SF’s Brand New (Free) Sci-Fi Festival | Feb. 1 – April 30 Ron
Walotsky Courtesy of SF Public Library SF by the Bay, a celebration of
Bay Area science fiction and fantasy, includes over 30 programs,
including author talks, live dramas, lectures, panel discussions, a
“filk” music concert (songs inspired by sci-fi and fantasy), book
displays, a costume contest and diverse film screenings, including
landmark films with a local flair: THX 1138 and Star Trek IV: The
Voyage Home. Additionally, the Main Library will feature an exhibit of
rare books, magazines and art drawn from the Main Library’s J.
Francis McComas Fantasy and Science Fiction Collection, a reference
collection of more than 3,000 books and magazines. McComas was the
co-founding editor of New Jersey-based publication Magazine of Fantasy
& Science Fiction. SF by the Bay: Science Fiction & Fantasy Festival
February 1 – April 30, 2020 San Francisco Public Library All events
free and open to the public More Details Program Highlights SF by the
Bay Exhibit Reception and Aelita, Queen of Mars with live piano
accompaniment Feb. 15, 10 a.m., Main Library, Latino Hispanic
Community Room Join us for the opening reception for the SF by the Bay
exhibit with Gordon Van Gelder, publisher of Berkeley’s Magazine of
Fantasy & Science Fiction, as well as co-sponsors SF in SF, Locus
magazine, Tachyon Publications, Borderlands Books and other special
guests. The reception will be followed by a screening of the silent
film Aelita: Queen of Mars with introduction and live piano
accompaniment by acclaimed concert pianist Frederick Hodges. Author
Talk: Black Speculative Fiction Feb. 19, 5 p.m., Main Library, Latino
Hispanic Community Room Bay Area writers and poets will speak about
their influences, share current works-in-progress, and reveal their
2020 visions. Join the conversation as they center diverse
perspectives from the Black Speculative Literary Arts landscape.
Speculative genres presented may include fantasy, science fiction,
myth, faerie tales, climate fiction, horror, and eco-poetry. Panel
discussion and Q&A moderated by Audrey T. Williams, Oakland-based oral
storyteller, activist, writer and poet. Documentary and Discussion of
Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin with director and panel Mar. 28, 2 p.m.,
Main Library, Koret Auditorium Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin is a
feature documentary exploring the remarkable life and legacy of the
late feminist author Ursula K. Le Guin. Best known for groundbreaking
science fiction and fantasy works such as A Wizard of Earthsea, The
Left Hand of Darkness, and The Dispossessed, Le Guin defiantly held
her ground on the margin of “respectable” literature until the
sheer excellence of her work, at long last, forced the mainstream to
embrace fantastic literature. The film will be followed by Q&A and
panel discussion with the director Arwen Curry, Phil Gochenour, Debbie
Notkin and others. SF & Fantasy Costume Contest Apr. 12, 12 p.m., Main
Library, Koret Auditorium The Library hosts its first Science Fiction
& Fantasy Costume Contest. Fans of science fiction, fantasy and
cosplay are urged to participate and to cheer their favorite costume
entries. Live Podcast: Our Opinions Are Correct Apr. 16, 5:30 p.m.,
Main Library, Latino Hispanic Community Room Annalee Newitz, a science
journalist who writes science fiction, and Charlie Jane Anders, a
science fiction writer who is obsessed with science, will host their
podcast Our Opinions Are Correct live at the Main Library as part of
the SF by the Bay celebration. They will explore the meaning of
science fiction and how it’s relevant to real-life science and
society. Film: THX 1138 Apr. 23, 1 p.m., Main Library, Koret
Auditorium Film: Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home Apr. 30, 12 p.m., Main
Library, Koret Auditorium Saturday, March 28, 2020SF’s Brand New
(Free) Sci-Fi Festival | Feb. 1 – April 30Rodrigo PaolettiPhil
Gochenour explores the literary history of the zombie apocalypse
narrative from its roots in William Morris’ utopian novel News from
Nowhere and anarchosyndicalist political theory through its
reconfiguration in John Wyndham’s eco-disaster novel The Day of the
Triffids and Max Brooks’ World War Z. Zombie Apocalypse & the
Utopian Tradition Saturday, March 28, 2020 at 10:30 – 11:15 a.m.
Latino/Hispanic Rooms, Lower Level Phil Gochenour received a Ph.D. in
comparative literature from Emory University and has held faculty
positions at the University of Virginia and Towson State University.
Currently, he is a Senior Technical Writer for the Engineering
Excellence organization at Amazon. Upcoming SF’s Brand New (Free)
Sci-Fi Festival | Feb. 1 – April 30 Events Sun 3/1 SF by the Bay
Sci-Fi Festival “20/20: You Decide How It Ends” | SFTue 3/10 SF by
the Bay Sci-Fi Festival: Women and Speculative Fiction | SFSun 3/15 SF
by the Bay Sci-Fi Film Lecture: Cities of the Future | SFThu 3/19
Sci-Fi Festival: Free Concert “Music From Middle Earth to
Tatooine” | SFWed 3/25 SF by the Bay Sci-Fi Festival: Panel
Discussion about Philip K. Dick | SFWed 3/25 SF by the Bay Sci-Fi
Festival Free Movies: Impostor and A Scanner Darkly | SFThu 3/26 SF by
the Bay Sci-Fi Festival Book Reading: The First Star Trek | SFSat 3/28
SF by the Bay Sci-Fi Festival: Zombie Apocalypse & the Utopian
Tradition | SFSat 3/28 SF by the Bay Sci-Fi Festival: Radio Play
“Ghost Town Mortuary” | SFSun 3/29 SF by the Bay Sci-Fi Festival:
The Golden Age of Science Fiction | SFThu 4/9 SF by the Bay Sci-Fi
Festival Free Movie: Blade Runner | SFSun 4/12 Sci-Fi Festival:
Science Fiction & Fantasy Costume Contest | SFThu 4/16 SF by the Bay
Sci-Fi Festival Free Movie: Time After Time | SFThu 4/16 SF by the Bay
Sci-Fi Festival Podcast: Our Opinions Are Correct | SFSun 4/19 SF by
the Bay Sci-Fi Festival: Tachyon Publications Anniversary | SFWed 4/22
SF by the Bay Sci-Fi Festival: A Talk with Steven Black & Don Herron |
SFThu 4/23 SF by the Bay Sci-Fi Festival Free Movie: THX 1138 | SFThu
4/30 SF by the Bay Sci-Fi Festival Free Movie: Star Trek IV “The
Voyage Home” | SFDisclaimer: Please double check event information
with the event organizer as events can be canceled, details can change
after they are added to our calendar, and errors do occur.
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29/03/2020 Last update