Gotham Writers Conference 2020

Gotham Writers Conference 2020

I attended the Gotham Writers Conference 2020.

Introduction

The Gotham Writers Workshop held the Gotham Writers Conference 2020 as a virtual conference because of COVID-19. Last year they held the conference at the Ace Hotel in New York City on October 25, 2019. This year, they used Zoom to hold the virtual conference from October 16, 2020, to October 18, 2020. On day one they held three presentations featuring writers. On the second day, they held three presentations focused on writers and agents. The last day was for pitching roundtables. They scheduled thirteen roundtables. Each roundtable had eight authors and two agents. Each author presented a query and the first two pages of their work to the agents. The agents gave their feedback.

This is the link to the Gotham Writers Workshop, the sponsor of the event.

Gotham Writers Conference 2020

https://www.writingclasses.com/

Summary

Friday, October 16 at 9:50 AM

The conference began with a welcome speech from Gotham president Alex Steele.

Friday, October 16 at 10:00 AM

The Writers: How I Got Published Panel with Jennifer Keishin Armstrong, Lev AC Rosen, and Jennifer Marie Brissett moderated by Dave Seigerman.

Jennifer Keishin Armstrong publishes non-fiction. Her Goodreads page is https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4619632.Jennifer_Keishin_Armstrong

Lev AC Rosen is a novelist. His Goodreads page is https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4731557.Lev_A_C_Rosen

Jennifer Marie Brissett is an SF novelist Her Goodreads page is https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/9536871.Jennifer_Marie_Brissett

The moderator asked questions of the panel and the panelists answered if they had something to say. Here are three examples I liked.

  1. What are you looking for in an agent? You need someone who knows what a contract looks like.
  2. Does the agent say they can cover different genres? I can do anything is a suspect statement.
  3. What is success? The goalposts keep moving. It’s okay if you are writing for yourself.

Josh Sippe conducted a brief audience Q and A session during the last ten minutes of the panel.  

Friday, October 16 at 11:25 AM

The Benefit of Your Day Job (even if you dislike it) presentation by Jacob M. Appel.

Alex Steele introduced Jacob M. Appel. Jacob has written 200 short stories, 19 novels, and has 9 advanced degrees. They featured him in an Amazon Prime documentary linked below.

Jacob believes that having a day job helps you as a writer, giving your writing context.

He gave ten things that he has learned to help him write well. Three of his points follow.

  1. Make writing your third priority after family and occupation.
  2. Write a novel to ask a question not to answer a question.
  3. Readers want to read something they don’t know, but the writer does. Know more than the reader.

Jacob had the audience take part in an eight-minute exercise. He had us write a scene using jargon from your specialized field or occupation.

The talk ended with a Q and A session with Josh Sippe as the moderator.

Friday, October 16 at 12:30 PM

Kelly Caldwell interviewed Erin Entrada Kelly about her writing journey.

Erin Entrada Kelly is the 2018 Newberry award-winning author of Hello, Universe. She discusses her writing journey.

Goodreads link to Hello, Universe by Erin Entrada Kelly.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30653713-hello-universe

Here are three interesting observations from the interview.

  1. Find the thing that makes your character unique and universal.
  2. Use yourself as a source of inspiration.
  3. She writes all her works longhand in a notebook because she says using more of your senses engages you with the work better.

The talk ended with a Q and A session with Josh Sippe as the moderator.

Saturday, October 17 at 10:00 AM

Agents: Why We Will Rep You Panel with Stephen Barr, J. L. Stermer, and Eric Smith moderated by Samantha Fabien.

Three literary agents discuss what will compel them to take you on as a client.

Stephen Barr is an agent at Writers House agency representing adult literary, non-fiction, and YA.

https://www.publishersmarketplace.com/members/sbarr/?_ga=2.233505950.1007296491.1609353739-447247430.1609353739

J. L. Stermer is an agent at New Leaf Literary Agency representing 70% non-fiction and some YA.

Eric Smith is an agent at PS Literary representing adult and YA science fiction.

https://mswishlist.com/agent/ericsmithrocks

Samantha Fabien is an agent at the Laura Dial Agency.

The moderator asked questions of the panel and the panelists answered if they had something to say. Here are three examples I liked.

  1. What makes a query stand out? The hook, comp titles, platform (for non-fiction), and compelling first pages.
  2. What is your deciding question for offering representation? Where do you think your career is going? Do we have chemistry, a working relationship?
  3. What qualities are most important to see in an author? (JL) content, character, voice. (ES) voice, sell, communication. (SB) connection, sincerity, engagement.

The talk ended with a Q and A session with Josh Sippe as the moderator.

Saturday, October 17 at 11:30 AM

The Agent and Client–making a connection discussion. Josh Sippe moderated the discussion between Amy Bishop, an author, and June Hur, an agent.

An agent and a client discuss how to connect with each other.

Amy Bishop is an agent at the Dystel, Goderich, and Bourret Agency.

https://www.dystel.com/amy-bishop

June Hur’s debut novel is The Silence of Bones, a murder mystery set in 1800 Korea.

This is the Goodreads page for The Silence of Bones

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/44280973-the-silence-of-bones

The moderator asked Amy and June questions. These are three Q and A examples I liked.

  1. How important is a query letter? (AB) a well-crafted query letter says that the author is serious. Queries are hard, but don’t need to be perfect to be effective.
  2. Can rejections be positive? (JH) Publishing is a marathon. Rejections are subjective and not personal. Keep your perspective as an author.
  3. What was the timeline for The Silence of Bones? (AB) Query in August 2017, Agreement September 2017, Submitted to editor February 2018, realization that the novel is YA, Big revision to the editor in August 2018, published by Feiwel & Friends in April 2020.

End of discussion.

Saturday, October 17 at 12:30 PM

Alexander Steele conducted the Pitching Game Show with Alec Shane, Alexandra Levick, and.

Alec Shane is an agent at Writers House.

Mina Hamedi works at the Janklow and Nesbit Agency.

https://www.minahamedi.com/

Noah Ballard is an agent at Curtis Brown.

The contestant’s goal was to practice their pitching skills. They picked a contestant, and Alex Steele drew a character and a situation at random. The contestant had a few minutes to prepare a pitch. The contestant gave the pitch to the agent panel and ended the pitch with a proposed title for the book. They picked four contestants, and they gave their pitches one at a time. The agents could not reach a consensus, so all four contestants received a $50 gift certificate for a class at Gotham Writers Workshop.

Sunday, October 18 from 12:00 PM to 4:30 PM

The SF/Fantasy Pitching Roundtable #2 with Kurestin Armada and Dong Won Song.

Each session was on an individual Zoom call with eight participants and two agents for each table.

The first group session had six tables: Literary/Mainstream 1, Literary/Mainstream 3, Middle Grade/Young Adult 1, Mystery/Thriller/Horror, Non-Fiction 1, and Science Fiction/Fantasy 2.

The second group session was from 3:00 PM to 7:30 PM and had seven tables: Literary/Mainstream 2, Literary/Mainstream 4, Middle Grade/Young Adult 2, Non-Fiction 2, Non-Fiction 3, Picture Book, and Science Fiction/Fantasy 1.

I took part in the SF/Fantasy Pitching Roundtable #2. In the first part of the roundtable, each participant read their query letter, and the agents made their comments. It took about ten minutes for each query letter. A 30-minute break followed. In the second part of the roundtable, each participant read the first two pages of their novel and the agents offered their feedback.

Recommendation – Conclusion

I enjoyed virtually attending the Gotham Writers Conference 2020. I’m glad they could hold the conference. Last year in New York City I did not have my novel presentation completed in time to earn a spot at the pitching roundtables conducted on October 26, 2019. This year I took part in the Science Fiction/ Fantasy Roundtable #2. My star of the Con was Alex Steele. He gave a great welcome speech, introduced Jacob M. Appel for his presentation, and conducted the Pitching Game Show. The conference was well worth the time invested, and I would like to attend next year.

Links

Recap for the Gotham Writers Conference in New York City, New York on October 25, 2019, sponsored by Gotham Writers Workshop. There were five panels and presentations at the conference. I did not attend on October 26, 2019, for the pitching roundtables.

Gotham Writers Conference 2019

Gotham Writers Conference 2019

Introduction

I attended the Gotham Writers Conference in New York City, New York on October 25, 2019, sponsored by Gotham Writers Workshop. This was the first year for this conference. It was at the Ace Hotel on 20 West 29th Street, New York City. There were five panels and presentations at the conference. Day two of the conference on October 26, 2019, was for pitching roundtables. The roundtables had a group of picked authors pitching their work to two agents in their genre. I did not get picked for the roundtables, so I did not participate.

The Gotham Writers Conference opened with a welcome from Gotham President Alex Steele. He related the story of how the genesis of the conference occurs. Josh Sippe’s job is to go to other writer’s conferences and report back to Alex. Josh asked why don’t we do a con? Alex replied that it was a “terrible” idea, so of course, they put on a conference.

https://www.writingclasses.com/

This is the swag bag we received at the conference. It said “Write” on the back of the bag.

This was the badge I used at the conference.

Summary before Lunch

Friday, October 25th at 10 AM

The Writer’s View: If I can do it, you can too, a panel with Seth Fried, Kody Keplinger, Joselin Linder, and David Seigerman (moderator)

The authors had different backgrounds. Kody is a fiction novel writer, Seth started with Literary Magazines, and Joselin writes non-fiction using proposals. The moderator asked questions about their process and experience. There were many interesting comments. I will detail three of them here that I found particularly helpful. Use comp titles that have been released in the last twelve months for your queries. Social media is part of your job as a writer. Being a professional means you meet deadlines because writing is a job.

Links to the authors

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4460711.Seth_Fried

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/3095919.Kody_Keplinger

http://kodykeplinger.com/

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1188589.Joselin_Linder

They held the presentation in the Basement of the Ace Hotel with about 160 attendees

Friday, October 25th at 11:25 AM

Embracing Rejection, a lecture by Kim Liao

She said to shoot for rejection instead of acceptance because that puts your fears in a box. Then you won’t be paralyzed by fear to submit your work.

She asked the attendees to take three minutes to answer two questions and put our answers down on paper. What are your biggest hopes and dreams as a writer? What stops you from achieving those hopes and dreams?

She then asked a series of five questions to the attendees. Five things to do in the next year to accomplish your goals or dreams. Four things to do in the next six months. Three things to do in the next two months. Two things to do in the next month. One thing to do before next Friday. The questions were helpful to help prioritize tasks to be completed.

https://www.writingclasses.com/faculty/bio/kim-liao

They held the presentation in the Basement of the Ace Hotel with about 160 attendees

Friday, October 25th at 12:25 PM

Weike Wong is interviewed by Gotham President Alex Steele

Alex had Weike read a passage from her novel Chemistry. In the passage, the unnamed main character is given a proposal of marriage from her boyfriend. That event starts off the novel leading to the main character’s dilemma and change.

Weike wanted to write a novel without shocking turns of events. She wanted a character-driven story and chose to find other ways to create tension in the story.

Alex had Weike read another passage from the novel. The main character is a grad student in Chemistry. She a psychologist to help her understand why she feels the way she does.

It was Weike’s choice to write a first-person novel with no names except for the boyfriend, Eric. It is a short novel with no chapters. Weike’s advice is to have a vision and stick to it.

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/15679271.Weike_Wang

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/31684925-chemistry

They held the presentation in the Basement of the Ace Hotel with about 160 attendees

Summary after Lunch

Friday, October 25th at 2:45 PM

The Agents View: What We Talk About When We Talk About You, a panel with Kurestin Armada, Suzie Townsend, Jim McCarthy, and Susan Breen (moderator)

Susan asked a series of questions to the panel and they responded. Who was the latest client you signed and why? They talked about searching the slush pile and related that it feels like panning for gold. What do you like to see with a platform? They said it is essential for non-fiction writers but is up to the author for fiction writers. How quickly do you know you love the book you are reading? They say within the first few pages. She asked about pay and they said the going rate for agents is 15%. Is finding an agent only the first step? They talked about the agent must be a partner you trust and trusts you and that it is some kind of magic when a book works.

The panel ended with a question and answer session with the attendees.

Kurestin Armada’s literary agency

Suzie Townshend’s literary agency

Jim McCarthy’s literary agency

https://www.dystel.com/jim-mccarthy

They held the presentation in the Basement of the Ace Hotel with about 160 attendees

Friday, October 25th at 4:10 PM

The Agent Game Show with J. L. Stermer, Noah Ballard, Alec Shane, Jeff Kleinman (host), and Alex Steele (fill-in host)

Jeff was late because of a time mix-up to Alex filled in as host of the panel. Alex ran the Game Show by having the agents answer questions and having the attendees vote on their favorite responses.

Alex’s questions were the most awkward situation, most uplifting experience, most challenging book you sold, worst pitch for a book, and name an author you would love to represent. At this point, the audience favored Noah’s answers.

Jeff continued the questioning. He asked about elements of a great query letter, is platform important to you, and after the sale is made what do you do as an agent. Jeff gave out gag gifts to the panelists at the end with input from the audience.

J. L. Stermer’s literary agency

Alec Shane’s literary agency

https://www.publishersmarketplace.com/members/gylligann/?_ga=2.205836820.621312319.1576097454-525066593.1576097454

Noah Ballard’s literary agency

They held the presentation in the Basement of the Ace Hotel with about 160 attendees

Recommendation – Conclusion

I enjoyed attending the Gotham Writers Conference. Thanks to Josh Sippe for getting me into the conference at the last minute due to a late cancellation. The Conference was packed with eager writers looking for advice from the pros. I wish I had gotten my novel presentation completed in time to try to earn a spot at the pitching roundtables conducted on October 26, 2019. Hopefully next year there will be another conference and I could submit my novel then. My star of the Con was Alex Steele. He gave a great welcome speech, conducted an interesting interview with Weike Wang, and filled in admirably at the Agent Game Show. The conference was well worth the time invested and I would like to attend next year.

Links

A similar conference I attended this year was the Indie Author Conference in Parma, Ohio on October 12, 2019, at the Parma-Snow branch of the Cuyahoga County Library at 2121 Snow Road Parma, Ohio 44134. The Cuyahoga County Library sponsored the conference for the fourth time. There were three presentations in the morning and a local author fair in the afternoon. The focus of the conference was for writers and authors to learn more about self-publishing. They featured thirty-one authors in the showcase. The listed authors all had at least one published book in either 2018 or 2019 for sale.