In the jubilant afterglow of our San Diego celebration we now turn attention to September’s event in Irvine, which will be our 48th conference in 30 years. And regardless of whether you’re a writer pursuing the traditional route or one opting instead for a more personal path to publication, the founding principle of the SCWC remains as true today as ever before: quality matters.
That’s why the SCWC is a craft-centric conference. We’re not about “pitches” and “promises” and stuffing as many people into a ballroom full of strangers as possible. We’re about doing the needed work and providing the wherewithal. We’re about intimacy, accessibility, community and mutual support. As such, our focus at LA14 (Irvine) will again be on elevating the quality of manuscripts coming through, troubleshooting problematic aspects of execution, embracing material of promise, expanding on ideas perhaps not yet fully explored, avoiding catastrophic premature e-publication, and connecting the dizzying array of dots flooding today’s publishing landscape.
Don’t get bilked. Don’t get blinded by the tethered assurances of Author Solutions (AuthorHouse, iUniverse, Trafford, Wordclay, Xlibris, et al) and its similarly mercenary ilk, those who profit from selling uninformed writers “author services” far more than from actually publishing and selling their books. Get wise and get good.
What’s on the page is what matters most. It matters to agents. It matters to acquisitions editors. It matters, ultimately, to book-buying readers. So get to Irvine in September and allow us to let you be the best writer you aim to be.
Courtesy of longtime SCWCer & debut author Oz Monroe, whose literary dark fantasy Soil-Man is now out, we’re having a writing contest. The subject is, appropriately, “anniversary,” written in any genre you wish. The writers of the two winning submissions selected will both receive Full Conference admission to SCWC*LA14. Deadline to submit is May 1, 2016. Up to 1500 words. Submit your entry here.
In the meanwhile, discounted Early “Bard” Pre-registration is now open for our LA14 (Irvine) event. Do so by May 15, 2016, and save $100 on Full Conference attendance. It’s going to be another big mind sweller, so don’t dither. Don’t deny yourself. We’re talking about your work. We’re talking about your passion. Your words are worth it.
Also, if you haven’t, subscribe to our periodic .COMmunity updates and receive the latest announcements via email. Join the well-moderated conversation on our SCWC Facebook group for all sorts of writerly info and support. And for those seeking a more streamlined forum for SCWC exclusives, announcements, publishing news and more, we’re also on the emerging Tsu social media network, as well as Twitter.
That’s all for now. Until next time, go forth and write hard!
–Michael Steven Gregory
Executive Director, SCWC
Our return to Irvine was more than worth it. Great weather. Great hotel. Great staff. And, most important, exceptionally great writers. So much so that we even introduced a new award just to lend proper recognition of the talent in our midst. A couple other new things debuted at LA13. Despite the latest “Rogue” workshop going until 3:30 in the morning, freelance editor Jennifer Silva Redmond threatened to kick off a read & critique session beginning at 6 a.m. for anybody who might wish to participate. Sure enough, participate they did (that’s them in the photo), so maybe we’ll make it a regular part of future schedules. Also, we unveiled the following:
Back to the awards. When the caliber of quality storytelling is as high as what we got coming through the LA13 advance submission readers (many of the agents did well this time around), the read & critique and other craft/execution workshops, it becomes a rather tortuous joy debating which manuscript pages are to be singled out for official recognition, knowing so many are deserving. But awards are awards, and only a handful can be given. Here they are…
OUTSTANDING FICTION (Commercial Fiction)
Medium of Exchange
By Elizabeth Harris-Moritz of Palm Desert, CA
OUTSTANDING NONFICTION (Memoir)
Going Native: Letters from Micronesia
By Bridget Dole of Long Beach, CA
OUTSTANDING TOPIC STORY
Bear
By Elisabetta Panzica of Mission Viejo, CA
OUTSTANDING IMPROVEMENT
Linda Rhoades of Redlands, CA
OUTSTANDING PROMPT EXECUTION
Gregory Kompes of Las Vegas, NV
Congratulations, all! We’ll be back in Irvine next September. Thanks to our special guest speakers, Stephanie Diaz, Stephanie Kegan, Ara Grigorian, Neal Griffin, and Aline Ohanesian. Yet another big shout out to all our workshop leaders, advance submission readers and front desk staff. And to all the conferees, some who traveled from as far away as New Zealand, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Japan, Italy, Canada and Palm Springs(!)—thank you for placing your trust in the SCWC and continuing to be its life blood.
Finally, as many of you know, the SCWC community Facebook wall vanished last Friday, just as the conference was kicking in. Over 1400 members now need to re-join our new one, where there’s always vital writing resources and vibrant conversation. Please do so today and share the word with the writers in your extended community so we can get back to where we once belonged.
We’ll return to Irvine next September. In the meantime, discounted pre-registration for our 30th annual San Diego conference, taking Presidents’ Day Weekend, February 12-15, 2016, is now open. Register now, if only to keep somebody else from doing so!
–Michael Steven Gregory
Executive Director, SCWC
Fresh off the just-announced news of his winning the Gold in Sports Fiction at the 2015 Readers Favorite International Book Awards for his breakout success Game of Love (Curiosity Quills Press), Ara Grigorian rounds out our LA13 Special Guest Speaker slate. It’s been one helluva journey for Ara and his debut novel, and a bit of a whirlwind since its release this past May. An award well deserved, he’ll tell us all about the agonizing slog to publication, and the heady reception his book has received since it long-awaited publication. In addition to speaker duties, Ara will be conducting two workshops in our StoryCore track, “Finding the Beats of Your Story” and “Romance, Bromance and Beyond.”
Three other SCWCers on staff for our Irvine conference were also honored by the 2015 RFIRA. Kathy Porter Earth’s Ultimate Conflict scored Gold in Science Fiction. Darlene Quinn’s fourth installment of her popular Web series, Conflicting Webs, took the Silver in General Fiction. And in the Children’s/Fable, Sheri Fink’s enchanting The Little Seahorse landed a Bronze. Good job, everybody. Congratulations!
While the deadline has passed for optionally submitting material to Advance Submission Readers, a few have caught up on their workload and will remain open until September 15. If interested, be sure to contact the conference first to check a specific Reader’s availability. Those who are sold out are noted under their respective bio on the staff page.
We’re starting to fill up, but there’s still room to register for Irvine. Discounted pre-registration remains open at this time. We have a wonderful line-up of authors, agents and editors, a terrific schedule that’s nearly complete, and the usual surprises in store. Your work is worth it, so don’t miss out.
On the good “muse” front, two more SCWCers with books due out soon. The jacket for Seamus Beirne’s debut novel, the historical adventure Breakout from Sugar Island, has been revealed by Fireship Press. We’re awaiting the publisher’s announcement of a release date and expect to have it soon. On the literary fiction side, Jill G. Hall’s The Black Velvet Coat tells the alternating stories of two women separated by decades, yet bound by a vintage coat and brass key found in its pocket. The novel will be published October 6 from She Writes Press.
That’s it for now. Be sure to join our .COMmunity by subscribing to periodic updates (under the navigation bar on the right) and never miss an important announcement. Those planning ahead for our 30th annual San Diego conference, taking Presidents’ Day Weekend, February 12-15, 2016, register before October 1 and save a whopping $100 off Full Conference.
–Michael Steven Gregory
Executive Director, SCWC
Joining SCWC for the first time, Stephanie Kegan, author of Golden State (Simon & Schuster), will be our Friday evening Special Guest Speaker. Named a Top Ten Must by Entertainment Weekly and declared “Riveting” by Kirkus, Stephanie’s haunting literary drama explores the extraordinary, ultimately disastrous impact a brother has on his younger sister’s life with ripped-from-the headlines urgency. “[An] intense, provocative novel … will resonate with anyone who’s ever watched a loved one self-destruct,” lauds People Magazine and we couldn’t agree more. Welcome aboard, Stephanie!
Our Saturday morning Special Guest Speaker is also a first-timer for the SCWC. An extraordinary success at an impressively young age, Stephanie Diaz had her debut novel, Extraction, published last year by St. Martin’s Griffin at the ripe age of 21. “A gripping tale of loyalty, heartache, and self-discovery,” is how Kasie West (Pivot Point) described it, adding, “Diaz’s debut had me invested from page one.” Rebellion followed early 2015. Evolution, the third in the series, drops in September, just in time for the conference. We can’t wait to hear about and learn from yet another exceptionally talented writer. Welcome Stephanie, too (two?)!
Internationally best-selling children’s book author and SCWC alumni Sheri Fink returns with a needed new workshop. “Author Marketing Secrets: How to Authentically Connect with Your Readers through Social Media & Beyond” promises to go where most so-called social media “gurus” fail to tread because Sheri has actually done it. By herself … Another author/SCWCer returning with a new workshop, Jeremy Lee James will be contributing “Infusing Your Prose With Confidence, Style, & Voice” to StoryCore. Darlene Quinn will fill out the track with an absolutely essential workshop every novelist and narrative nonfictionalist on the fence should consider: “In the Beginning: Who, What and Why of Story.”
Deadlines are coming up quick. Most notably, admission to the “Best Foot Forward: Polishing to Impress” workshops, conducted by Jean Jenkins, requires not only advance sign-up, but submission of material prior to conference weekend. Limited to only 12 participants, those wanting to get in need to do so before Sept. 1. Details here.
More Advance Submission Readers have been added to the slate. Deadline for submissions to Readers is Aug. 29. As of today, all Readers remain open, but be aware that that will likely change in the next week.
We’re still crafting the remaining few workshops that will best serve the LA13 schedule, and there’ll likely be more additions to the staff. Be sure to subscribe to our updates, or follow us on Facebook, Twitter or Tsu to keep up to speed on all things SCWC. And, as mentioned in last month’s “latest news,” author Suzanne Redfearn is conducting a workshop geared to those writers who prefer “pantsing,” versus plotting, their novels. We just dug up the below-posted clip of NY Times best-selling author, and longtime friend of the SCWC, T. Jefferson Parker addressing that very topic. Have a watch and share the view.
Finally, discounted pre-registration is now open for our 30th annual conference in San Diego. Dates are Presidents’ Day Weekend, February 12-16, 2016. Register before October 1 and save a whopping $100 off Full Conference participation. Limited to 175 writers. Register today.
–Michael Steven Gregory
Executive Director, SCWC
Whether found in print or online, short stories remain a popular way for writers to reach new readers. In fact, some of our most memorable stories were written in the short form. But writing a great one can be tricky. So, given all the markets currently available–many of them paying markets—we’re pleased to welcome multiple award-winning fictionalist Kristin FitzPatrick to LA13. Her debut anthology, My Pulse is an Earthquake, is out September from West Virginia University Press, and was a semi-finalist for the Mary McCarthy Prize in Short Fiction. Kristin will conduct two new workshops, “Making Every Line Count: Dialogue in Short Stories” and “Writing Razor Sharp Description in Short Stories.”
Author Suzanne Redfearn, whose outstanding suburban thriller, Hush Little Baby, came out last year, returns to the SCWC with a needed workshop. Geared specifically to those among us who eschew plotting story in advance of sitting down to write it, through hands-on exercises “Pantsers: Keep the Creative Flowing” will inform how to allow story to develop organically, dictated by its natural flow, creating unexpected surprises and tension. Suzanne’s No Ordinary Life is out February from Grand Central and we’re looking forward to the read.
Of course, many more workshops have been added since last update. You can check them out on our newly expanded Workshops & Events page. The preliminary schedule is now posted. It is the working schedule, and will continue to evolve as we plug in the remaining sessions and adjust time slots.
SCWCers with new books include Charisse Tyson. Born Again in a Biker Bar chronicles her spiritual odyssey from controlling co-dependent with an alcoholic husband to a sound marriage and miraculous salvation … Girlgoyle, by Evan Ramspott (writing as Better Hero Army), is out this month. The first book in his Hollow Mountain Butterfly series, it tells the tale of Tiffany Noboru, who awakens from her death only to discover she’s been drafted into the Gargoyle Ghost Hunter Corps … And come September, Solange Ritchie’s debut thriller, The Burning Man, sets FBI forensic pathologist Catherine (“Cat”) Powers on the hunt for an Orange County serial killer. Best of success to all!
Also, a hearty congratulations to Southern California Independent Booksellers Awards finalists David Putnam (The Replacements) and Don Winslow (The Cartel). Both are up for the T. Jefferson Parker Mystery Award, the winner of which will be announced in October.
Still more staff and workshops to announce. Be sure to join our Facebook .COMmunity wall and Twitter feed to keep up on all things SCWC. Now let’s see what author/workshop leader Ara Grigorian has to say…
–Michael Steven Gregory
Executive Director, SCWC