon-46-at-madison-concourse-hotel-and-central-library/
LOCATION:Madison Concourse Hotel\, 1 West Dayton Street\, Madison\, WI\, 53703\, United States
CATEGORIES:Books,Culture
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