The conference was again well attended this year. Peeps were turned away from the Saturday night Royal Palm Literary Awards banquet due to lack of space. Next October, the con will move to larger digs at the Hilton in Altamonte Springs. It is a laid-back con, with a good balance of networking build into the day between panels. Ice cream and ice fruit bars on Friday afternoon FTW! I came down with severe laryngitis Thursday afternoon, so I didn't end up networking much, but I did croak at people and hand over my business cards. I need to re-do the cards, the type ended up too small and the red text color didn't pop like I was told it would, lol. Luckily, they didn't cost much. I'm going to do two-sided cards on the next attempt. The most interesting panel to me was 'Let's Talk About Sex' on Friday night. The writers/editor on hand spoke about their genres and then after a brief (unplanned, I'm pretty sure) foray into personal sexual upbringings and some defining of sexual terms (BDSM) and relationships (F/F, M/M, M/F/M vs F/M/F vs M/M/F, ect), the panelists settled into the philosophy and history of sex in books and its relation to feminism over time. I think a large portion of the room turned out hoping for the mechanics of writing better sex, but it was still interesting. The most engaging speaker, imo, was Tof Eklund who spoke on writing LGBTQIA characters. He's a very thoughtful and careful speaker, spoke honestly, and was well-organized. The first of two 'most practical' panels I attended was Red Sofa Literary's Jennie Goloboy speaking about how to write a good query letter. She brought examples that had caught her eye and critiqued samples from the audience. She gave me good tips on mine for Billie Mae, and said that including my Honorable Mention from Writers Of The Future was a good idea. If you've won awards, definitely include them on your queries. Include the fact that you're in a writer's group or have attended workshops as well. The second 'most practical' was the panel on Social Media by Sarah Nicolas, who writes as Aria Kane. Just do it, was her advice. Once your platform is set up and you familiarize yourself with it, it doesn't really take more than a half-hour a day to maintain it. And I have to say that Arliss Ryan was very entertaining and totally killed her Mastering The Metaphor presentation. Vic DiGenti also fell under the heading of being wonderfully entertaining in his to-the-point, example-filled talk on building suspense into your thriller or mystery novel. Check my twitter feed @LAndrewsPatt for my con tweets. Here's the list of websites that were rec'ced over the weekend that passed my down and dirty this-might-be useful-to-me scrutiny :-) AbsoluteWrite - ask any writing question or just tal;k writing with writers - I'd run across this site before, but haven't tried it FundsForWriters - grants, contests, fellowships, markets AgentQuery - Agent bios and wants, info on agencies QueryTracker - Kind of Duotrope (which I love) for queries :-) Triberr - Blogging across platforms by group. That's the actual useful link for understanding Triberr :-) There's also a guide of sorts. giphy - for adding blog content 99Designs - for help designing anything, I think, but especially video marketing materials I wish I were going to the Writer's UnBoxed Con. They still have a few openings for attendants available if anyone wants to jump onboard! And an ANNOUNCEMENT! My short, 'Karl's Last Night' placed first in the Published Short Fiction category and won a lovely Royal Palm Literary Award :-) That's two in a row for me! To put Giphy into use, here's a celebration dance: Thanks for dropping in today!
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So, the first thing that I'd love to write down here is that I wrote today, but that'd be a lie. Mostly I medicated and rehabbed my daughters' horses, who managed to mangle themselves just before summer, the riding high season for girls of a certain age, started. I did manage to give my sound and currently whole riding horse, Tallahassee, a rub and a 'good girl'. In between barn trips, I did the business of writing. I checked on submissions and decided where to submit the idle shorts. I re-worked my business card. I tweaked this spanking new site. I rehearsed speaking about my first novel, Billie Mae, in preparation for interviewing agents at the Florida Writers Association Conference this coming weekend. But I didn't like, actually write.
My friend, Rachel Caine, NY Times best-selling author of the Morganville Vampires and Weather Wardens books, has been developing Morganville as a webseries by way of a successful Kickstarter fundraiser. She's developing her new craft of scriptwriting while jumping into the deep end of learning to produce for film. Talk about a challenge! But the results have been fantastic. Check out this trailer for Morganville: The Series. The first episode airs on October 27th on Geek and Sundry. I read Glass Houses, the first Morganville book, in first draft. I am thrilled that the story has resonated with so many readers and taken Ms. Caine to fantastic new levels of art! Another friend, science fiction writer M.J. Carlson, self-published his debut novel this month. I've been reading M.J.'s work for years now and while Changed is well worth anyone's time and small change, I can tell you that the best is yet to come. Changed features an interesting concept and engaging characters. The descriptions of a future, climate-change affected Jacksonville, FL, are worth the read alone. Combine that with a solid action-oriented story with a hard science core and about halfway in, you have a page-turner. M.J. has extensive medical and computer science experience and it shows in his work. Go read Changed now so that you can say that you were in at the beginning later. Thanks for spending a few minutes with me today!!! |
AuthorElle Andrews Patt writes speculative and literary fiction. Archives
August 2021
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