SAWG Blog

Official blog of the San Antonio Writers Guild

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

ThrillerFest XI set July 5-9 in New York City

What: ThrillerFest XI
When: Tuesday-Saturday, July 5-9
Location: Grand Hyatt in NYC
Desc.: Premier thriller conference for authors, aspiring writers and fans.
Visit: thrillerwriters.org/thrillerfest-x-register-today
   Want to learn from the masters of the genre? Sign with your dream literary agent? Hear from FBI special agents and other subject matter experts? Come join us at ThrillerFest 2016 at the Grand Hyatt in Manhattan, New York City, for a week-long thriller extravaganza. We want to help you realize your dream of becoming a best-selling author!
   The festival will include panels, workshops, and lectures Friday and Saturday.
   Master CraftFest: Taking place Tuesday, July 5, this inaugural one-day, intensive workshop on craft
   CraftFest: Running from Wednesday, July 6, to Thursday, July 7, this fastest growing section of the conference is ideal you are looking to hone your writing skills.
   PitchFest: Taking place on Thursday, July 7, if you’d like to pitch your novel to the best literary agents in the business, this is the event for you. Last year, we had over 50 agents attending PitchFest.

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

DFW Writers Conference set April 23-24

   The DFW Writers Conference, sponsored by DFW Writers Workshop, has grown to be the premier writers conference in the southwest. Our goal is to provide writers with excellent education, networking, and industry exposure at the best value.
Date: Saturday and Sunday, April 23-24
Where: Fort Worth Convention Center, Fort Worth
Visit: dfwcon.org

Where:

   The Fort Worth Convention Center spans 14 blocks of the city’s Central Business District. The Convention Center hosts a wide range of events including: conventions, conferences, corporate meetings, sporting events, concerts, trade shows, banquets and consumer shows.

1201 Houston Street
Fort Worth, TX 76102-6432
Phone: (817) 392-6338
Region: Downtown

   The following website gives helpful information on the convention center, getting around and things to do: www.fortworth.com/meetings/convention-center

Workshops

   There are two unique workshops designed to help you get the most out of DFW Writers Conference. The DFW Writers Conference has been working on ways to make our education program more interactive and hands-on. Less listening to lectures and more conversing and collaborating. We want writers to bring their real-world writing challenges to the conference and leave with solutions, or at least a plan of action.
   As part of that, we’re going to bring back two unique DFWCon workshops from last year: “So Here’s My Problem” and “So Close and Yet So Far: Getting Good Writers Over the Hurdle.”
   Both of these workshops put writers at a table with a support team of agents, editors and published authors so they can work together and do some serious problem solving.
   In the “So Here’s My Problem” workshop, any writer at any skill level can bring any problem or question related to their writing or the business of publishing. You can ask for help with your cover letter, or your pitch, or a few pages of your manuscript. You can ask the panelists to help with voice, or character development, or plot structure. It’s up to you. Our team of industry experts will do their darndest to help.
   The “So Close and Yet So Far: Getting Good Writers Over the Hurdle” workshop is designed for writers who have been querying and submitting their work and have received multiple rejection letters. Part clinic, part support group, it is not for writers who are just starting out and are still working on their manuscript. The participating writers will share their tale of woe and seek advice from the experts on how to move forward. Writers can even bring their rejection letters for show and tell, though it’s not required.
   Here’s how these will work. Because of time constraints we’ll have to limit the number of participants who can bring their challenges in front of the panelists, so advance registration will be required. We’ll put up an online form well ahead of the conference. We’ll let conference registrants know by email newsletter when it’s time to sign up.
   Each petitioner will have an allotment of time to present their case to the panel and hear feedback. The petitioners are to listen to the feedback and not debate it, and may speak only to respond to direct questions from the panel.
   These workshops proved very popular at the 2015 conference. One big difference for 2016: the rooms will be big enough to allow an audience. We’ll have a table set up at the head of the room for the panelists and petitioners, and theater-style seating in the rest of the room so others can listen and learn. So, you can learn a lot from these workshops even if you’re not the one in the hot seat!
   No registration is required for observers.
   We’ll run the workshops multiple times to give lots of attendees a chance to petition the experts for help.

Special Speakers

   We’re excited to announce three special guest speakers who have graciously agreed to come to the2016 DFW Writer’s Conference!

In alphabetical order:

Christopher Golden
   Golden is the award-winning, bestselling author of such novels as The Myth Hunters, Wildwood Road, The Boys Are Back in Town, The Ferryman, Strangewood, Of Saints and Shadows, and (with Tim Lebbon) The Map of Moments. He has also written books for teens and young adults, including Poison Ink, Soulless, and the thriller series Body of Evidence, honored by the New York Public Library and chosen as one of YALSA’s Best Books for Young Readers. Upcoming teen novels include a new series of hardcover YA fantasy novels co-authored with Tim Lebbon and entitled The Secret Journeys of Jack London.

Thomas Kunkel
   Kunkel is the president of St. Norbert College in De Pere, Wisconsin. He has served as president of American Journalism Review and as dean of the Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland. He is the author or editor of five previous books, including Genius in Disguise, Enormous Prayers, and Letters from the Editor. Recently, his book, Man in Profile: Joseph Mitchell of the New Yorker is causing quite a stir in literary circles.

Tara McKelvey
   McKelvey, a fellow at Harvard’s Shorenstein Center, is a correspondent for Newsweek and The Daily Beast. She is also a frequent contributor to The New York Times Book Review and the author of Monstering: Inside America’s Policy of Secret Interrogations and Torture in the Terror War. She is now a White House reporter for the BBC.

Classes:

   There are over 50 classes to chose from at the DFW Writers Conference. Here are some of them:

“The Seven Deadly First-Page Sins,” taught by Laura Maisano and Tex Thompson
   Laura Maisano, senior editor at Anaiah Press, and Tex Thompson, author of the Children of the Drought series, have teamed up to teach this class. This dynamic duo helped last year’s attendees trim and build their manuscripts with Prose P90X, and this year they’re up to shenanigans again. The class tackles the toughest part of getting an agent or editor to read on–the first five pages. Time to make your sample pages the best they can be to increase your odds of request!
The Seven Deadly First-Page Sins
   There’s no one right way to begin your story – but there are plenty of wrong ones. In this class, we’ll take you on a cautionary tour through the pits of page-one hell, complete with agent pet peeves, reader turn-offs, and “thanks but no thanks” editorial deal-breakers. Don’t let your manuscript suffer in form-rejection torment: let veteran editor Laura Maisano and author Tex Thompson guide you through the slush-pile inferno and lead your story toward the light!

“Writing the Odd, Publishable Poem,” a class by Joaquin Zihuatanejo
   Joaquín Zihuatanejo is a poet, writer, teacher and World Poetry Slam Champion from Dallas, Texas. He has been called by critics “one of the most passionate and poignant performance poets in the country melding equal parts poetry, story telling, and comedy into a crowd pleasing display of verbal fireworks.” His work has been published in Prairie Schooner, Mas Tequila Review, Di-Verse-City, The San Diego Poetry Annual, Manteca, An Afro-Latino Anthology, among others. Here’s what Joaquin has to say about his class:
Writing the Odd, Publishable Poem
   In this interactive workshop, we will look at what goes into making a poem that forces an editor to lean into it because it is just so wonderfully odd. Walking that line between esoteric academic poetry and accessible poetry that borders on the narrative or spoken word is a very complicated thing to do well. In this workshop we will look at poets who do this exceptionally well and examine how they are doing it. There is not a great deal of room on that digest size or pocket digest sized anthology page, so in this workshop we will find ways to make the best use of the space we have to work within as poets. But we will find ways to do it that are odd, engaging, and above all publishable.

“Freelance Editing 101,” a class by Leslie Lutz
   Leslie Karen Lutz, will teach this class for the comma geeks. Yes, that’s you, the one in the corner who just noticed the misplaced apostrophe on the takeout menu. And let’s not forget the writer sitting next to you, that friend from workshop who always knows how to fix a broken scene or improve a flat character. Why not put your inner sticklers at the center of a brand new career?
   Whether you want to quit your day job or just make a little money on the side, freelance editing can help you take all that hard work you’ve been doing as a writer and turn it into income.
   Titled “Freelance Editing 101,” this class will teach you the basics of today’s editing marketplace.
   The workshop will be taught by Leslie Lutz, a local editor and the founder of the North Texas Chapter of the Editorial Freelancers Association. She started editing in 2010 and has now edited over forty titles for small publishers, editing companies, and various authors. She earned her Certificate in Editing from the University of Washington in 2013.
   In this course, you’ll learn about the four different types of editing and which one fits your personality and skill set. Don’t like correcting punctuation? Perhaps developmental editing is right for you. Got an ear for rhythm and an eye for style? Line editing could be your new passion. Love a well-placed hyphen more than a good donut? Maybe you really are suited for the role of copyeditor or proofreader. In this workshop, we’ll try to get a sense of what kind of editor you are and how you can turn those skills into a business.
   We’ll also cover several other topics to help you get started:
  • Finding your clients
  • Setting your rates
  • Estimating how much time a project will take
  • Using the most popular editing tools
  • Writing a great editorial meme
  • Maintaining a positive editor-client relationship
  • Honing the art of diplomacy
  • Writing an editing contract
   You don’t have to work at a major publishing house for ten years in order to break out on your own as an editor. Come find out if this career is for you.

The 2016 Agents & Editors Conference set June 24-26

The 2016 Agents & Editors Conference set June 24-26 Date: Friday-Sunday, June 24-26
Where: Hyatt Regency, 208 Barton Springs Rd., Austin, TX 78704

   The Writers' League of Texas will offer a conference in June that's a chance to gather with those who write and publish in the same genre, market, or format as you, so that you can trade ideas and encouragement – but we have moved them to Friday. We’ve also inserted additional panel options to our Saturday line-up, and expanded our Sunday program to include breakout presentations and a closing luncheon. Plus, we have the largest visiting faculty of agents and editors to date.

Featured Agents include:
Ethan Bassoff, Lippincott Massie McQuilkin
Jenni Ferrari-Adler, Union Literary
Mark Gottlieb, Trident Media Group
Jessica Papin, Dystel & Goderich Literary Management
Ammi-Joan Paquette, Erin Murphy Literary Agency
Michelle Tessler, Tessler Literary Agency

   Ethan Bassoff attended Emerson College and managed Brookline Booksmith, a prominent Boston bookstore where he also hosted reading events. He then joined InkWell Management, where for six years he worked with recipients of the National Book Award, the Man Booker Prize, and finalists for the Story Prize. In 2012 he joined Lippincott Massie McQuilkin where he continues to represent both emerging and established writers of literary and crime fiction and narrative nonfiction including history, science, humor, and sports writing. His clients include New York Times bestselling writers, winners of the Pulitzer Prize, the Whiting Award, PEN/USA Book Award for Creative Nonfiction, finalists for The National Book Critics Circle Award and the Edgar Awards, and many other honors. Ethan has moderated panels at the Association of Writers and Writing Program and regularly attends writers workshops including Bread Loaf. He keeps store browsers in mind when signing new authors and brings a strong editorial approach to all proposals and manuscripts, understanding that great ideas must also tell compelling stories.
   Jenni Ferrari-Adler is an agent at Union Literary in New York City. Jenni represents exciting novelists including Mo Daviau (EVERY ANXIOUS WAVE), and Brittani Sonnenberg (HOME LEAVE); the agency’s award-winning food writers and food shops; YA and Middle Grade; Narrative Nonfiction, and other categories. She holds an MFA in Fiction from the University of Michigan and a BA from Oberlin. She edited the anthology ALONE IN THE KITCHEN WITH AN EGGPLANT, Confessions of Cooking for One and Dining Alone. She has taught Fiction at the University of Michigan and the Gotham Writers’ Workshop, and worked as a reader for The Paris Review and as a bookseller at Housing Works. Jenni is on the contracts committee of the AAR and is a member of The IACP. She lives in Brooklyn with her husband and children. Follow her on twitter: @jenferrariadler or contact her at jenni@unionliterary.com.
   Mark Gottlieb’s focus on publishing began at Emerson College, where he was a founding member of the Publishing Club, later its President, overseeing its first publication and establishing the Wilde Press. He graduated with a degree in writing, literature and publishing. Mark enjoys working directly with authors, helping to manage and grow their careers with all of the unique resources that are available to Trident. Since becoming an agent, he has ranked as high as #1 in Agents on publishersmarketplace.com in Overall Deals. He has also ranked #1 in categories such as Science-Fiction/Fantasy, Children's, and Graphic Novels. He has ranked in the top five for Thriller, Mystery/Crime, Women’s Fiction, Romance, Young Adult, and certain nonfiction categories such as Pop Culture, Memoir, How-To, and Humor.
   Jessica Papin is an agent at Dystel and Goderich in New York. Prior to that, she was the Director of International Rights at the American University in Cairo Press, in Egypt, and an editor at Warner Books (now Grand Central Publishing) in New York. With a background on both sides of the desk, Papin loves working collaboratively with clients to shape and refine their work. She is interested in literary and smart commercial fiction, narrative non-fiction, history, medicine, science, economics and women’s issues. In every case, she looks for passion, erudition, and storytelling skill. A wry sense of humor doesn’t hurt.
   Michelle Tessler established her New York-based literary agency in 2004. She represents a select number of best-selling and emerging authors of upmarket fiction (literary and commercial) and nonfiction (including narrative, popular science, memoir, history, psychology, business, biography, food, and travel). She values fresh, original writing that has a compelling point of view. She represents, among many others, Paul Collins, Frans de Waal, Mira Jacob, Amy Stewart and Amanda Eyre Ward. She is a member of the Association of Author’s Representatives and Women’s Media Group. More about the agency can be found at www.tessleragency.com.

Featured Editors include:

Michelle Howry, Simon & Schuster/Touchstone
Jodi Warshaw, Amazon Publishing

   Michelle Howry specializes in commercial nonfiction. Her bestsellers at Touchstone include popular history books like THE GIRLS OF ATOMIC CITY by Denise Kiernan, diet category-killers THE NEW ATKINS FOR A NEW YOU and THE FORKS OVER KNIVES PLAN, pint-sized Hollywood diva Kristin Chenoweth’s A LITTLE BIT WICKED, and the BRO CODE franchise of books (with more than 1.5 million copies in print). Michelle acquires platform-driven practical nonfiction in the areas of self-help, personal finance, psychology, relationships, cookbooks, and health, as well as narrative nonfiction in categories such as popular history, biography, popular science and technology, and some celebrity memoir, including two upcoming books from #1 New York Times–bestselling author Matthew Inman, aka The Oatmeal.
   Jodi Warshaw got her start in publishing as an intern for Gordon Lish at Alfred A. Knopf and his literary magazine, The Quarterly. From there she moved to San Francisco to edit pop-culture titles for Chronicle Books. For the past two years she’s been at Lake Union Publishing, an imprint of Amazon Publishing, where she acquires book-club fiction. Her taste runs the gamut from historical to contemporary women’s fiction, and right now she’s particularly looking for issue-oriented fiction in the vein of THE PERFECT SON by Barbara Claypole White and INSIDE THE O’BRIENS by Lisa Genova.

E-mail: wlt@writersleague.org
Visit: www.writersleague.org/38/Conference

Saturday, January 16, 2016

Austin Book Fest set March 5

   Several authors, including Julie Kenner, will be in Austin, TX Saturday, March 5, noon until 4 p.m. at the Austin Book Fest, at the Hyatt Regency Austin.
   The event is hosted by Vilma's Book Blog and sponsored by InkSlinger PR and Atria Books. There will be a over 40 authors.
   The hotel is at 208 Barton Springs on shores of Lady Bird Lake in downtown Austin.
For more info:
Tickets: 2016austinbookfest.eventbrite.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/austinbookfest/
Website: vilmasbookblog.com/austinbookfest/