Sheree Renée Thomas 2023 Octavia E. Butler Award
@blackpotmojo
@Marvel BLACK PANTHER’S RAGE NINE BAR BLUES TROUBLE WATERS AFRICA RISEN DARK MATTER JANELLE MONÁE @nytimes bestseller THE MEMORY LIBRARIAN Editor @FandSF
ID:72180302
https://www.shereereneethomas.com 07-09-2009 02:13:41
12,5K Tweets
6,9K Followers
3,8K Following
Join me at beautiful ETSU for the annual Dr. Bert C. Bach Written Word Initiative Presentation. We'll explore Strange Alchemies, Map the Impossible, and visit Mars! #etsu #tnhumanities #shereereneethomas #blackspeculativefiction #afrofuturism
etsu.edu/cas/litlang/wr…
Locus Magazine is offering a ZOOMAPALOOZA, half off ALL virtual coffee meetings w/ SFFH luminaries, for 2 DAYS ONLY. Talk to your faves & me! Ask for industry advice or key secrets of the multiverse! 😍
Locus Mag: Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror 2024 indiegogo.com/projects/locus…
Honored to see DARK MATTER and AFRICA RISEN on Business Insider's #afrofuturism list curated by Yoonji Han! Support these authors and add their work to your reading list and personal collection
rb.gy/suyvwp
Cool Indiegogo perks! From Sheree Renée Thomas 2023 Octavia E. Butler Award Neil Gaiman George RR Martin Wesley Chu & many others!
Help us fund a strong 2024: support Locus Magazine, locusmag.com, & the Locus Awards!
indiegogo.com/projects/locus…
(questions: pls email [email protected] subject line Fund2024)
Some SFF writers you just want to snap up every single project they touch! And Sheree Renée Thomas's MARVEL comic appearance, signed, is just that. Here's your chance to get this piece of history today and support what Locus does!
Sheree Renée Thomas 2023 Octavia E. Butler Award
igg.me/at/locusmag2024
We’re fundraising to support Locus Magazine. Get a signed copy of the 2023 Locus Award Year’s Best Anthology!
James Weldon Johnson, best known for GOD’S TROMBONES & “Lift Ev’ry Voice & Sing,” was president of the NAACP. In 1920 he wrote a scathing report on his observations of the US invasion of Haiti. #blackhistory “The Truth about Haiti: An NAACP Investigation' historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5018