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I don't think we need a whole area for this, but it would be nice to have somewhere for people to post information about writerly get-togethers.
Maybe it will turn out that we need a separate area.
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I'd love to know about any converences or conventions in the midwest. It seems so many of them require a flight to New England or Cliafornia. Heck, I'd even take one in a city that's not so gosh darned expensive to fly/stay in, but I'd really love one in the midwest.
Posts: 3567 | Registered: May 2003
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I'm interested in hearing about any, mostly because it seems that there are NONE in Houston.
I'm not sure it would need a separate forum. Why not just expand an underused forum instead? Any convention is an opportunity to look into the market (Markets for our Writing), places to discuss others work (Discussing Published Books and Hooks), a place to learn (Writer's Class), etc.
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I want to go to someplace where I can interest an agent in my work. There's a Maui writer's conference in September IIRC. I sure would love to find something cheap and east-coast.
Posts: 2830 | Registered: Dec 2004
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Is there anything coming up (maybe after May) in upstate New York? I've never done any workshops or conventions, and I think it would be fun.
Posts: 1041 | Registered: Aug 2004
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I (as did Kolona) went to the Columbus Writer's Conference last year. Doesn't look like they've updated their website for anything in 2005 yet, but last year it was in August, and most interesting.
Posts: 652 | Registered: Feb 2002
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I'm trying to juggle things to make it to LTUE, Kathleen. Saw your name on the list of Prominent Attendees. Hope to see you there.
Posts: 1672 | Registered: Apr 2004
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Jeraliey, depending where you live in upstate New York you may want to join Vermont League of Writers. It is inexpencive, available to anyone (no matter where you live) and has workshop/meetings four times a year. The workshop/meetings aren't very intense, but I go when there is something of interest. Often the meetings are in a Northern Vermont location like Burlington. Next meeting is in April. There are other more intensive workshops in Vermont, but I haven't see the dates for them for this year yet. Come to think of it there is a Sifi convention in Burlington as well- I don't know anything about it, but maybe someone else here has been to it.
[This message has been edited by Kickle (edited February 03, 2005).]
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I'll be there, Ergoface and Dakota. I'd love to get together with you (and any other Hatrackers (is that what we are?)), if we can work it out.
Posts: 8826 | Registered: A Long Time Ago!
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I'm pretty sure I'll be going to CONDFW IV, Brian. Richardson is a ways away, so I won't be there for the whole conference. Just enough to justify spending the money.
Posts: 836 | Registered: Jul 2004
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I may try to get to LTUE Friday eve or Saturday morning. I've gone in the past but it's been many years ago. I remember it was great fun and very interesting. It would be a kick to meet some Hatrackers if y'all decide to get together.
Man. Is there really such a dirth of writing workshops in ths country? Thank goodness for Hatrack.
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I might be able to wander my way over to LTUE. And I'm not sure if we are Hatrackers or Rathackers. But we're definatly not Tackharers
Posts: 1895 | Registered: Mar 2004
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hmm, anyone know of a "good" conference or workshop in any of the states surrounding New Mexico?
It would really be nice to attend a fantasy/sci-ci one, but that might be hoping too much since most things here seem to be southwest style...even the writing. But even a general conference would be useful...maybe Colorado?
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I'm going to be on vacation in North Carolina in June. Can anyone recommend anything near Durham or Greensboro between June 10 and the end of the month?
Posts: 1473 | Registered: Jul 2004
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My buddy and fellow NFG editor, Karen Dionne,
has got this going on:
quote:The writers' organization I co-founded with another writer last spring, Backspace, is sponsoring a one-day writers' conference in New York this summer on June 2, to coincide with BEA (Book Expo America). I've got an amazing program lined up: literary agent Richard Curtis is our keynote speaker, I've got other agents and editors conducting a workshop and sitting on panels, and we're also having a panel of thriller authors - so far David Morrell (creator of Rambo) has said yes, and Lee Child and Barry Eisler have given me a tentative yes (they still have to check their schedules).
posted
The Italian seminar is getting a huge amount of interest!
We have also secured the services of Centro Linguistico Internazionale Sorrento Lingue, one of Italy's premier language schools (recognized by the Italian Ministry of Education). They will be taking care of accommodation, classrooms (in a 16th centuty palazzo), excursions, providing internet access, and generally holding my hand and wiping my nose when necessary.
I will be announcing finalised prices shortly. If anyone's interested who hasn't yet signed up for the newsletter, you'll hear it there first! http://www.write-across-europe.com
With the level of feedback I'm getting (plus the fact that Sorrento Lingue will be mailing details to around 10,000 contacts later this month) I'm expecting the seminar to be oversubscribed.
Don't miss out!
Posts: 15 | Registered: Feb 2005
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I have time this summer to go to conferences . . . and my only real interest is in pitching to agents.
The ones I'm planning to go to are Oct, Richmond, VA, and Sep, Columbus, OH. Not summer, and that seems like a shame -- but I haven't found any earlier conferences where you can meet with agents. If anyone knows any, please post.
Y'all have a great time at Boot Camp. Apparently OSC will be teaching writing about an hour from my house next year. Wow!
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Looks like the speaker schedule is still in process, but the dates for the 2005 Columbus Writers Conference have been posted -- August 26-27. Last year participants had the opportunity to signup for a meeting with an editor or agent.
I didn't do the meeting portion last year, but the rest of the conference was very enjoyable.
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Rather last minute, but I signed up for the BookExpo America/Writer's Digest Books Writer's Conference in New York on June first. If I had seen this thread earlier, I might have tried to stay an extra day for the Backspace conference Mike C mentioned. Ah well.
Wbriggs, the BookExpo conference may not be in summer, but it has a pitching session. I hope to be in Columbus, too. Maybe GZ will be there again and we can all touch bases.
[This message has been edited by Kolona (edited May 17, 2005).]
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Okay. Biggest take-aways from the BookExpo America/Writer's Digest Books Writer's Conference? Leave driving in New York to New York drivers. And, if you take a shuttle to or from the airport, give yourself an extra hour or two for the driver to get lost -- which actually negates the first take-away, but there’s no way around it.
One writer/speaker at the conference based his whole presentation on marching to the “invisible hand of art” as opposed to “the invisible hand of the marketplace,” although an agent later clearly disagreed when she advised the opposite, proving -- as I have firmly suspected -- writing really is a crapshoot.
It is also a business, and it was pointed out that agents have their own agendas, namely, to consider their reputations and relationships with editors and publishers. Basically, every writer and work they pitch has a bearing on that, so they’re going to choose their clients and projects carefully.
Writing is also a strange business, in that most books fail. Even most bestsellers fail -- a rather odd thought, I thought, but there is too much product out there and too few readers. The result is a “culture of disappointment” that writers must get past by viewing all aspects of their writing careers as positive, i.e., really really wringing every bit of enjoyment and encouragement from any even marginally positive things that happen.
Nancy Kress spoke on genre fiction, and the genre that she seemed to note most for exceptions to the rules was SF. For instance, the protagonist doesn’t always have to win in SF as opposed to most genre fiction.
I found it interesting when Jon Karp, in listing ‘tenacity' as a necessary trait for a writer didn’t go for the obvious, as in keep sending out those manuscripts, but connected tenacity to ‘rewriting,’ which he further explained as a “combination of inspiration and cold-blooded calculation.”
Peter Almond quoted Saul Bellows as saying that “a writer is a jealous reader.”
The pitch session was too short, or there were simply too many of us conferees. I got to actually pitch only once, although two agents requested material -- one by default. There were a handful of us still waiting for her when the session ended, so she gave us her card and told us to send our material to her and she’d be sure to look at it. She definitely went up in my estimation.
I was particularly pleased with myself because I was pitching with a handicap that afternoon. While sitting at the speaker session before lunch, I reached down beside my chair for my water bottle and threw my back out.
Big-time pain.
And then I had to give up sightseeing to hole up in my hotel room, hardly able to move without serious distress. I still think the flight attendant didn’t believe me the next day when I insisted I couldn’t lift my carry-on into the overhead compartment.
So if you remember nothing else from this, remember that bottled water in New York can be dangerous.
[This message has been edited by Kolona (edited June 07, 2005).]
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WBriggs - there's one in Richmond VA in Oct? I can't find it on the Locust Listings. Do you have more info on it?
About 6 years ago there was one in Virginia Beach, VA but it was kinda small. I haven't seen anything near me since <sigh> (I live in Portsmouth, VA) Meenie