Winter Fiction Fest 2017
Introduction
The Winter Fiction Fest was held on February 18, 2017, at Loganberry Books in Cleveland, Ohio.
http://www.loganberrybooks.com/
The event was sponsored by Literary Cleveland. Literary Cleveland’s mission is to create and nurture a vibrant literary arts community in North East Ohio. The group sponsors writing workshops, author interviews, and a monthly group meeting mixer.
This is a link to the Literary Cleveland Website.
Summary – Conference Set-Up
The events started with an interview. Susan Petrone interviewed the author, Mary Doria Russell.
Next, three different workshops were offered. Conference participants picked one workshop to attend. After the first workshop was completed, the Conference participants chose one of the other two workshops to attend.
The three workshops were as follows:
A: Beyond Motive, Means and Opportunity: How to Plot Your Mystery with Casey Daniels and Shelly Costa.
B: Turning History into Fiction with DM Pulley
C: Science Fiction: Not just for kids anymore! With Geoffrey Landis and Mary Turzillo
Everyone attended the interview first. There was about 30 people at the conference.
Summary – Interview
Mary Doria Russell has published six novels. The first two were science fiction and the other four were historical fiction. Her latest novel is called Epitaph. It details the events at the O. K. Corral.
She gets her ideas from reading biography books. She then researches her subject and looks for the moment that works as a novel. When she hears the voices, then she begins to write. Sometimes the research works like saving Italian Jews in World War II (A Thread of Grace), the 1921 Cairo Peace Conference (Dreamers of the Day), the early life of Doc Holliday (Doc), and the events at the O. K. Corral (Epitaph). Sometimes it doesn’t work like when she researched the relationship between Edgar Allen Poe and Sarah Elmira Royster. Another that didn’t work was Abe Lincoln and Mary Todd Lincoln.
She is currently researching a novel about the 1913 Copper Country strike in Michigan that will be called Unremembered Lives. Questions went to the audience at that point. Someone asked about agents. She has used the same agency for all her work, but she has had a dozen editors for her six novels. The novels were all published by Random House, but since she takes years to research and write each book, she has never had an editor start and finish any of her books. She doesn’t believe in outlines.
Summary – Science Fiction
I went to the C Workshop first. Nine people attended this session.
Mary had the flu so she skyped into the conference. First was a review of the subgenres of Science Fiction and Fantasy. What makes it SF or F is a speculative element. Talked about the markets and the tradition that SF and F writers start in the short fiction magazine route. Two websites that help in finding markets are ralan.com and duotrope.com. Stories have five elements including people, prose, plot, particulars, and prose.
A characterization handout was given, which encourages the writer to ask questions about the main protagonist. Another handout on character traits found at http://www.fiction-writers-mentor.com/list-of-character-traits/ Plot makes the character interact with the world. The inciting event shatters the main character’s place in the world. The plot is about the main character’s failures in trying to solve problems.
Three possible premises are What If, If Only, and If This Goes On. The last part of the workshop was a brainstorming session about the premise. We went with If This Goes On. It started with global warming and ended with The Waterlords of Cleveland. I should have taken a picture of the brainstorming whiteboard.
Summary – Mystery
I finished the Conference at the A Workshop. About 20 people at this session.
They presented a slideshow presentation and took turns explaining each slide. Most mysteries follow the conventions in one of these subgenres; cozy, police procedural, medical/legal thriller, suspense, romantic suspense, thriller, historical mystery, PI, Noir, Forensic, or YA. Setting is where the mystery starts. Your sleuth may be a member of law enforcement, have ties to law enforcement, or is an amateur. Make it matter, raise the stakes. The victim has secrets. There is an apparent reason and a real reason for the murder. The killer must be a worthy opponent of the sleuth. Everyone in the story must be s suspect. The plot is the search for the truth. In most stories, but not all, the reader discovers the clues as the sleuth discovers the clues. The solution of the crime must be surprising, plausible, and satisfying. The last twenty pages must have a resolution.
Conclusion
In review, I felt that all the authors presented their subjects with expertise, knowledge, and humor. I am glad that I attended the conference. I wish that I had been able to observe the workshop I missed. But the two workshops I attended were excellent. I am sure that it was just as informative as the others. I am looking forward to attending other events that are sponsored by Literary Cleveland in the future.
Links
A similar Conference to the Winter Fiction Fest 2017 was the Western Reserve Writers Conference 2016. Winter Fiction Fest is sponsored by Literary Cleveland while the Cuyahoga County Public Library sponsors a similar event called the Western Reserve Writers Conference 2016.
This is my recap for the Western Reserve Writers Conference 2016 on September 24, 2016. It was located at the South Euclid-Lyndhurst branch of the Cuyahoga County Public Library at the new William N. Skirball writer’s center which is located at the branch. It was a one-day event with an introduction, a keynote speaker, three breakout sessions, and one Q & A panel.