Me neither. Until last weekend when I attended the Surrey International Writers’ Conference, which many consider the finest writers’ conference on the continent. The emphasis is on the how to: how to write, how to get published, how to improve one’s craft.
It’s a different focus from a writers’ festival with its readings and panels about the lit scene.
My first workshop had its amusing aspects. The presenter was Jack Whyte, popular author of a nine-book cycle on the Arthurian legend and a trilogy on the Knights Templar. Three weeks before the conference, I got an e mail asking me to send in three pages of my worst writing. The worst! Jack would read these at the workshop and critique.
I thought about this. I have lots of bad writing on hand but I was sure that many of the participants would send in their best, garner the praise and everyone would think, “Wow, and that was your worst?”
Jack Whyte and blogger Joan
He also did not like the way I repeated the name of the main
character a few times on the first page. He believes once the character is
mentioned by name at the beginning of the story, the person should thereafter
be referred to as “he” or “she.” This contradicts the advice of some in my
writing group who want the character’s name mentioned often. And this points out a typical writing dilemma:
one’s person’s rule is another person’s pet peeve.
Did some of the participants send in their best writing? Of
course. Do I care? Nah. They learned nothing but I learned a lot. In
my spare time at the conference, I worked on the story, cutting and pasting and
pointing up the heroine’s dilemma while sharpening the dialogue. Now I think I have a story I can sell.
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