Those who are serious about being a writer should consider
attending a writers’ conference. It’s a place to learn more about the craft of
writing and to network with other writers. These meetings are open to anyone
who is willing to pay the fee. A few are even free. There is no ‘good writer,
published writer’ qualification in most of these conferences. They are for all
who are interested, no matter whether beginner or pro.
Some are one day and others last a full week. Enter keywords
like Writers’ Conference into a search engine and see what you come up with.
Refine the search by limiting it to your own geographical area which would keep
cost down. Many community colleges, junior colleges and universities sponsor writing
workshops, seminars, or conferences. State author conventions offer workshops
and often being published is not a
prerequisite to becoming a member and/or attendee.
I’ve attended a retreat/conference that my online
writers critique group sponsored several times but that first one is memorable, mostly because it was filled with treasures for this writer. I’ve known many of the women in the group for
years but had never met them in person. Plans for the event went on for close
to a year, and we all had to commit early on as a down payment was necessary to
hold the meeting site. This one required airfare, lodging and food cost. A
regional park near Washington , D.C.
proved the most affordable and also offered a lovely wooded area with furnished
cabins on the banks of the Potomac River . Regular readers of this blog have heard about the various conferences I've attended here.
That first time, twenty-five women from around the globe traveled to the
conference site. Most were from around the USA ,
a few from Canada , one from Shanghai , one from Belgium ,
and yet another from Italy .
Several in the group gave presentations on various aspects of writing, and we
had three outside professionals speak to us, as well. One was a freelance
writer who publishes in top magazines around the world. The owner of a literary
agency spoke, and then she sat back and listened as one of our members gave a
pitch on a nonfiction book she’s written. The agent liked what she heard and
invited the writer to send a written proposal and the first three chapters. The
third professional speaker opened the door to the world of poetry. She left
many of us eager to try our hand at more poems.
Over lunches and dinners, all prepared by a marvelous cook
from Mississippi, who also happened to be a Microsoft specialist and one of our
presenters, we networked, compared stories of publishing nightmares and
successes, and encouraged one another in whatever way we could. Besides all
that, we just plain had fun.
I came home so inspired and eager to write all the things
I’d thought about as I heard one speaker after another. The bond we had created
over the years in our online group was cemented for good after our face to face
meeting.
I highly recommend that each and every one of you look for a
writers’ conference of some kind. Start with a one day meeting, then move on to one that meets two or three days. Spread your wings and consider a full week somewhere. If you attend one, I think you’ll want a
second helping. So start looking in your area or farther away. It’s up to you
to reach for this particular star. Start a fund, save your loose change, put it
on your Christmas list so you’ll be ready when conference time rolls around.
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