Writer’s Conference Last Weekend

This weekend I attended The Write Stuff Writer’s Conference here in Allentown.  I was pretty psyched because Maria V. Snyder, fantasy author, was going to be there and I had a to learn about this genre.  I also managed to squeak in just in time to join a critique group on Friday night and, serendipitously, Ms. Snyder was on my critique panel.  You were only allowed to submit the first page, and I was the 2nd author up.  I thought I did pretty well.  Not sure it was even my best submission, but it felt good to know that I have a hook, it’s a good start, and that my love of language was obvious.  I met a few other writers at the mixer, but was dumb enough not to stay overnight since it was close to home. I won’t do that next year!

Another author, Juilene Osborne-McKnight who writes historical fiction, was also there.  This is another genre I love and am considering writing, but I figured I’d best stick to fantasy this  year. She gave the keynote address.  On that, I CANNOT say enough. She literally transported me back to my childhood, the sweet spot of it, and no one has ever done that to me before.   I went up to her afterwards since she teaches at one of the local colleges.  I have to email her when I get a moment, since she gave me her address.

All in all, I learned a lot.  I will definitely go next year, and most likely, I’ll join the writer’s group that hosted it as well.  I was told by one person that I had “Talent”, that is, not just “I learned the skill of writing”, but I have it.  I believe it, too, well, honestly, I always have.

Things I learned:

  • Agent Panel: self- promotion by an author does not make a difference in bringing in the really big numbers. Hm.  I don’t think these agents liked self-promotion, like I’ve been learning, but we’ll see. Also, the publishing market is changing with the advent of audio books and ebooks, but not as quickly as one might think.
  • World Building: there was a lot here, like remember to think about your target reader as you build your world.   Great tips on where to get accurate data.  My favorite? Children’s historical books. Going to pick some up.
  • Revisions: this was a jam packed session. The author was funny and spoke really fast! I have a whole notebook full of little tips on deep-down line editing.
  • Workshop on Genre Crossing: more and more authors are doing it, and it’s less taboo now. We’ve got to make a living I guess.
  • Fantasy chat: my novel DEFINITELY could be YA. Whoa!  Hadn’t considered that! Word count for YA is 75,000.  Ms. Snyder told us her publishers told her to drop her novels to 100K (fantasy is usually 110-120K, I believe)  I’m saying “woohoo!” to this because YA Fantasy is hot right now.
  • I am a story teller.  I want and need to study my craft more, as in literature, myths, archetypes.

Final reveal?  I’m not sure I can name my genre, I’m not sure pigeon-holing is as valuable as it once was.  But I do now know that what I love in literature and want to write is literary fiction with fabalistic devices, but not too many.  I still think of The Time Traveller’s Wife when I write that, more than Isabelle Allende. I could be wrong.

Ok, wonderful weekend.  Wiped out from it all, but feeling SO GOOD.

Writer’s Links Galore!

I have a lot of tabs open and the only way for me to organize them properly is to post them.  Ya know, so I can review later.  Here they go:

Literary Agents:

Editors:

Freelance Writing:

Creative Writing:

Marketing for Writers:

Groups:

Writers:

Tools

Enjoy.

Realization

It occurred to me last night as I labored through a wedding scene in my novel that I am NOT actually revising my novel.  I’m still in the process of writing it.

At a start of 63K words, and perhaps 15+ typed double spaced pages already cut, plus maybe the same amount hand-written added, I’m still 40K shy of high fantasy typical genre.  I have LOTS of subplots I need to work out, I have to change POV, and I have to have a secondary view from the antagonist’s POV.  Arg.

Even some of what I’ve already gone over need more work, much more.

All in all, though, I feel better.  A final edit should not take me 3 months, so it make more sense that it’s still not completely developed.  Plotted, mainly, yes, but supporting characters need more flesh and the protagonist’s journey needs to be longer as well. With all that, I should be able to get to 110K, maybe by the summer.

Sigh. God help me. And I want it to be literary.  Hm, is that suicidal??