Friday, March 6, 2015
Navigating a Big Writer's Conference--What's Best to Do, What Do You Bring, How to Make the Most of Your Time and Money
This spring, two major writing conferences happen. One is the annual AWP (Associated Writing Programs) conference in Minneapolis on April 8-11. The other is the Muse and the Marketplace, the premier New England conference sponsored by Grub Street writing school, on May 1-3 in Boston.
Mega-conferences are high opportunity and high overwhelm. Concurrent
workshops, panels, and pitch sessions with agents tempt you to
multi-task or bilocate. But the best results often come from thinking
carefully ahead of time about what you want to leave with--more skills,
more contacts, a sense of where you are in the publishing process, a
hopeful connection with an agent?
Dialogue Skills to Develop Real or Imagined Characters--And Help Sell Your Book to a Publisher!
Imagine
a publisher sitting in front your manuscript. By some wild luck, and
your hard work, it has arrived in his or her hands. Now it awaits
trial. Will it pass or fail?
The
publisher skims the pages until a section of dialogue appears. It's
read and the entire book is judged on how the dialogue moves. If it's
good, the publisher turns back to the first pages and begins to read
your story. If the dialogue is clunky, the manuscript is set aside with
a sigh (or a laugh) and the publisher moves on to the next in the
stack.
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