Today, my mind is on writer’s conferences. Actually, my mind
has been filled with thoughts of conferences for the past year and a half as I, and
my other co-chairs, have been in the throes of planning one. Yes, it's just like herding cats...though cats are more cooperative!
This weekend I am running around at the Hilton in Pasadena
for the California Crime Writers Conference, a biennial writer’s conference
sponsored by Sisters in Crime Los Angeles and the Southern California Chapter of Mystery Writers of America. (By the way, don’t show up at the door hoping to
get in. We are sold out! No room at the inn.) Being Vice President of SinC-LA
automatically makes me a co-chair, and being President of SoCalMWA is an
added bonus.
I can remember the first writer’s conference I attended. I
wasn’t even writing mysteries yet. I was still a hopeful historical novelist,
trying to get an agent. That was way back in 1993. It was held in San Diego and
it was there I began learning about networking. Prior to that, I was a solitary
writer, working away on my computer without really communicating with a soul
about my writing. My son was three and I juggled my time with him, writing, and
working on the weekends when his dad could be with him at home. I thought it
would be a good place to not only learn a few things about the craft of
writing, but the business of writing
as well. And I knew I would be able to sit down and pitch my work to an agent
or an editor. Those were heady days when all was new and I was just getting my writing legs. As it turned out, I did
get my first agent from this conference and I’ve been on a learning curve ever
since.
My first agent, Kimberley Cameron |
I remember, at that first conference, that we were divided
up into genres, and there were always a sparse few at the historical fiction
table. We were the conference nerds, but that was okay. I spent all of my school
years as some kind of nerd, too: a drama nerd, a literature nerd, an art nerd. But
that was all right. It was good to talk and commiserate. I was learning a lot
and quickly. From writing query letters to better researching techniques.
I went to this San Diego conference for years until I changed
over to writing mysteries and got my publishing contract in 2007. If you do the math, you will see that there is
fourteen years between that first conference and a contract. That’s a lot of
time to write, a lot of manuscripts, and a LOT of rejections. And depression.
Was this career choice really going to work? Would it be worth the time,
effort, and money?
SJ Rozan speaking at 2011's CCWC |
The first thing I really got from these conferences was
inspiration. They served as giant pep rallys to encourage me and let me know
that I was not alone! There were many others in the same boat as me. We weren’t
in competition with one another, but cohorts in the same battle. I was able to
connect with other medievalists online (which has continued to be a valuable
resource) and other writers. Later, when I joined the mystery community and
signed up for Sisters in Crime and Mystery Writers of America, I found a true
home and concrete information I could take to the bank. In fact, it wasn’t long
after I switched to writing mysteries that I got that contract.
For the writer starting out, I do recommend writer’s
conferences. If you write mysteries, may I recommend ours in Southern California?
You’ve got some time to plan. It won’t be rolling around again till 2015, but you’d
better be ready to sign up by mid 2014. We sold out this time. Next year
we might sell out even quicker.
And if you're at the conference this weekend, stop me before I whiz by and say hello!
5 comments:
Great post. Hope the conference this weekend is a great success!
Totally agree. I'm not at this conference mainly because I'm the program chair for the Public Safety Writers Conference which is less than a month away.
Organizing a conference is a huge job, and I salute anybody who can do it well -- as you obviously can, Jeri.
Even at the mystery conferences/conventions aimed at fans (Malice Domestic, Bouchercon, for example), a high percentage of the unpublished attendees are aspiring authors, hoping to learn something useful, make contacts, and find inspiration. I always try to keep them, as well as the fans, in mind when I'm a panelist or moderating a panel.
Conferences are a great way for writers to network. It's a solitary job. Connection is important. Wishing you much success with yours!
It's over! Thank goodness. I feel I had very little to do with its success. Our Sinc Prez Patty Smiley really did the lion's share and I just nodded and used my whip-cracking abilities when needed--and my loud voice. We owe the success of his conference to many, many hands as well.
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