Pennwriters Annual Writing Contest (Deadline: Jan. 31, 2014)
Transcription
Pennwriters Annual Writing Contest (Deadline: Jan. 31, 2014)
TH E the newsletter of Pennwriters inc. NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2013 • VOl. XXI NO. 6 Pennwriters Annual Writing Contest (Deadline: Jan. 31, 2014) by Colette Garmer, Contest Coordinator, Area 3 It’s that time again. Time to break out your literary babies, shine them up, dress them in their Sunday best and submit them to the Pennwriters Annual Writing Contest. Before you know it, the holidays will be upon us, and we’ll be struggling to fit writing into our busy schedules. Take the time now to edit and polish before the crush of the season. Take a chance—enter the contest. You never know unless you try. Why not be a part of the fun this year and be one of those numbers? our 2013 contest set new record highs. There were 117 entries that fell into the following subcategories: • Novel Beginnings: 64 entries • Non-Fiction: 17 entries • Poetry: 13 entries • Short Story: 23 entries In 2014, the Pennwriters Annual Writing Contest will transition to all digital. The publishing industry operates in a digital world, and we wish to remain at the forefront of the current practices and comply with industry standards. We strive to hold a contest that is resumeworthy. In other words, we want you to be able to proudly mention your win in your query letter to an agent or editor, knowing that this contest and our rules conform to industry standards. As a member of Pennwriters, you should be proud. In 2013, our conference was described in a national writing magazine as one of the best conferences to attend. We are considered one of the great buys when looking to attend a first-rate writing conference. All this adds up to an agent or editor associating your writing contest win with a respected organization. Here are the categories of our contest. Multiple entries are allowed with the proper entry fees. • Novel Beginning—Submit no more than 10 pages. Include your genre so we can match your entry with a suitable judge. $15 entry fee per piece. • Short Story—Short Story entries must present a complete story within the allotted 10 pages. Include your genre so we can match your entry with a suitable judge. $15 entry fee per story. • Non-Fiction—This includes Creative Non-Fiction, Narrative Non-Fiction and Article. Submit no more than 10 pages. Must present a complete piece within the allotted 10 pages. $15 entry fee per piece. • Poetry—up to 40 lines per poem. $15 entry fee for up to three poems (3 poems/$15; 6 poems/$30). PleASe NoTe— • entries may be fewer than 10 pages but must not exceed 10 pages. If even one word appears on page 11, the entry will be disqualified. • each entry will be evaluated by at least two judges who will provide specific feedback and comments. • The Third-Place prize has increased from certificate only to certificate plus one complimentary entry for the following year’s contest. There is no cash prize, but the entry-fee value is $15. + continued on page 10 n in this issUe PW Annual Writing Contest ...........1, 10 President’s Column .......................... 2-3 PW Officers and Online Groups..........3 Member News ...................................4-5 10 New Year’s Resolutions ...................6 Area Report: Area 1 ............................7 Area Report: Area 3 ............................8 Unforgettable Characters ...................8 A Poem ..................................................9 Area Reports: Areas 2 & 4 ...................9 Contest Rules and Information .........10 Area Reports: Areas 5, 6 & 7 .............11 Volunteer Spotlight .............................12 2014 Pennwriters Conference...........13 Publishing Options .........................14-17 Conference Volunteer Roles.............17 Market News ..................................18-19 Submission deadline/theme ........back THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org 1 President’s Column Carol Silvis, Area 3 PRESIDENT Unforgettable characters touch us in many ways. We fall in love with compassionate, heroic, honorable characters—and we love to hate the devious, brutal, awful ones. Writing about this theme for the newsletter has made me think about the characters I will probably never forget and the reasons why I won’t forget them. I have come up with a few explanations, but there are probably many more. First, whether I love, hate, fear, admire, or grieve for these characters, they all have many layers of emotion that make them seem real. They compel me sit up and take notice. Second, they have character traits with which I can identify, whether they are traits I aspire to or ones I hope never to have. Third, they face difficult challenges and struggle their way through obstacles to attain their goals, regardless of the risk. I want to know what they are doing and what is happening to them. Fourth, they are not perfect; they are human. Unforgettable characters give us somebody to root for and to worry about as we follow them along their road to personal growth. Make the people in your stories unforgettable, and readers will remember those characters long after they close the book. How do you go about creating unforgettable characters? Read, read, read. Study people. Take courses and attend conferences. With the holidays approaching, it might be a good time to think about giving yourself a present. Why not treat yourself to the 2014 Pennwriters Conference? It will be held May 16-18 in lancaster, featuring keynotes Kami Garcia and Meredith Mileti. Conference co-coordinators Ayleen Stellhorn and Charli Mac are putting together an awesome slate of workshops. You will be able to hone your writings skills, talk to other Pennwriters, and meet agents and editors. look for more information in future issues of the Penn Writer and online. Have you changed your address or email address? If so, please notify Jessica Williams, PW secretary, at jesswilliams0638@gmail.com. We thank you in advance for helping to keep our member roster current. NOTICE: Publication herein of articles, interviews, and news concerning markets, contests, seminars, classes, etc., does not imply an endorsement, recommendation or any warranty given by Pennwriters. Readers are urged to determine for themselves the reliability, integrity, and financial responsibility of those with whom they deal. The contents of this issue of The Penn Writer are copyrighted © 2013 by Pennwriters, Inc. All rights are reserved. Permission to photocopy is expressly denied. All rights revert to individual authors immediately upon publication. Also, check the website for ongoing online courses offered on a variety of topics. Board News: The Board met on Saturday, September 28, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. We are excited to announce that we have allocated funds to update our website to make it more user friendly and efficient for our needs. We have chosen the firm Canto labs (cantolabs.com.) They have developed websites for several nonprofits. Hopefully, the new website will be completed by the first of the year, and the 2014 conference registrants will have an easy time navigating the site and signing up for the conference. In addition to a “facelift,” the site will feature a forum and access to current and previous newsletters. Ayleen, our Author Advocate, has exciting website plans for the published authors, and Jess, our Secretary, is looking forward to a streamlined process for new and renewal memberships. next page 2 THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org ’ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• President Carol Silvis 724-327-2725, snax@nb.net Dave Szymanowski, who has been troubleshooting and maintaining the current site, will continue in that role, officially now as Webmaster. We need volunteers to serve as representatives for Area 2 and Area 5. If you would like to volunteer for either of these roles, please let me or another board member know. If you do not reside in Areas 2 or 5 but are in a bordering area, you can volunteer to be the Area 2 or the Area 5 rep. Heather, the newsletter editor, is always looking for articles. Check the back page of each issue for the theme and submission deadline. You do not have to submit an article on the current theme. –Carol Vice President Annette Dashofy 724-255-7955 annette@annettedashofy.com secretary Jessica Williams 443-286-9379 jesswilliams0638@gmail.com treasurer Jackie Shaffmaster 570-878-7056, jmy382@hotmail.com Author Advocate 2014 conference co-coordinator Ayleen Stellhorn 717-359-9279 ayleen@embarqmail.com 2014 conference co-coordinator Charli Mac charli-mac@comcast.net Pennwriters Online: Your Internet Connection Website . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www.pennwriters.org Yahoo Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Pennwriters/join Facebook . . . . . . . . . . . . .“Pennwriters” and “Pennwriters Annual Conference” linkedIn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www.linkedin.com/groups?about=&gid=67420 Twitter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . www.twitter.com/Pennwriters Online Courses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . http://tinyurl.com/PennwritersOnlineCourses Meetup.com . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . search for keyword “Pennwriters” webmaster coordinator of Area reps Dave Szymanowski 814-838-6870 daveszy39@roadrunner.com newsletter editor Heather Desuta 412-337-6966 thepennwriter@gmail.com Public relations chair Christiana Reuling penciledwhimsies@gmail.com Annual writing contest coordinator Colette Garmer 724-889-6863, writingcontestcoordinator@ pennwriters.org Pennwriters Areas Map Bylaws chair Jean Jenkins 814-774-0557 jean.jenkins10@gmail.com internet Activities coordinator and online courses coordinator Pauline Drozeski cadlady@deepbluewaters.com election chair Terry Friedman 610-692-8668, tfried44@verizon.net Contact information for Area Reps can be found in area reports within the newsletter. Members living outside of Pennsylvania are Area 7 THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org 3 Member News & Accomplishments Area 7 Clara Bowman-Jahn’s essay “You Sow What You Reap, Gal 6:7” appears in the anthology THe 'I' WoRD edited by Kate Gould. We asked writers “What words inspire you?” These backstories to the writing process and snapshots of the many muses are idiosyncratic, funny, moving, sad and, yes, inspiring. Area 7 Bobbi Carducci’s book for young readers, SToRee WRYTeR GeTS A DoG, received a Bronze living Now Award honoring books that enhance the quality of our lives. This award is in addition to the GolD Mom’s Choice Award for excellence and being named A Best Dog Book for Young Readers by Cesar Milan, TVs the Dog Whisperer. In other news, Bobbi’s short story, “Spearmint Miracle,” was the second place winner ($100 prize) in the First Annual Adult Short Story Contest hosted by loudoun County Virginia library Association and was published in a collection that will be available throughout the library system. Kathryn Craft, Area 6, has sold a second novel: WHIle THe leAVeS STooD STIll, based on her personal story, about a tense ten-hour standoff between the police and one desperate man ready to take his life, while his family and the community grapple with how best to respond. The novel sold to Shana Drehs at Source4 books, for Spring 2015 publication, by Katie Shea Boutillier at Donald Maass literary Agency. Meanwhile, Kathryn’s debut, THe ART oF FAllING, received a great review from Kirkus and blurbs from several hot women’s fiction authors. It releases Jan. 28 and is available for pre-order at Amazon and Barnes & Noble. Doris Dumrauf, Area 3, published her six-page photo feature, “A Home for Stories,” about the Senator John Heinz History Center, in the Sept/oct 2013 issue of Pennsylvania Magazine. Katherine Ernst, Area 6, recently published THe loNG GAMe under the name J.l. Fynn, the pseudonym she shares with her writing partner Chelle Bruhn. In the New Adult novel, twenty-year-old Shay Reilly has proven himself to his Irish-American Gypsy clan on small-scale cons, but now the clan leader has a bigger mission for him: playing the long game. To rake in the big score he’s after, he needs to con co-ed Spencer into falling in love with him. He knows he should see Spencer as a mere means to an end, but that’s easier said than done when there’s a witty, attractive girl in your arms. Now the only thing that can keep them apart is the thing that brought them together: Shay’s plans of revenge against someone who wronged his clan and family years before—Spencer’s father. Katherine graduated Magna Cum laude from loyola law School in New orleans and worked as a high profile criminal and corporate fraud attorney in Philadelphia. She’s highly active on social media and loves interacting with readers and writers. To learn more, visit www.jlfynn.com. Area 6 Suzanne Grieco Mattaboni’s story, “Reunions,” was chosen for the Chicken Soup anthology series, THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org CHICKeN SoUP FoR THe SoUl: MIRACUloUS MeSSAGeS FRoM HeAVeN: 101 Stories of eternal love, Powerful Connections, and Divine Signs from Beyond, was released in october. Hana Haatainen Caye, Area 3, recently published THe olD WoMAN WHo lIVeD IN THe VINeGAR BoTTle, a retelling of the Welsh tale about a woman in a shoe. This is Hana’s 30th book published through iStorybooks, which includes seven in her “lincoln and laura” series. Hana also provides all the narrations for iStorybooks under the name Maya Ray. She also published an article, “Sneezes, Wheezes and Watery eyes,” about which pets are best for families with allergies. The article will appear in the october/November issue of Pinpoint Publications’ ZIP. The “Ask Green Grandma” column continues to run in each issue of Green Child Magazine. Area 3 Lorraine Henderson’s latest confession sale, “our Thanksgiving Miracle,” will appear in the November issue of True Confessions. This one is based on the fires and floods out west, which she witnessed during her two weeks in Colorado in August. It was sad to see the mud slides destroy so much, but this story has a happy ending, with the return of a family bible on Thanksgiving day. Area 1 Lisa Lepovetsky‘s poem, “lunacy,” appears in the fall issue of the e-zine Rose Red Review. Area 3 Jason Jack Miller’s novel HellBeNDeR was nominated for the Appalachian Writers Association Book of the Year Award, which recognizes superior and significant writing in Appalachian literature. HellBeNDeR, Share Your Good News—Email Heather Desuta, newsletter editor, at thepennwriter@gmail.com. Type “PennWriter Submission” in the subject line, and please include your Area number. a supernatural revenge thriller set in the hills of West Virginia, was Miller’s thesis novel for the Writing Popular Fiction program at Seton Hill University, where he is now adjunct faculty in the MFA and undergraduate program. Miller’s third novel in the Murder Ballads and Whiskey series, THe ReVelATIoNS oF PReSToN BlACK, was released this summer by Raw Dog Screaming Press, with a fourth book scheduled for fall 2014. Miller also recently began negotiations with a los Angeles talent agency to package HellBeNDeR for TV/film. Visit jasonjackmiller.blogspot.com and www.rawdogscreaming.com. Area 2 Rosemary D. Neidig’s memoir, eVeRY TWo MINUTeS: oNe WoMAN’S HeAlING JoURNeY THRoUGH SexUAl TRAUMAS, is available at Amazon and lulu.com. Steven Nesbit, Area 5, recently published HUDoJNIK: THe lIFe AND ART oF IVAN I. GARIKoW. Like an acclaimed Russian novel, Ivan Garikow's life story (1918-1982) is one of hardship and hope, intrigue and suspense, misfortune and triumph, and setback and survival. It is a war story, a love story, a detective story, but most importantly, a story about a man and his art. This biography captures his stormy and tumultuous life in Europe and America and heralds Garikow's unyielding faith, indomitable courage, undaunted optimism and the love for his art. This book is the culmination of historical research, scholarly writing, and narrative nonfiction. More than 100 images of Garikow's paintings are included. Steven Nesbit taught english in the public schools for 32 years and was an Adjunct Professor of Communications at York College. His educational career has spanned almost four decades, and he’s been a writer for 20 years. From freelancing and feature writing to ghostwriting and collaborative writing, his vast writing experience is filled with much diversity. Nesbit has written more than 25 bio-features for publication. Visit him at stevenmnesbit.com. Area 7 Nancy Springer’s latest novel, DRAWN INTo DARKNeSS, will be released this November. Darkness lies closer than you think… Liana Clymer is running away— from her divorce, from her past, from herself. Leaving behind everything she knows, she finds herself ensconced in a fuchsia-colored cottage in the swampy hinterlands of the Florida panhandle. Far from the grown sons who don’t return her calls, her only companion her dog, Liana decides to put her best foot forward and get to know whoever lives in the blue house across the street, the only neighbors within sight of her new home. But moments after a teenage boy, Justin, answers the door and wins her over with his shy kindness, his face appears on the TV screen, and is immediately recognizable as the child who was taken from his parents two years ago. Worse, Justin’s abductor has no intention of letting Liana go. A powerful will to live…and to save Justin too…seizes hold of Liana. She will fight tooth and nail to survive. But does she have what it takes to thwart a wily, depraved psychopath for whom abuse is a way of life…and killing is routine? Robert Starr, Area 5, recently released his book SeCReT oF THe GolDeN SHAWl, a spellbinding story of a woman, Mary, and her young son, Billy, who receive mystical gifts from a family long forgotten. Their journey begins on the farm lands of Missouri and takes them to Salem, Massachusetts, and then to Egypt; however their story almost ends before it begins. When they arrive in Salem, they discover that they are heirs to a fortune and feud that has lasted generations. Can Mary and Billy survive the threats from a family bent on destroying their lives, or will the Golden Shawl and the Sun God Ra protect them? SeCReT oF THe GolDeN SHAWl is available on Amazon. Area 5 Judy Wolfman’s first novel, NoT MY TIMe, was published by Black Rose Publishing in August. This historical fiction book is based on the true story of Nessy Wolpert Marks, a Holocaust survivor who spent her teen years in the Kovno Ghetto in lithuania, where she witnessed murders, starvation, lice and many other horrors. She escaped, assumed a false identity, worked in an orphanage and later a work camp until the end of WWII. Nessy sought out living members of her family and eventually found her way to America, where Judy interviewed and recorded her. NoT MY TIMe is available through Amazon and Barnes & Noble. Visit www.judybwolfman.com or www.blackrosewriting.com. In other news, Judy had an article, “Help Kids Read and Write,” in the September issue of Teachers of Vision magazine. THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org 5 10 New Year's Resolutions for A Writer by Catherine E. McLean, Area 1 1. I will write __________ pages q every day q every week q every month 2. I will set aside writing time and not let anything or anyone interfere with that sacred time which will be from __________ a.m / p.m. to _________ a.m / p.m. 3. This year I will complete ____ (quantity) q novel/s q short story/stories q essay/s q nonfiction article/s q short creative nonfiction q book-length creative nonfiction or ______(quantity) pages per q day q week q month because my goal is to achieve __________________________________________________ by Dec. 31, 2014. looking ahead, five years from now, I will __________________________________________________________ And 10 years from now ____________________________________________________________________________ My Magnificent Obsession—my ultimate, all time, top goal—is to achieve______________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ (i.e. money, awards, placement on NYT Best Seller lists, win contest, etc.) 4. I will create or collect _______(quantity) motivational and inspirational signs to hang or tape near my writing area to remind me why my writing is important to me. 5. During the first storm of the year when I am housebound, I will reread the punctuation and grammar sections of my desk reference which I haven't opened since _______ (year of graduation). 6. In striving to master writing craft elements to make my work more marketable, I will read _______________________________________________ (title of book or books) and faithfully read q one chapter q two chapters every q morning q evening q during my lunch hour at work or q while waiting at my child/children's after-school practices or doctor's appointments. I will also take notes and practice what I'm striving to learn. 7. For my completed q short story or q article/essay or q book length fiction or nonfiction, I will diligently and systematically revise my drafted pages at a rate of _____(quantity) q pages q scenes q chapters per q day q week q month q during my lunch hour at work or q while waiting at my child/children's after-school practices or club meetings. When I have the manuscript as good as I can get it, I will then take the work to my local Pennwriters group or online critique partner(s) for feedback. 8. I will pay my Pennwriters dues promptly at renewal time in July. 9. I will volunteer to serve my fellow Pennwriters by: q participating in my local Pennwriters group or online forum q offering to help my Area Rep by ______________________ q writing an article for The Penn Writer q volunteering to be a room moderator or Penn Pal at the May conference q volunteering to serve at the registration table during the May conference q volunteering to sell silent auction tickets at the May conference q volunteering to be a time keeper for editor-agent appointments at the May conference 10. I will q absolutely q positively q definitely make my writing a top priority in 2014. Catherine is the author of KARMA AND MAYHEM and JEWELS OF THE SKY. Her short stories have appeared in hard-copy and online anthologies and magazines. She's been a workshop presenter and will be giving the online workshop, "Revision Boot Camp," January 13-31, 2014 (information is at www.WritersCheatSheets.com). Visit her author site www.CatherineEmclean.com. 6 THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org writer’s toolBox: ••••••••••••••••••••••• Marketing Using the customers’ own words and testimonials to describe their needs add power to marketing. In drafting promotions, be mindful of the psychology of printed text: • • • • • Avoid big paragraphs (paragraphs with more than seven lines) Be concise leave a lot of white space Use larger fonts Make everything reader-friendly and easy to ingest -from Strategic Marketing Made Easy For Writers: Optimize Your Promotions For Bestseller Results by Nate Hardy, Area 6. www.PlusSignProductions.org writer’s toolBox: Forming Habits Having trouble achieving your writing goals? Area 6 Rep Cathy Rouse recommends HabitForge, an online accountability site. It's based on the idea that doing something for 21 days straight will make it a habit. You set a goal (about writing or anything) and it emails you twice a day to remind you to do task. Cathy said, “It pushed me to focus on my WIP every day, even if it was fifteen minutes to midnight. I wanted to keep the chain going. The sense of accomplishment has been amazing.” writer’s toolBox: the Grapevine Share your good news or pass along the good news of a friend or fellow member! Don’t forget that word-of-mouth marketing can be a powerful tool. ...Area 3 MaryAlice Meli’s short story, “Rescue Me,” was published Sept. 20 at www.untiedshoelacesofthemind.com in Issue 8, the online ezine’s latest collection of flash fiction since its founding in 2009. ...Big congrats to Jason Jack Miller, Area 3! His novel HEllBENDER was nominated for the Appalachian Writers Association Book of the Year Award. Area 1 Todd Main • Area 1 Representative 814-459-8752 • todd_main@steris.com Meadville Vicinity Pennwriters (MVP) 1st Saturday, 1-4 p.m. WHeRe: Tim Horton's on Conneaut lake Road, Meadville CoNTACT: Babs Mountjoy, bmountjoy@zoominternet.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ WHeN: 1st Saturday, 10–Noon WHeRe: United Methodist Church, edinboro CoNTACT: Jan Brawn, jbrawn@coaxpa.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ WHeN: 2nd Saturday, 1-4 p.m. WHeRe: Tom Ridge environmental Center, 301 Peninsula Drive, Presque Isle CoNTACT: Todd Main, todd_main@steris.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Shenango Valley Pennwriters (SVP) WHeN: 3rd Saturday, 1-4 p.m. WHeRe: Community library of Shenango Valley CoNTACT: Catherine Mclean, catherinemclean@windstream.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ WHeN: 4th Saturday, 1-4 p.m. WHeRe: Barnes & Noble, near the Millcreek Mall, erie CoNTACT: Dave Szymanowski, daveszy@adelphia.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Fellowship of the Quill (FOTQ) WHeN: every Thursday, 7-10 p.m. WHeRe: Tim Horton’s, 2565 West 12th, erie CoNTACT: Todd Main, todd_main@steris.com WHeN: i start drawing, and eventually the characters involve themselves in a situation. then in the end, i go back and try to cut out most of the preachments. - Dr. Seuss our lives are defined by opportunities, even the ones we miss. - THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN BUTTON, F. Scott Fitzgerald THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org 7 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Area 3 Candace Banks • Area 3 Representative ckb1@consolidated.net First Monday Discussion Group Discusses e-publishing, social media, e-readers, formatting, marketing and website creation. Please RSVP so proper-sized room is reserved. WHeN: 1st Monday, 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. WHeRe: Bethel Park library (part of Bethel Municipal Bldg.) CoNTACT: Cheryl Williams, cherylewilliams205@yahoo.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Second Tuesday of the Month Group Discusses topics of general interest to writers. WHeN: Contact larry for fall meeting schedule. WHeRe: Panera Bread, Settlers Ridge Centre Drive CoNTACT: larry Ivkovich, inkfish1@verizon.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Mindful Writers Group our goal is to complete a book-length manuscript (fiction, nonfiction or creative nonfiction) in nine months using Writing Meditation Method. WHeN: every Wednesday, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. WHeRe: eat ’n Park, at Wexford exit of I-79 CoNTACT: To join, contact Madhu Wangu, madhu.wangu@me.com. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Robinson Nonfiction and Fiction Group Discussion about writing elements such as chapter length, character development, pacing/plot; also, platforms and promotion plans, queries, book proposals, and more. WHeN: 1st Thursday, 10:30 a.m. WHeRe: Panera Bread, Settlers Ridge Centre Drive CoNTACT: lynn Price, lynn@behlerpublications.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Robinson Township Writers Group Features monthly discussion or speaker on a wide range of subjects, from craft to marketing. All Pennwriters members and friends are welcome. WHeN: the last Thursday of each month, 11:30 a.m. WHeRe: eat ’n Park in Robinson CoNTACT: Deborah Riley-Magnus, writerchef@sbcglobal.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pittsburgh East Writers Group Small, friendly critique group. Main focus is fiction writing but writers of all genres are welcome. WHeN: 3rd Saturday, 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. WHeRe: Monroeville Public library’s upstairs conference room CoNTACT: Chuck Rakiecz, crakiecz@verizon.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Critique Group North eight members writing shorts, flashes and novels. Currently, membership is full, but interested writers may submit their names and email addresses for the waiting list. WHeN: 2nd Thursday, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. (includes time for lunch) WHeRe: King’s Restaurant, Rt. 910, at Wexford exit of I-79 CoNTACT: MaryAlice Meli, maryalicemeli@yahoo.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ South Hills Critique Group Small group of fiction writers. Six member limit. Work to be critiqued is emailed prior to meetings. WHeN: 3rd Thursday, 10 a.m. WHeRe: Panera in the Galleria, Mt. lebanon CoNTACT: Please RSVP to Stephanie Claypool, sclaypool@verizon.net 8 THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org Pennwriters Share Their Unforgettable Characters Charlotte Brontë’s Jane eyre. She seems so realistic and sympathetic a character. Her determination to survive and be true to herself is inspirational. Her classic rags to riches story (while not compromising herself) is inspirational. Also, frederic henry from A FAREWEll TO ARMS. I liked this character as he seemed so realistic. Just a good kid who realizes war is horrible and yet, he just keeps living on. He loses the love of his life as well as his stillborn child. Somehow, he just seems to find the will to keep going on. -Jay Snyder For me, it's Delia Grinstead in Anne Tyler's lADDER OF YEARS. When life becomes overwhelming and her family unappreciative, she does what most of us only fantasize about. She simply walks away. No plan, no forethought, she just goes for a walk down the beach on a family vacation and keeps on walking until she's found a new town, a new life, and a new sense of self. Whether you think that Delia is brave or crazy, the fact is that this otherwise ordinary woman had the courage to reinvent her vision of the future and create a happier place for herself. I first discovered this book as a 12-year-old who needed a step stool to reach it on the shelf and it's stuck with me my entire life. It's still one of my favorite novels. -Christiana Reuling Jim nightshade and will halloway in Ray Bradbury’s SOMETHING WICkED THIS WAY COMES. They represent my youth better than any other characters I know. -laura lovic lindsay Michael Connelly’s harry Bosch. Over 18 novels, he has been beset by everything imaginable yet he perseveres to bring the guilty to justice no matter the cost to himself in his professional or personal life. His motto—“Everybody matters or nobody matters”—should be a mantra for police officers everywhere. -Dave Freas A Poem... And The old Women Just Say, “o, My Word” You have to go almost fully down the street to see it. Nothing is visible from the cross street, just the Delaware River and St. Mary’s steeple on the far side. Walk, see the old house he’s patched with tin pans painted gray to match. See the sprawling pet cemetery in the side yard. See large flat stones he’s dredged himself, set on end to face the flow of water, the animals’ names drawn in bright red oils. See the occasional canoe or Blue Heron pass to view the banks shrubbed with a tangle of wires hooked up to extend his rotary land-line phone and add an outside outlet for a TV. See inside the house. No, you’ll need to imagine his parents’ bedroom just as they left it, a living room scented by couch-sleeper raccoons and churlish cats who fight for food. See him on easter afternoon repaint “Flossie 1968” and “Fannie 1961,” gentle goat grave names in all-capscan’t-be-missed-boldface. Now watch him half-limp to a new Dodge Challenger, Redline, 3 Coat Pearl and drive to Price Chopper; walk a distance from the car, hike baggy, stained pants up and ask most everyone, “You want a close peek at my Cherry Bomb?” Men look for a vintage vehicle, but, my, my how the teenage girls giggle, nudge one another. He thinks they like him, talks a lot about the kids he used to have, laughs a lot as well. This is good. Area 1 Pennwriter Margaret Hemme is a retired special education teacher and a relatively young poet. Her poems have been published in print and online, and she has placed favorably in the Innerboard Poetry Competition. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Area 2 Area 2 Representative: Position Open If interested, email Carol Silvis at snax@nb.net. Danville Group 1st and 3rd Wednesdays, 7 p.m. WHeRe: episcopal Church (Market Street) CoNTACT: Dave Freas, quillracer@pa.metrocast.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tunkhannock Group #1 WHeN: 2nd and 4th Tuesdays, 7 p.m. WHeRe: Methodist education Building (corner of Warren St. and Marion St.) CoNTACT: Ann Vitale, penann@epix.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tunkhannock Group #2 WHeN: every Thursday, 7 p.m. WHeRe: Dietrich Theater (60 east Tioga Street) CoNTACT: Ann Vitale, penann@epix.net WHeN: ••••••••••••••••••••••••• Area 4 Cathy Rouse • Area 4 Representative cebr@comcast.net The Southern Alleghenies Writers Guild 3rd Saturday, noon-3 p.m. WHeRe: contact Jim lee for info CoNTACT: Jim lee, 814-442-1241, jimlee.author@gmail.com WHeN: While these meetings are not Pennwriters events, they may be of interest to Area 4 members: Nittany Valley Writers Network WHeN: 2nd Tuesday of the month, 7-8:30 p.m. WHeRe: Schlow library, 211 S. Allen Street, State College ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Nittany Valley Writers Network: The Early Risers WHeN: 3rd Wednesday of the month, 7- 8 a.m. WHeRe: The Waffle Shop, W. College Ave. & Blue Course Dr., State College ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Nittany Valley Writers Network: Social Gatherings WHeN: 4th Tuesday of the month, 5:30-7 p.m. WHeRe: The Autoport, 1405 S Atherton St., State College we tell ourselves stories in order to live. - Joan Didion THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org 9 examples... My Great American Novel / Novel Beginnings / Mainstream My Great American Novel / Novel Beginnings / Mainstream Pg 1 Pg 1 Pennwriters Annual Writing Contest Rules and Information In order to enter our contest, you must: • Be a Pennwriters member with a current membership in good standing. • Use standard manuscript format, explained below. • Go to this webpage and enter: pennwriterswritingcontest.weebly.com/enter-the-contest.html • Submit online by midnight EST on January 31, 2014. • Pay your fee(s) through the secure PayPal portal—and that’s it. Easy peasy! Please note: When submitting your entry, provide your name and contact information ONlY in the online entry form that is at the contest website. Author’s name MUST NOT appear anywhere on the entry. Author’s name on manuscript WIll result in immediate disqualification. Entry fee will not be returned. NEW THIS YEAR: There is no need to include a cover page. Standard manuscript format and additional instructions: • Double space the entire text in 8.5” x 11” page format. • Use one-inch margins all around. (1” top, bottom, left and right). This will yield 24 to 26 lines per page. • Fonts must be in Times New Roman or Courier New, in 12 pt. type. • Align text left and indent the first line of each paragraph. • Entries must not exceed 10 pages (of approx. 250 words per page). • In the header, at the top left, please provide: Name of Entry / Category Entered / genre (if it applies). Page number should appear on the top right. See top of this page (My Great American Novel example). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . First Place Prize: Your choice of either free registration for the Pennwriters Annual Conference (valid for the 2015 PW Conference in Pittsburgh or the 2016 PW Conference in Lancaster) or $50 cash. Second Place: Your choice of either 50% off registration for the Pennwriters Annual Conference (valid for the 2015 PW Conference in Pittsburgh or the 2016 PW Conference in Lancaster) or $30 cash. Third Place: One free entry into the 2015 Pennwriters Annual Writing Contest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . We look forward to receiving your electronic entries starting Jan. 1, 2014. The deadline is midnight EST on Jan. 31, 2014. Good luck! writer’s toolBox: Notable Internet Links • An excellent blog post titled Creating Unforgettable Characters, by Dr. Vicki Hinze, is available at www.fictionfactor.com/guests/unforgettable.html • www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/the-100-favourite-fictional-characters-as-chosen-by100-literary-luminaries-526971.html • www.pantagraph.com/news/best-first-lines-from-novels/article_a125216a-649f-5414-88b5-76a688ea3b6a.html 10 THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org ••••••••••••••••••••••• Area 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Area 6 Area 5 Representative: Position Open If interested, email Carol Silvis at snax@nb.net. Charli Mac • Area 6 Representative charli-mac@comcast.net Critique Night, York, PA every 3rd Thursday WHeRe: New Visions Books & Gifts, 2594 eastern Blvd., Kingston Square Shopping Center CoNTACT: Becky Maslowski, rrosem@hughes.net There are currently no Pennwriters Area 6 groups meeting, but if you are interested in forming a group, please contact charli-mac@comcast.net. WHeN: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Lancaster Area Group WHeN: 2nd & 4th Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m. WHeRe: music section, lancaster Barnes & Noble CoNTACT: Walt Honsinger, walthonsinger@hotmail.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Harrisburg Area Group WHeN: 4th Wednesday WHeRe: New Cumberland library, 1 Benjamin Plaza, New Cumberland CoNTACT: Don Helin, dhelin@copper.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pottsville Area Critique Group CoNTACT: Dana Mansell, wstiefan@infionline.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Writers’ Wordshop WHeN: 2nd & 4th Thursdays WHeRe: Bosler library, Carlisle CoNTACT: Melinda Downey Shultz, 717-275-2772, mame.shultz@gmail.com that was a memorable day to me, for it made great changes in me. But it is the same with any life. imagine one selected day struck out of it, and think how different its course would have been. Pause you who read this, and think for a moment of the long chain of iron or gold, of thorns or flowers, that would never have bound you, but for the formation of the first link on one memorable day. - GREAT EXPECTATIONS, Charles Dickens ••••••••••••••••••••••• Area 7 Bobbi Carducci • Area 7 Representative 540-338-5064 • bcarducci@comcast.net I am looking for someone in Area 7 to help me gather information to be posted monthly on the Area 7 Connector Blog. http://pwarea7.wordpress.com Share your accomplishments. Submit articles on writing, announce book signings, etc. Contact me via email to submit your ideas, etc. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Baltimore Area Pennwriters WHeN: on hiatus. WHeRe: Panera Bread in Golden Ring, 8640 Pulaski Highway, Rosedale, MD CoNTACT: Jess Williams, jesswilliams0638@gmail.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Blue Ridge Group Meetings include critique on request, sharing resources, writing exercises and discussion. Beginning to multi-published writers welcome. WHeN: 2nd and 4th Wednesdays, 7-9 p.m. WHeRe: Purcellville library, Purcellville, VA CoNTACT: Bobbi Carducci, bcarducci@comcast.net ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Northern Delaware Group Meetings will be held monthly to discuss all sorts of writing stuff. All levels of experience are welcome. email Cindy Callaghan for more information: callaghancindy@gmail.com. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Anyone interested in forming a group, please contact me. If you have a place to meet and a desire to spend time with fellow writers, it is possible to host a group. Other information of interest: Book signing possibilities in Blue Ridge Area: • Around the Block Books, Purcellville, VA • Second Chapter Books, Middleburg, VA • Potomac Books, Dulles, VA Local Groups of Interest in Blue Ridge Area: • loudoun County Writers Association THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org 11 Volunteer Spotlight: leslie Tobin Smeltz by Jess Williams, Secretary, Area 7 While it takes many to run an organization, some volunteers shine especially bright in times of need. This can be said about Area 6’s leslie Tobin Smeltz. leslie helped significantly during the 2013 Pennwriters Conference, doing anything and everything. Without having to be asked, she stepped in and handled any situation that needed asssitance, all while handling her own position of Read & Critique Chair. As last year’s Conference Coordinator, take it from me—leslie was a true gem in a time of need. Pennwriter Jack Hillman is leslie’s writing mentor and the reason she joined our organization. When asked what being a Pennwriter has done for her, leslie said, “Going to Pennwriters conferences, especially this year’s conference, gave me the confidence boost that I needed, both personally and professionally, to continue to move forward with my writing. Volunteering as much as I did gave me the opportunity to meet and get to know many more Pennwriters who have been so kind and supportive. It also gave me the opportunity to connect with an agent who was interested in my writing. While that didn’t work out [the agent changed agencies and was not permitted to take the manuscript with her], she did give me the name of another agent to query. even if that doesn’t work out, I wouldn’t have had that opportunity otherwise. Pennwriters did that for me. As they say, ‘It’s not who you are, it’s who you know.’” leslie is a self-proclaimed “full-time, stay-at-home mom of a 7 year old—a very precocious little guy who keeps me hopping.” Working at home means there’s always chores to do: mountains of laundry to tackle (“Who knew one child could go through so much clothing!” she says), a dishwasher that’s perpetually running, and a cat who seems in constant need of attention. For the past 10 years, leslie has also been a guest liaison for science fiction conventions from Polaris in Toronto to Dragon Con in Atlanta and everywhere in between. While leslie may be a writer now, it was never her intention to become one. Her original plan was to become a professor. She has a masters in American History and was accepted at lehigh University for her Ph.D. But she took another path, and after positions with the Department of the Navy and then lucent Technologies/Agere Systems, she was laid off. It was then that her interest in becoming a writer emerged. “That was the beginning,” leslie said. After starting with short stories, she realized there was a novel in her that she needed to start. “Unfortunately—six chapters in— I found out I was pregnant. Then I had a terrible pregnancy that included bed rest, followed by an eight-week premature baby, so my writing was put on hold. About a year after my son was born, the writing bug bit me again. This time, I couldn’t ignore the creativity that wanted to come out. So, in 2007, I began my journey from just thinking about becoming a writer, to actually becoming one.” Her first completed manuscript and its sequel, are Women’s lit about a journey to self-empowerment. She is also working on a paranormal romance and has a mystery novel and a fantasy novel set aside for future endeavors. It looks like leslie has a full slate, but that won’t keep her from lending both hands to future Pennwriters events! She has volunteered to be a chair at the 2014 Confernce and will pitch in wherever needed. With volunteers like leslie, Pennwriters will continue to grow. Jessica Williams is Pennwriters’ secretary. By day she is a full-time employee, struggling single mom and lover of fiction. By night she battles plot issues, character flaws and perspective. A peek at her work can be found online at idiosyncraticheart.blogspot.com. when writing a novel a writer should create living people; people not characters. A character is a caricature. - Ernest Hemingway 12 THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org 1. 3. Friday Evening Keynote Kami Garcia is the New York Times, USA Today, Publishers Weekly and international bestselling co-author of the Beautiful Creatures novels. in february 2013 the Beautiful Creatures film released in theaters worldwide starring Viola Davis, Jeremy irons, emma thompson and emmy rossum. Her upcoming novel, unBreakaBle, the first book in Garcia’s upcoming solo series, tHe leGion, releases in october 2013, and is currently being developed as a major motion picture. Garcia has an Ma in education and taught in the Washington, DC, area where she grew up, until she moved to los angeles, where she was a teacher and reading specialist for 14 years. in addition to teaching, Garcia was a professional artist and led fantasy book groups for children and teens. she lives in la with her husband, son, daughter, and their dogs spike and oz. Saturday Luncheon Keynote Meredith Mileti’s novel, aftertaste, has received high praise from the New York Journal of Books: “aftertaste serves up a satisfying and delicious story of rebuilding a life after everything is suddenly and cruelly taken away... a debut novel as thoughtful and poignant as it is wickedly funny. it is one to savor.” Meredith lives in Pittsburgh with her husband, David Cohen. she is currently working on her second novel, tentatively titled BlooM, a story of marriage, identity, betrayal and the secrets families keep. 2014 Pennwriters Conference Co-Coordinators: Charli Mac (charli-mac@comcast.net) and Ayleen Stellhorn (ayleen@embarqmail.com) THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org 13 Publishing Options—Channeling Goldilocks by Lynn Price, Area 3 We all remember the story of Goldilocks and the whole “this bed is too hard, this one’s too soft, ahhh… this one is just right.” Well, publishing options are a lot like that. one may feel too right, another all wrong, and one feels absolutely perfect. In order to figure out which book deal is just right for you, it’s important to consider some factors that you may not be aware of. Your top considerations should be What is the intent I have for my book and my writing career? and What can this publisher do for me? Knowing your answers will help you decide which option is appropriate for you and your writing career. BIG GUN PUBlISHERS These are publishers like Random House, St. Martin’s, Penguin, Harper Collins, etc. who are owned by conglomerates. They are the litmus against which all publishers are compared, because they basically own the marketplace due to their long history, money, large print runs, distribution, editing, sales and promotion. The most important factor to point out here is that Big Gun publishers make their money by selling a lot of books. They employ talented, experienced book editors and designers, and they have their own sales teams to pitch their books to the marketplace, which I’ll define as national accounts like bookstores and libraries, and secondary markets like Costco, Target, Wal-Mart, etc. INDEPENDENT TRADE and COMMERCIAl PRESSES These are the Big Guns’ little sisters. They work exactly like the Big Guns but with fewer zeros in their operating budgets. They used to be referred to as Indie Publishers, but Self Publishers stole the verbiage, so now Independent Trade, or Commercial Trade Press, is used to define publishers who aren’t owned by corporations. The point here is that indie presses who meet these criteria are considered “mainstream publishers.” Behler Publications, where I serve as editorial director, falls in this category. Mainstream publishing is very expensive. Print runs, production costs, marketing and promotion all have to be paid for BeFoRe a title ever hits the marketplace, so mainstream publishers must have a healthy operating budget. In short, there is a lot of risk in mainstream publishing. How publishers make their money: Since indie trade presses don’t have a corporate umbrella like the Big Guns, they have to work smart. They can’t spend more than they have, and they have to feel confident the authors they sign will sell well because they depend on marketplace sales. Advances are lower, because they are more risk averse than their corporate brethren. If they pay an author a five-figure advance, they have to be pretty well guaranteed they’ll get a return on the investment. otherwise, they’ll be in the red. The indie trade press can’t afford to let a book tank, because, like the Big Guns, they’re shouldering virtually 100% of the financial risk. How authors make money: Advances are based on how well the indie trade press feels the book will sell. With the economic climate being what it is, bookstores and libraries don’t order in the numbers they used to. Advances are lower, because book sales are lower. The result is that the typical author makes money on his or her royalties. No, it’s not a lump sum, like an advance, but those quarterly checks can be quite lovely. I remember writing a check for $17,000 in one quarter to one of our authors. Some indie trade publishers pay advances and some do not. Not paying an advance does NoT mean the publisher isn’t a mainstream press. It simply means they aren’t at a point where they can afford to pay advances, and authors will make money with their royalties. Mind you, these non-advance paying publishers need to meet all the other mainstream criteria. Distribution: like their big sisters, the indie trade press has distribution. However, they’re too small to have their own sales teams, so they establish distribution deals with full service book distributors, like Consortium/Perseus, IPG, NBN and others, who have in-house and regional sales teams to pitch a publisher’s catalog. This is how books gain their national distribution. (NOTE: This is not to be confused with Ingram or Baker & Taylor. Ingram and B&T are wholesale distributors, meaning they fulfill orders placed by bookstores and libraries. They don’t have sales teams, and don’t pitch any publisher’s catalog.) Editing: like their big sisters, the indie trade press performs all aspects of editing, because they have to have a quality product in order to garner sales. They hire talented, experienced editors in order to ensure the high quality of their books. Solid indie trade publishers perform an intense editing process that includes copy, line and developmental edits. next page 14 THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org ’ copy editing = technical stuff like punctuation, spelling and grammar line editing = the craft of writing, like paragraph structure, sentence flow, word choice, voice, style, readability, and forward movement Developmental editing = storytelling, plot structure, character development and motivation, theme, premise, symbolism, tension, pacing, the author’s search for truth Marketing/Promotion: Indie trade presses mirror the Big Guns in that they need to let the public know about their books, because they depend on sales to keep the lights on. like the Big Guns, they provide the following services. Print runs - Indie trade publishers need to have large print runs in order to meet demand for national distribution. sending out Advance reader copies (Arcs) – Three to four months before a title hits the marketplace, publishers send out hundreds of ARCs to reviewers and the media, which includes print, radio and TV. Advertising – Publishers may take out advertisements in the media or online marketplaces. co-op promotion – Publishers buy co-op promotion with bookstores that will showcase their books in face-outs, special tables, and end caps. PRINT ON DEMAND PUBlISHERS This is where mainstream publishing takes a detour. PoD publishing refers to a business plan that made its debut when digital printing technology was developed. Instead of doing offset printing (with print runs in the thousands), digital printing allows the publisher to print smaller runs of, say, 25 or 50, for a reasonable cost, which allows PoD publishers to run their businesses on a shoestring budget. Many PoD publishers will claim they are just like “traditional” publishers because all publishers use the Print on Demand technology. It’s true that mainstream publishers use the digital technology for smaller print runs, like backlist titles and advance reader copies. But those same publishers more often use offset (or web based) printers. The PoD business plan is based on digital printing technology, however they don’t invest in distribution, provide editing, or offer marketing, promotion or bookstore placement. Because the PoD publisher operates on a shoestring budget, they are risk averse. This is a huge disadvantage to the author, and here’s why: How POD authors make money: PoD publishers’ books have no distribution, and they aren’t stocked in bookstores (which I’ll explain below), so the only way authors make money is if they personally sell books. They are the unpaid sales force for their publisher, and the only way authors can make sales is to buy books from their publisher at a discount and sell them at events. How POD Publishers make their money: PoD publishers lack distribution and often have inferior editing and no marketing/promotion, which means PoD publishers have no way to make money from outside sources, like bookstores. Since these books aren’t stocked in bookstores, PoD publishers are less choosy about signing a quality manuscript. This forces them to turn inward to their authors, who buy their own books in order to make sales. As a result, PoD publishers need to constantly look for new authors, both to bring in new money and to compensate for authors who choose not to buy their own books. The PoD publisher makes money from authors who buy their own books. POD Distribution: Many PoD publishers will insist they have distribution and will tell you they’re distributed by Ingram or Baker & Taylor. As I mentioned before, these two companies are wholesalers, meaning they only fulfill orders placed by bookstores and libraries. They don’t have sales teams pitching the catalog. In order to qualify for a distribution deal with one of the full-service book distribution companies, publishers have to meet certain criteria, meaning high sales. Since the only sales PoD publishers normally get are from their own authors, they will never qualify. Editing: Book editors are expensive and worth their salt. However, the PoD budget doesn’t allow for hiring talented, experienced editors, so the quality of their books is inferior to Big Guns and Indie Trade Presses. Many PoD publishers will only look for punctuation errors, though they may not tell you that up front. PoD authors should seek out professional editors and pay out of pocket for that service. Marketing/promotion: PoD publishers can’t afford to market and promote. Some may send out press releases, but this is normally a one-page sheet that spams the marketplace. (I’ve received tons of these. Have you?) Authors may be asked to submit an address list of potential next page THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org ’ 15 readers, and the publisher will send out the press release. Many PoD publishers will tell you that you’ll need to buy books if you plan on speaking. This isn’t standard promotion. The following are typical PoD publishing promotion practices: Print runs – POD publishers don’t do print runs in any great numbers because it costs too much, so they’ll normally print enough to supply authors’ orders. Many POD publishers will use CreateSpace’s printing services, which is what authors use when they self-pub with Amazon. This means that books are only printed when there is a physical order. sending out Advance reader copies (Arcs) – They don’t provide this service Advertising – They don’t provide this service co-op promotion – They don’t provide this service Can you see why I say that the PoD author is the unpaid sales force for the publisher? The PoD publisher provides zero services that will help sell the book, because they simply can’t afford it. All sales are entirely up to the author. VANITY PUBlISHING This publishing option is exactly what it sounds like. Authors pay to be published. everything about the production process, from editing, to cover design, to interior design and layout is inferior and, as such, these books are not stocked in bookstores. like the PoD publishing option, vanity publishers have no distribution, marketing/promotion, and only print whatever the author orders. They will only print a book upon receiving a physical order. E-PUBlISHING This is exactly what it suggests—your book will only come out in e-book format. like the digital printing process was a boon to the PoD publisher, e-book technology has been a boon to the e-publishing community. As such, you have many who have opened on shoestring budgets, which adversely affects all phases of production… especially editing. They pay their editors a percentage of sales. So if an editor edits a book that ends up not selling well, the editor won’t get paid more than a few dollars, even though it’s not his or her fault. This leads to a very high turnover for e-book editors who employ this type of payment. Since there is no physical book to be concerned with, the e-publisher often relies on online promotion, which is a rich field of possibility—provided they utilize this to good advantage. There are many good review sites that will review e-books. 16 THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org The successful, well regarded e-publishers specialize. Romance and fantasy have a number of e-publishers who are doing very well, and YA seems to be picking up as well. Mainstream fiction and nonfiction tend to have a harder time with e-book sales. SElF PUBlISHING This is where the you, the author, are the one in charge of every aspect of production, promotion and sales. You set the retail price, and it’s your name (or the name of your company) on the copyright page. You buy the ISBN. Many writers choose to self pub through Amazon, and I’ve seen some terrific success stories. Mostly, however, I’ve seen unhappy, disillusioned authors, because they didn’t realize how tough it is. You MUST know what you’re getting into if you choose this option. To do this right, you have to treat this as a full-time job. You should hire an outside editor to make sure your manuscript is clean, hire an excellent cover designer, and plan out your promotion and marketing plan so you know exactly how you’re going to nab readers. The upside is that you’re in total control. The downside is that you’re a team of one, whereas, Big Gun and Indie Trade Press authors have teams of hundreds, so you have to know your stuff. Questions to ask a potential publisher: To help you figure out who is who in this publishing quagmire, here are some helpful questions you can ask of any publisher offering you a contract: 1) How many books do you publish each season? (seasons being Fall/Winter; Spring/Summer) This is important because you want to make sure you won’t get lost in the shuffle. A small press that’s putting out dozens and dozens of books each season can’t possibly do justice to your book with marketing, promotion or editing. Check their lineup. Are there reviews and winning titles? Check out the books they’ve published. Are there award winners? Do they have reviews by national magazines such as Kirkus, Library Journal, Publisher’s Weekly? 2) How many genres do you accept? The Big Guns have imprints and accept all genres. Indie trade presses should specialize in a particular genre. Small presses would be hard pressed to do justice to every genre. The editing is different, the promotion and marketing is different. If you see a press that accepts all genres, chances are strong that they’re a PoD press. next page ’ Volunteer Positions for the 2014 Pennwriters Conference There are several chair and committee positions open for the 2014 Pennwriters Conference next May. Please check the list for positions that match your interests. Email Charli Mac and Ayleen Stellhorn (charli-mac@comcast.net, ayleen@embarqmail.com) to find a volunteer position that fits Pennwriters and you. 3) Do you do print runs? If they say they use print on demand technology, they’re PoD. If they say, “our average print run is 2,500 units,” they’re a trade press. 4) Who is your printer? If they say lightening Source or CreateSpace, they’re a PoD publisher. If they say Malloy, Versa Press or any standard printer, they’re more than likely a trade press. Be aware that many of the standard presses have the digital technology, so that’s why it’s important to know what kind of print runs they do. 5) What kind of promotion do you provide? This refers to sending ARCs out to reviewers and media. It’s their job to support you on a national level, while you take care of the local marketplace by doing book events and local interviews. But your publisher should help you with that. 6) Who distributes your books? This distinguishes the PoD publisher from the indie trade press, which can be really hard to see. If they say Ingram, Baker & Taylor, they do NoT have distribution because they are wholesalers. If they say Consortium/Perseus, IPG, NBN, or blue chip distributors of this nature, they are a mainstream publisher. lastly, ask around and do your research. How long has a publisher been in business? My normal suggestion is to give a publisher a couple years to find their footing. Talk to the authors of a potential publisher. Are they happy? Read some of their books; they’re a reflection of the quality of their editing. You’re Goldilocks looking for “just right,” and you need a publishing option that will support your vision. Along with being the editorial director for Behler Publications, Lynn Price is the award-winning author of DONOVAN’S PARADIGM and THE WRITER’S ESSENTIAL TACKLE BOx. Since 2003, Behler Publications has been publishing best selling and critically acclaimed nonfiction about everyday people who end up doing extraordinary things due to a pivotal event that alters their perspective about life. Behler Publications’ bestsellers include JAN’S STORY by CBS journalist Barry Petersen; FANCY FEET by Heidi Cave, OFF THE STREET by Detective Chris Baughman, star of the upcoming MSNBC show Slave Hunters; THROWAWAY PLAYERS: THE CONCuSSION CRISIS FROM PEEWEE FOOTBALL TO THE NFL by former Tampa Bay Buccaneers president Gay Culverhouse; and Los Angeles Times bestseller KTLA: NEWS AT TEN WITH STAN CHAMBERS by former Los Angeles news icon Stan Chambers. The Hospitality Room Chair: • organize the Hospitality Room to accommodate all vendors and Conference Committee Chairs as necessary. • Regularly check, throughout the conference, on the needs of vendors or Conference Committee Chairs set up in the Hospitality Room. • Schedule volunteers to host the Room throughout the Conference. The Chinese Auction Chair: • obtain donations for Chinese auctions from members and outside sources. • Schedule staff to accept donations and sell tickets for the Auction for the duration of the conference. • Prepare receptacles for each donation to receive auction tickets. The Merchandise Table Chair: • Confer with CC and PW Treasurer regularly to know what PW merchandise is available for the conference, to determine if CC plans to secure new merchandise for the conference, and to offer suggestions based on what has sold in the past. • Confer with the Book Table Coordinator to ascertain the names of Pennwriters and/or speakers who will provide books to be sold on the merchandise table. • Schedule staff for the merchandise table for the duration of the conference. The Moderators’ Chair: • Schedule volunteers to moderate workshops. The Agent/Editor Appointment Chair: • Schedule pitches with agents/editors. • Schedule time-keeping staff. The Freebie Table Chair: • obtain brochures, guidelines, etc., from publishers, magazines, etc., for freebie table. • Set up and maintain freebie table throughout the conference. The After-Hours Sessions Chair: • organize sessions for genre meetings and/or critique groups. • Confer with CC prior to brochure printing/mailing, and program printing to schedule these sessions. • Direct attendees to correct sessions, with either signs or staff. Additional responsibilities of each chair: • Confer with CC regularly. • After the Conference, prepare and submit to the CC, in a timely manner, a Conference report. THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org 17 Market News once you’ve got all those “Unforgettable characters” and the stories, poems and articles about them, written, you have got to find somebody who’ll release them upon an unsuspecting, yet ultimately grateful world. here are some options… One of the leading children’s magazines, cricket needs fiction, poetry and nonfiction for ages 9-14. Fiction needs are for stories 1,200-1,800 words, short-shorts 600-900 wds, and a few longer pieces up to 6,000 for serialization. They use realistic contemporary fiction, historical fiction, SF/F, folklore, myths and legends and humor. Nonfiction should run 1,200-1,800 words; poetry 3-35 lines. Pay for prose writing is up to 25 cents/wd; poems get $3/line. They now use the Submittable Submission Manager and prefer online submissions through that service, though they still consider paper subs. Detailed guidelines are online at cricketmag.com/25.submission-guidelines. the first line is a sort of exercise in creativity for writers— but one that pays $30 per story, if you make the grade. As you might guess from the quarterly’s name, they provide a different opening sentence to a story each issue, and contributors take it from there, composing a complete piece of fiction from that bare-bones story prompt. Send stories, 300-3,000 words attached in Word or Word Perfect, to submission@thefirstline.com. Visit thefirstline.com/submission.htm for detailed guidelines, the upcoming issues’ opening sentences and deadlines. Pedestal, a quarterly webzine using all sorts of genre poetry pays a healthy $40/poem. Editor John Amen wants all original poetry, no reprints. Send a maximum of 6 poems at a time. They also use the Submittable.com service to receive submissions. Next deadline is Nov. 30. Dr. Steven Wittenberg Gordon edits a monthly e-zine called songs of eretz Poetry Zine. He uses all genres of poetry, but wants work with a universal appeal and has a 200-word maximum limit. Original poems get $7, reprints earn $2. He needs verses in the body of the email, sent to swgordonmd@gmail.com Brain, child is a literary magazine exclusively for mothers. They like to call themselves a unique amalgamation of The New Yorker and Parenting and use essays, poetry and fiction from freelancers. They want “smart, creative pieces that go beyond the expected.” Short stories and creative nonfiction pieces earn up to $500. Editor-in-Chief Marcelle Soviero wants highly individual perspectives on being a mother of children ages 0-16. Detailed guides are online at brainchildmag.com/about/writers-guidelines. 18 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . by Jim Lee, Area 4, Associate Editor, Market Reports THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org The SF/F magazine Apex is temporarily closed to submissions as of this column being written. They are slated to reopen with a new editor (not yet named) after December. Other SF/F/H short fiction markets currently/temporarily closed to subs include Beware the Dark, Betwixt, new Myths and innsmouth Magazine. Avon romance puts out 200-400 print titles/year; 2 e-books/ week. Advances for these romance novels range all the way between $5,000 to $100,000. Send a query letter and your full manuscript via the online submission form at avonromance.com/impulse. Detailed guides are at avonromance.com. AArP the Magazine covers the “varied needs and active life interests of AARP members, age 50 and over.” A bimonthly, they pay $1 per word for feature articles. Send queries and recent writing samples by email to aarpmagazine@aarp.org (in body of email, no attachments) or via snail mail to AARP The Magazine, c/o Editorial Submissions, 601 E. St. NW, Washington, DC 20049. For detailed guides, visit aarp.org. llewellyn Publications puts out nonfiction books with an emphasis on body, mind and spirit, magic, Wicca, paganism, witchcraft, ghost hunting, spirit guides, tarot card decks, tarot books, reincarnation, astrology, alternative health and angels. Contact them by mail: llewellyn Worldwide, Acquisitions Dept,, 2143 Wooddale Drive, Woodbury, MN 55125. See www.llewellyn.com and submissions@llewellyn.com. Kensington Publishing corp. uses a variety of genre fiction, but no SF/F or poetry. See their website for specific editor interest and guides: www.kensingtonbooks.com. Briarpatch is a magazine covering current events, grassroots activism, electoral politics, economic justice, the ecology, labor, food security, gender equality, indigenous peoples’ struggles and international solidarity. Their address is Briarpatch Magazine, 2138 McIntyre St., Regina Sk S4P 2R7, Canada. For editorial deadlines and other info, visit www.briarpatchmagazine.com. A monthly magazine for practicing vets, Veterinary economics publishes nonfiction articles concerning the business of client and patient care, including personal solutions, communication, practice finances, personal finances, day-to-day management issues, client relations, life balance, changing models of practice and vaccine protocols. Visit http://veterinarybusiness.dvm360.com for article types and other guides. Their mail address is Editor, Veterinary Economics, 8033 Flint, lenexa, kS 66214. snafu is a Print on Demand anthology of military horror being put together by Cohesion Press of Australia. Editor Geoff Brown needs original horror and science fiction relevant to the theme, of 3,000 to 7,000 words. Attach your .doc, .docx or .rtf file and send email message to cohesionpress.com/submission/anthologie. Deadline is Dec. 1, and pay is 3 cents/word (Australian currency). This publisher apparently also puts out novels and stand-alone novellas, so check for more info online. the Georgia review has been published quarterly since 1947 by the University of Georgia. They feature “an eclectic blend of essays, fiction, poetry, graphics and book reviews.” They’re interested in literature, history, philosophy, anthropology, politics, film, music and visual arts. They pay $50 per published page for fiction and nonfiction; $4 per line for poems. They are closed to unsolicited submissions May 15-Aug. 15, but they otherwise read continuously. Send one story, article or 3 to 5 poems with self-addressed envelope to The Georgia Review, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602. No previously published or simultaneous subs, please. See guidelines at garev.uga.edu/submissions.html. Coming out nine times/year, Backpacker pays between 40 cents and $1/word for articles that “inspire and enable people to enjoy the outdoors by providing the most trusted and engaging information about backcountry adventure in North America.” They want email queries with writing samples (as attachments or links) to the appropriate department. For detailed guidelines, visit backpacker.com/guidelines. those “Unforgettable characters” may also help land you novel writers an agent. here are several agencies… Adams literary exclusively represents children’s book authors and artists. Check: info@adamsliterary.com and submit using website submission form. Visit them online at www.adamsliterary.com. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . American theatre uses nonfiction that covers trends and events in all types of theatre, plus the economic and legislative developments affecting the arts, with a particular focus on pro, not-for-profit theatre. Contact Editor-in-Chief Jim O’Quinn at American Theatre, 520 8th Ave., Fl 24, New York, NY 10018. Online: www.tcg.org. the August Agency represents writers of mainstream fiction, creative and narrative nonfiction, crime fiction and true crime, memoir, pop culture, media and current event books, politics and social sciences, business, bio, history and academic works. They have an online form for submissions. Contact Cricket Pechstein at cricket@augustagency.com. But first I’d check www.augustagnecy.com for guides. Doe coover Agency handles literary fiction and a broad range of nonfiction (bio, memoir, history, business writing, health, cooking, food and gardening). Also interested in children’s lit (picture books, Young Adult and middlegrade). Visit www.doecooveragencty.com for the individual agents’ interests/areas of concentration. Mailing address is PO Box 668, Winchester, MA 01890. Pam strickler Author Management seeks historical fiction, women’s fiction and romance. No nonfiction, children’s or screenplays. Their snail mail address: PO Box 505, New Palz, NY 12561. Visit www.pamstrickler.com. Query by email only: pamstrickleragency@gmail.com. With a preference for literary fiction, juvenile and teen books, and narrative nonfiction, carolyn swayze literary Agency wants queries via email, to reception@swayzeagency.com. Their address is PO Box 39588, RPO White Rock, Surrey BC V4A 0A9, Canada. Online: www.swayzeagency.com. regina ryan Books handles nonfiction for the adult audience: narrative nonfiction, architecture, history, politics, natural history, science, the environment, women’s issues, parenting, cooking, psychology, health, wellness, diet and fitness, lifestyle, sustainability, popular reference, sports, travel and gardening. Query via email: queries@reginaryanbooks.com. Online: www.reginaryanbooks.com. emilie stewart literary Agency specializes in literary and commercial fiction and nonfiction. Query by mail only, to SASE to Emilie Stewart literary Agency, 241 E. Broadway, Suite B, New York, NY 10002. (emiliestewartagency.com) [Information for this column came from recent issues of The Writer and Writer’s Digest, the Ralan.com website and my personal inquiries.] the greatest adventure is what lies ahead. today and tomorrow are yet to be said. the chances, the changes are all yours to make. the mold of your life is in your hands to break. -THE HOBBIT, J.R.R. Tolkien THE PENN WRITER • November/December 2013 • www.pennwriters.org 19 THE PRSRT STD U.S. Postage PA I D Pittsburgh, PA Permit No. 2516 7 Strut Court Middle River, MD 21220-3539 Return Service Requested Save the Date for this special full-day event presented by Pennwriters Area 3 Your Path to Publication—and Beyond featuring Chuck Sambuchino Saturday, February 1 • 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. • Pittsburgh Airport Marriott Pennwriters, a not-for-profit organization of more than 390 members from Pennsylvania and beyond, was established in 1988 as a networking organization for published and aspiring writers of all genres. The group offers an annual three-day writers conference and area events and has a strong internet presence, with email groups, online classes and social networks. Authors who meet set criteria are granted Published Author status. For more information about Pennwriters and its members, visit www.pennwriters.org or contact President Carol Silvis at snax@nb.net. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . About Pennwriters . . . . Ring in your writing new year with a top-notch industry pro. Chuck Sambuchino is best known as the editor of THe GUIDe To lITeRARY AGeNTS and THe CHIlDReN’S WRITeR’S & IllUSTRAToR’S MARKeT, both published by Writer’s Digest Books. Chuck’s blog, “The Accompanying Guide to literary Agents Blog,” is one of the largest and most-visited blogs in the publishing industry. He was recently included in a Forbes Magazine Top 10 list of Social Media Influencers in Book Publishing. No matter what your writing level or genre, our program of four interrelated workshops will help you map out your path to publication and beyond. We’ll start with a close-up look at the two main paths to modern publication. our next step takes us to professional writing practices that get writing noticed by editors and agents. Then we’ll get a crash course in everything you need to know about agents, including how to identify the best agents for your work, query letter writing, and important do’s and don’ts. After lunch, anything goes with a free-for-all pitch session. Chuck will give on-the-spot, capsule critiques to anyone who wants to try out their elevator pitch or share their query letter, synopsis or manuscript’s first page in front of a live, friendly audience. The event will conclude with a session on what every writer—published and on the path to publication—needs to know about writer platforms: how to create one and develop self-marketing efforts as you go. Cost for Pennwriters members is $75 ($70 early-bird discount if registered by Jan. 10). Nonmember cost is $80 ($75 by Jan. 10). Registration includes a box lunch and chance to win one of eight door prizes. We will also raffle off a detailed critique by Chuck Sambuchino, of either your query letter, synopsis, or first page of your manuscript ($80 value). Raffle tickets will be available as buy one for $5, get one free. look for more details online and in the next Penn Writer. Submissions The Penn Writer is published bimonthly. Contact Heather Desuta, newsletter editor, at thepennwriter@gmail.com. DEADLINE FoR THE JAN/FEB ISSUE IS DECEMBER 1. The theme will be “Writer’s Toolbox.” What helps propel your writing forward? What websites and blogs do you visit? What essentials allow you to work your literary magic? Submissions not based on theme are welcome, and don’t forget to share your accomplishments, tips, great quotes, book recommendations, etc. Include relevant artwork, photos and book cover images. We hope to hear from you! Type “PeNN WRITeR SUBMISSIoN” in the subject line of your email message, and please include your Area number.
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