sessIons - Writer`s Digest Annual Conference

Transcription

sessIons - Writer`s Digest Annual Conference
July 31–August 2, 2015
New York City
The Roosevelt Hotel
Breakthroughs Happen Here
WritersDigestConference.com #WDC15
For all your book consulting needs! www.YourBookIsYourHook.com
Do you and your book have what it takes to be a bestseller?
Are you missing that one piece that could put you over the top
with literary agents, publishers, Hollywood and Broadway producers?
What You Get – As a writer, you will work with industry pros to be equipped to pitch your
book or project to get published, turn it into a film or TV series, or Broadway show, and be able
to talk about it confidently with the media, during a sudden meeting with an agent, publisher or
producer, or in any conversation with anyone, anywhere, anytime.
The Next Bestseller™ Workshop
November 6-8, 2015
New York City
Seats are limited to 12 writers.
www.TheNextBestseller.com
welcome and contents
Welcome to the Writer’s Digest Annual Conference!
I’m so pleased you could join us.
Of all the events that Writer’s Digest hosts, this one is my favorite by far. If this is your first Writer’s Digest
event, prepare yourself for three action-packed days of high energy, camaraderie, learning, inspiration and fun. And if you’re a returning attendee, welcome back! We’ve worked very hard to make
our 2015 event an even bigger and better experience.
This year, our conference expands to five distinctive tracks that run all weekend long, ensuring that
there’s something for everyone, every hour of every day. Tracks include Getting Published (both
through traditional means and via self-publishing), Platform & Promotion, The Business of Being an
Author, Craft, and Genre Studies. You’ll find sessions on everything from writing for magazines, getting
published online, and securing an agent to building compelling characters, writing a mystery, and
much more. You’ll also rub elbows with numerous award-winning writers and New York Times, USA
Today, and Amazon.com bestselling authors. Many of you have opted to participate in our signature
Pitch Slam, spending one nerve-wracking, energizing, fun-filled hour talking up your book to agents
who are attending the show specifically to find quality writers with great stories to tell and books to
write.
But that’s not all. You’ll mingle and make friends during Saturday
night’s cocktail party and maybe—just maybe—you’ll be
selected for WD’s official mentorship program for the
2015-2016 season. Be sure to catch my introductory
remarks before the opening and central keynotes
on Friday and Saturday night for more on that
exciting announcement!
The next few days are going to be
packed with inspiration and education. It can be overwhelming
at times, so remember to slow
down, take a breath, network
with your fellow writers, and—
most of all—have fun!
Table of Contents
Keep writing,
Session Descriptions .. ..
Welcome..
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Agenda ..
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Agents & Editors .. .. .. .. .. 15
Phil Sexton • Publisher
Writer’s Digest • @psexton1
Exhibitors ..
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Floorplan ..
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Restaurants .. .. .. .. .. .. 21
1
agenda
FRIDAY, July 31, 2015
track
11:00 AM
registration and exhibits
1:00 PM–
1:50 PM
Pitch Perfect
Zachary Petit, Jennifer Keishin Armstrong, Rebecca Webber, Jennings Brown
Great Writing! Great Story! Author Platform?
Dawn Michelle Hardy
2:00 PM–
2:50 PM
Grand Ballroom
Foyer & Corridor
Grand Ballroom
Chuck Sambuchino Pitch Slam Package Attendees Only
How to Write for Magazines
The Well Sold Story: An Agent’s Secrets to Writing Stories
that Sell
Room
GP
Sutton
PL
Vanderbilt
BA
Grand Ballroom
CR
Broadway
CR
Hudson
GP
Vanderbilt
PL
Sutton
BA
Broadway
CR
Grand Ballroom
GS
Hudson
GP
Sutton
PL
Broadway
BA
Grand Ballroom
CR
Vanderbilt
GS
Hudson
Paula Munier
Help, I Found a Cliché!
Steven Harper Piziks
The Magic of Sentences: How to Keep your Reader Spellbound
Barbara Baig
You Should Really Write a Book:
How to Write, Sell, and Market Your Memoir
Regina Brooks
Buzz Your Book in the Ever-Changing (and Crazy) Marketplace
3:00 PM–
3:50 PM
M.J. Rose
The Wattpad Workshop
Ashleigh Gardner
How to Build Authentic & Compelling Characters
Gina Panettieri
7 Steps to Stronger Middle Grade and Young Adult Novels
Gabriela Pereira
Fifty Shades of Publishing: All the Ways You Can Publish
a Winning Book
April Eberhardt
Superior Cover Design with Rodrigo CorraL
Rodrigo Corral
4:00 PM–
4:50 PM
Ask the Agents
Chuck Sambuchino (moderator), Marisa Corvisiero, Adriann Ranta,
Stephany Evans, Alec Shane
Plot Perfect
Paula Munier
Writing a Mystery: A Crash Course
Hallie Ephron
5:00 PM–
5:50 PM
OPENING KEYNOTE An Hour with Jonathan Maberry
6:00 PM–
6:50 PM
Book Signing: Jonathan Maberry
Jonathan Maberry
Jonathan Maberry
Grand Ballroom
Grand Ballrooom
Foyer
See the WDC Program Ebook for the most up-to-date listings at WRITERSDIGESTCONFERENCE.COM
2
Join the conversation on twitter @writersdigest • #WDC15
agenda
SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 2015
8:00 AM–
6:00 PM
track
Grand Ballroom
Foyer & Corridor
registration and exhibits
The Effective Query Letter Workshop
GP
Grand Ballroom
PL
Vanderbilt
Take Your Pants Off and Write! The Benefits and Pitfalls
of Pantsing vs. Plotting a Novel
CR
Sutton
Growing Your Iceberg: Crafting a Secondary World That Feels
Ancient
GS
Hudson
GP
Sutton
PL
Grand Ballroom
BA
BROADWAY
CR
Vanderbilt
CR
HUDSON
Janet Reid
Social Media for Writers
Tee Morris, Pip Ballantine
9:00 AM–
9:50 AM
Room
Jeff Somers
N.K. Jemisin
Write It. Finish It. Send It Out!
Steven Harper Piziks
Panel: Marketing Strategies for Authors
Phil Sexton (Moderator), G.P. Ching, Dan Blank, Nina Amir
Writing the Hook for Your Book
10:00AM–
11:00 AM
Jennifer S. Wilkov
Word Painting: The Fine Art of Writing Descriptively
Rebecca McClanahan
From Blog to Agent to Book Deal: What All Writers Need to
Know About Using Their Blog to Succeed
Brian Klems
Pitch Slam Session 1
Terrace
Check your registration badge for your assigned Pitch Slam Session
The New Model of Publishing: Combining Traditional &
Partnership Publishing for Success
GP
Sutton
PL
Broadway
BA
Grand Ballroom
CR
Vanderbilt
GS
Hudson
Kristen Harnisch, April Eberhardt
Act Like a Writer
Keith Strunk
Writer Unboxed LIVE!
11:10 AM–
12:10 PM
Jessica Strawser (moderator), Porter Anderson, Dan Blank, Donald Maass,
Erika Robuck, Therese Walsh, Heather Webb, Vaughn Roycroft, Brunonia Barry
Setting: More than Creating a Sense of Place
Hallie Ephron
Historical Fiction: Making Fiction from Faces and Places
William Martin
Pitch Slam Session 2
Check your registration badge for your assigned Pitch Slam Session
12:10 PM–
1:10 PM
Terrace
Lunch on Your Own & Exhibits
T racks : G
P = G e t ti n g pu b l i s h e d
PL = p l at fo rm & pro m oti o n C R = c raf t
GS = G en re stu dies
BA = T he busin ess of bein g an author
3
agenda
SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 2015
How to Become a Regular Contributor to Any Publication
Jessica Strawser, Zachary Petit, Susan Shapiro
eBook Subscription Services and What They Mean for You
Nadine Vassallo
1:10 PM–
2:10 PM
After the Book Deal: All the Things You Need to Know
about Book Blurbs, Marketing, Social Media and the
Publishing Process
TRACK
Room
GP
Sutton
PL
Broadway
BA
Grand Ballroom
CR
Vanderbilt
GS
Hudson
Brian Klems
How to DIY Your MFA in Creative Writing
Gabriela Pereira
Crafting Crime Fiction
Jane K. Cleland
Pitch Slam Session 3
Terrace
Check your registration badge for your assigned Pitch Slam Session
Panel: Getting Real about Self-Publishing
Phil Sexton (Moderator), Gwen Hernandez, G.P. Ching, Melissa Joulwan,
Rachel Funk Heller
Getting Discovered: Putting Your e-Books
on Libraries’ e-Shelves
GP
VANDERBILT
PL
Broadway
BA
Sutton
CR
Grand Ballroom
GS
Hudson
Porter Anderson
2:20 PM–
3:20 PM
How to Create Your Bestselling Author Career Plan
Nina Amir
Revising a Novel: Step Away From The Blue Pencil!
Hallie Ephron
How, When & Why to Switch Writing Genres
Susan Shapiro (Moderator), Caroline Leavitt, Naomi Rosenblatt, Seth Kugel,
Joseph Salvatore, Reneé Watson, A. Zell Williams
Pitch Slam Session 4
Terrace
Check your registration badge for your assigned Pitch Slam Session
Breaking into the Best Online Publications
Susan Shapiro (Moderator) Tyghe Trimble, Eli Reyes, Christopher Robbins,
Jerry Portwood, Sarah Hepola, Joanna Douglas
Beyond Bookstores: Selling Your Book in Unexpected Ways
and Places
3:30 PM–
4:20 PM
GP
Vanderbilt
PL
Grand Ballroom
BA
Sutton
CR
Hudson
GS
Broadway
Kristen Harnisch, April Eberhardt, Anjali Mitter Duva
How to Stay Sane During the Writing Process
Nathan Bransford
Scene Stealer: master Strong Scenes to Build Page-Turning
Stories
Jordan Rosenfeld
From Me-More to Memoir: Crafting Real Life Stories
Rebecca McClanahan
4:30 PM–
5:20 PM
Central Keynote Behind the Books
5:30 PM–
7:00 PM
Cocktail Reception
4
Jacqueline Woodson
Grand Ballroom
Grand Ballroom
Foyer & Corridor
See the WDC Program Ebook for the most up-to-date listings at WRITERSDIGESTCONFERENCE.COM
Join the conversation on twitter @writersdigest • #WDC15
agenda
SUNDAY, AUGUST 2, 2015
8:00 AM–
1:00 PM
TRACK
Room
Grand Ballroom
Foyer & Corridor
registration and exhibits
Self-Publishing on a Shoestring: Where to Skimp and
Where to Splurge for Maximum Exposure
GP
Sutton
PL
Hudson
BA
Vanderbilt
CR
Grand Ballroom
GS
Broadway
GP
Grand Ballroom
PL
Vanderbilt
BA
Hudson
CR
Sutton
GS
Broadway
G.P. Ching
How to Leverage Your Blog Content into a Successful Book
Nina Amir
9:00 AM–
9:50 AM
The Persistent Writer: Strategies to Succeed in a Changing
Publishing Landscape
Jordan Rosenfeld
A Stronger Outline for a Stronger Story
Gabriela Pereira, Bess Cozby
How to Craft an Irresistible Nonfiction Book Proposal
Phil Sexton
Breaking In: First Time Novelists Share How They Got Their
Book Published
Kristen Harnisch, Anjali Mitter Duva, Kim van Alkemade, Therese Walsh,
Rachel Shane, Pia Padukone
Getting into the Act: Make Your Readers Your Marketers
10:00AM–
10:50 AM
Gina Panettieri
Writing Your Way With Scrivener
Gwen Hernandez
Exposition & Economy
Jon McGoran
Panel: The Glorious World of Steampunk
Tee Morris, Pip Ballantine, Steven Harper Piziks
10:50AM–
11:10 AM
PROMENADE
CORRIDOR
Morning Break & Exhibits
First Line, First Paragraph, First Page
William Martin
Amazon for Savvy Authors
Erica Nye
11:10 AM–
12:00 PM
Dirty Little Secrets: Learn How the Publishing Industry
Really Works in Order to Become a More Successful Author
GP
Sutton
PL
Hudson
BA
Grand Ballroom
CR
Vanderbilt
GS
Broadway
Phil Sexton
Writing the Truth: Persuading through Prose
Jane K. Cleland
Beyond Castles, Crowns and Corsets: Writing the
Non-Western Past
April Eberhardt (Moderator), Anjali Mitter Duva, Nomi Eve,
Frances de Pontes Peebles
12:10 PM–
1:00 PM
Nail By Nail: A Carpenter’s Guide to Building
the Debut Bestseller at Midlife
Grand Ballroom
1:00 PM–
2:00 PM
Book Signing
Grand Ballroom
Foyer
Tim Johnston
T racks : G
P = G e t ti n g pu b l i s h e d
PL = p l at fo rm & pro m oti o n C R = c raf t
GS = G en re stu dies
BA = T he busin ess of bein g an author
5
SESSIONS
T racks: GP =Gettin g publ ished, PL =p l atform & p ro m ot i o n, BA =T h e b u s i nes s o f b ei ng a n au t h o r , CR = c ra ft, GS =G e n re st u d i es
FRIDAY, JULY 31, 2015
CR T
he Magic of Sentences: How to Keep Your
Reader Spellbound
1:00 PM–1:50 PM
Pitch Perfect
Chuck Sambuchino, Editor/Author, Writer’s Digest
This can’t-miss session is one of our most popular. Chuck will
give you insights into exactly what you need to be thinking
about as you prepare to pitch your work. If you intend on
participating in Saturday’s massive Pitch Slam, this session is
crucial to your success. Get guidelines for honing your pitch
to a razor’s edge, feel comfortable presenting, and find the
confidence you need to make a great impression!
Note: This session is for Pitch Slam/Basic Conference
Package registrants only.
2:00 PM–2:50 PM
GP PANEL: How to Write for Magazines
Zachary Petit, Editor, Print; Jennifer Keishin Armstrong,
Writer/Author; Rebecca Webber, Freelance Journalist;
Jennings Brown, Staff Writer, Vocativ
In this invaluable session, you’ll learn what it takes to break into
the business of writing for magazines. Find out how to target
markets, pitch them successfully, and build a regular portfolio of
work—and related income. It’s an open discussion where we’ll
be answering your questions. If you want to write for magazines,
it’s one session you can’t afford to miss.
Barbara Baig, Author/Writing Instructor
When you write, do you find yourself groping for the right word?
Do you wish your sentences had more flow, more energy, more
variety? Skilled writers command a large repertoire of sentenceconstruction techniques, enabling them to produce sentences
that grab readers and make them turn pages. This workshop
will introduce you to some of these techniques, so you can
use them to create your individual voice on the page and
captivate your readers.
3:00 PM–3:50 PM
GP Y
ou Should Really Write a Book: How to Write, Sell,
and Market Your Memoir
Regina Brooks, Founder and President of Serendipity Literary
Agency, LLC.
If you’ve ever been told that “You should really write a book,”
this session is for you. Learn the three key measures necessary
for aspiring authors to conceptualize, sell, and market their
memoirs. Designed especially for those who don’t happen to
be celebrities, this session reveals why and how so many relatively unknown memoirists are making a name for themselves.
PL B
uzz Your Book in the Ever-Changing
(and Crazy) Marketplace
PL Great Writing! Great Story! Author Platform?
M.J. Rose, Author
In this interactive, high-energy session, bestselling Author and
Marketing Guru M.J. Rose will show you how to brainstorm a
variety of ideas and techniques for promoting your work, building your brand, and selling books. Bring your own books to the
session, for a chance at Rose’s idea generation treatment!
BA T
he Well Sold Story: An Agent’s Secrets
to Writing Stories that Sell
Ashleigh Gardner, Head of Content, Wattpad
Writers at all stages of their careers are joining the Wattpad
community to reach new fans and connect with their readers.
Whether you’re just starting your first draft or are promoting
your bestselling novel, we’ll discuss the best ways to use
Wattpad and how to integrate it into your social media
strategy. Leave with an understanding of the opportunities
available on Wattpad and how writers are finding success!
CR Help, I Found a Cliché!
Gina Panettieri, President and Executive Editor of Talcott
Notch Literary
Create fresh, vivid and memorable characters and take your
writing to the next level. Panettieri will focus on character trait
clusters, personal history, motivation, and fatal flaws using
Jung’s archetypes and how those are reflected in fiction.
Participants will be allowed to ask questions about their own
projects.
Dawn Michelle Hardy, Associate Literary Agent, Serendipity
Literary Agency, LLC.
You’ve worked so hard to complete your manuscript. Now you
need to create a publicity plan that will help you connect with
readers, impress agents and editors. In this session, you’ll learn
about author platforms (and how to establish one), publicity
tips, setting up book tours, and more!
Paula Munier, Senior Literary Agent, Talcott Notch
Literary Services
In today’s tough and volatile publishing environment, what
you don’t know about the commercial viability of your story
can definitely hurt you. Literary Agent Paula Munier reveals the
little-known factors that affect your ability to sell your work, and
what you can do about it.
Steven Harper Piziks, Author
Everyone says to avoid clichés like the plague, but what does
that mean? Harper covers character clichés, including what
they are, how to avoid them, and what to do when you
discover one lurking in your novel.
BA The Wattpad Workshop
CR How to Build Authentic and Compelling Characters
See the WDC Program Ebook for the most up-to-date listings at WRITERSDIGESTCONFERENCE.COM
6
Join the conversation on twitter @writersdigest • #WDC15
SESSIONS
3:00 PM–3:50 PM continued
CR Plot Perfect
GS 7
Steps to Stronger Middle Grade and
Young Adult Novels
Gabriela Pereira, Creative Director and Instigator of DIY MFA
Trying to write for children but don’t know where to start? In this
workshop, you’ll learn seven fundamental steps that will get you
going. You’ll dig into the theory behind the techniques so you
can understand why they work, but you’ll also see practical
examples so that you can apply these tools to your own
project. You’ll leave the session with a seven-step plan to
help you craft stories that will dazzle and delight!
4:00 PM–4:50 PM
GP Fifty Shades of Publishing: All the Ways
You Can Publish a Winning Book
April Eberhardt, Literary Agent, April Eberhardt Literary
There have never been more options and opportunities than
there are right now—it’s no longer either/or, traditional vs.
self-publishing. Learn how to develop a publishing strategy.
Start thinking about your publishing options by project rather
than career goal!
PL Superior Cover Design with Rodrigo Corral
Rodrigo Corral, Designer, Rodrigo Corral Studio
As more authors take responsibility for developing the covers
of their books, it becomes vitally important that those same
authors learn the basics of good cover design, how to speak
the language of designers, and understand the creative
thought process that can transform a good cover idea into
something spectacular. In this special session, Rodrigo Corral,
award winning designer of covers and Creative Director for
iconic publishing house Farrar, Straus and Giroux, explores what
having a “well designed cover” means, how to design process
works, and effective ways to partner with designers to get your
jacket done right.
BA PANEL: Ask the Agents
Chuck, Editor/Author, Writer’s Digest
Marisa A. Corvisiero, Founder and Senior Literary Agent,
Corvisiero Literary Agency
Stephany Evans, Literary Agent, FinePrint Literary
Adriann Ranta, Literary Agent, Wolf Literary Services
Alec Shane, Literary Agent, Writers House
This Q&A with literary agents provides you with an opportunity
to find out what agents look for in sample chapters, what
makes them stop reading, what they can do for self-published
authors, what they want to hear during a live pitch, and much
more. You’ll get the chance to ask the agents about any topic,
from platform and marketing to self-publishing and series
writing.
Paula Munier, Senior Literary Agent, Talcott Notch Literary
Services
Learn the keys to creating a story structure that works—no
matter what your genre. Get the strategies you need to build
a scene-by-scene blueprint that will help elevate your fiction,
earn the attention of agents and editors, and keep readers
entranced from Page One to The End.
GS Writing a Mystery: A Crash Course
Hallie Ephron, Author
You know you’re reading a great mystery novel when you’re
up at three in the morning, unable to put it down. This session
will demystify the art and artifice and get down to the nuts and
bolts of writing a killer mystery novel.
5:00 PM–5:50 PM
Opening Keynote: An Hour with Jonathan Maberry
Jonathan Maberry, Author
Jonathan Maberry, New York Times Bestselling author and
four-time Stoker award-winner shares his insights into the
contemporary business of publishing and how one’s dedication
to the craft—and to one’s fellow writers—trumps every other
factor when it comes to being a successful author.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 1
8:00 am–6:00 pm
Registration and Exhibits
9:00 AM–9:50 AM
GP The Effective Query Letter Workshop
Janet Reid, Literary Agent, FinePrint Literary Management
Learn to craft a compelling query that introduces your work
and entices a literary agent to ask for more. Find out the key
things to avoid, plus what you must include. After the lecture,
bring your own query if you want it used as a class example.
(Not required, of course, but oh, what an opportunity!)
PL Social Media for Writers
Tee Morris, Social Media Expert/Author
Pip Ballantine, Author
In this session, Authors and Social Media Experts Tee Morris and
Pip Ballantine examine the most popular applications of social
networking and introduce new tools that connect not just with
other applications but with a community that carries influence
and impact. Beginning with set up and ending with Best Practices and Online Etiquette, you’ll build your network, incorporate third-party applications, and build a community through
your thoughts, opinions, and online resources.
See the WDC Program Ebook for the most up-to-date listings at WRITERSDIGESTCONFERENCE.COM
8
Join the conversation on twitter @writersdigest • #WDC15
sessions
CR T
ake Your Pants Off and Write! The Benefits and
Pitfalls of Pantsing vs. Plotting a Novel
Jeff Somers, Author/Writer
Some writers who are content to make it up as they go—
flying by the seat of their pants. Stephen King, for example, is
an author who develops a situation, then allows his characters
to lead him. Others need a more tangible plot outline to follow
closely, keeping them on track.There are pros and cons to both
“pantsing” and “plotting,” however. In this session, you’ll see
how each works, how to overcome each method’s weaknesses, and how to determine which is the right one for you.
GS G
rowing Your Iceberg: Crafting a Secondary
World That Feels Ancient
N.K. Jemisin, Author
In this workshop, Jemisin will guide you through the process of
creating the planet, politics, and people of a complete and
original secondary world, using principles that you can easily
apply to creating your own.
10:00 AM–11:00 AM
GP Write It. Finish It. Send It Out!
Steven Harper Piziks, Author
So the book is done. Now what? This fast-paced workshop
will cover the nuts and bolts of submitting a manuscript. Author
Steven Harper goes over how to find an agent or editor, how to
write a query letter, proper manuscript format, and what to say
when you get the magic phone call from a publisher.
PL PANEL: Marketing Strategies for Authors
Phil Sexton, Publisher, Writer’s Digest (Moderator)
Nina Amir, Author
Dan Blank, Founder, WeGrowMedia
C.P. Ching, Author
The biggest challenge facing an author—whether traditionally
published or self-published—is effectively promoting your work
and motivating the public to buy it. Learn the best and latest
strategies, plus have an opportunity to ask your own questions
at this invaluable session.
BA Writing The Hook For Your Book
Jennifer S. Wilkov, Author/Writer, Your Book is Your Hook
Every book has a hook! But reducing that 300 page manuscript
into your hook to get it out into the marketplace, attract
attention and sell can seem like a mystery of its own. In this
presentation, Jennifer Wilkov, host of the radio talk show,
“Your Book Is Your Hook!,” will show you how to master the art
of writing your hook along with your book! Break through the
bottlenecks, build your platform and use it to attract more
readers, agents, publishers, and press!
CR Word Painting: The Fine Art of Writing Descriptively
Rebecca McClanahan, Author
No matter your genre, you can benefit from improving your skills
in description. Learn how to create precise, imaginative, and
effective word pictures to engage your reader—plus how to
use description to bring characters and settings to life, discover
original images, reveal theme, and shape the narrative line.
GS F
rom Blog to Agent to Book Deal: What All Writers
Need to Know About Using Their Blog to Succeed
Brian Klems, Author, Online Editor, Writer’s Digest
Have a blog or thinking of starting one? Learn how to take your
blog to the next level, attract an audience AND a publisher by
following these rules developed by Brian Klems, whose parenting blog, TheLifeOfDad.com, landed him an agent and a book
deal.
10:00 AM–11:00 AM
Pitch Slam
11:10 AM–12:10 PM
GP T
he New Model of Publishing: Combining Traditional
& Partnership Publishing for Success
April Eberhardt, Literary Agent, April Eberhardt Literary
Kristen Harnisch, Author
Traditional and alternate publishing are often viewed as an
either/or proposition, but hybrid publishing is becoming more
and more popular. There are a growing number of options—
ones that savvy writers are prepared to take advantage of.In
this eye-opening session, author Kristen Harnisch details how
her first novel came to be partner published in the United States
and traditionally published in Canada. Learn how to determine which publishing choice is best for you, as well as tips and
pitfalls to avoid.
PL Act Like a Writer
Keith Strunk, Author, Actor, Teacher
Learn how to be a celebrity even if you’re not famous yet!
Discover your public persona that draws people to you and
your words through fine tuning your own personal style as a
public presenter, interview subject, and reader/interpreter of
your own work.
BA Writer Unboxed LIVE!
Jessica Strawser (moderator), Editor, Writer’s Digest Magazine
Porter Anderson, Journalist, Speaker and Consultant
Specializing in Book Publishing
Brunonia Barry, Author
Dan Blank, Founder, WeGrowMedia
Donald Maass, Author/Founder, Donald Maass Literary Agency
Erika Robuck, Author
Vaughn Roycroft, Writer/Writer Unboxed Facebook Community
Manager
Therese Walsh, Co-Founder, Writer Unboxed
Whether you’re a not-yet-published writer or an experienced
author, wading through online writing advice can be overwhelming. At this panel, Writer Unboxed presents a diverse
lineup of savvy specialists to advise you on platform, craft,
industry and community, to help you find the empowering
information you need.
T rack s: GP =Getting p ubl ished, PL =p l atform & p ro mot i o n, BA =T h e b u s i nes s o f b ei ng a n au t h o r , CR = c ra ft, GS =G e n re st u d i es
9
SESSIONS
11:10 AM–12:10 PM continued
CR Setting: More than Creating a Sense of Place
Hallie Ephron, Author
In this workshop, you’ll examine the best techniques for
creating a vivid sense of place and the many uses of setting
that go beyond simply describing where your characters are.
Explore the crucial link between viewpoint and setting, and the
decisions a writer makes about which characters filter settings.
GS H
istorical Fiction: Making Fiction
from Faces and Places
William Martin, Author
In storytelling, research matters. This is especially true in historical
fiction, in which a writer must create worlds that no longer exist.
Or do they? William Martin will take you through his photographic research for The Lincoln Letter to demonstrate what he
learns when he studies historical imagery. Along the way, you’ll
explore larger research issues, discuss strategies for the use of
primary sources, and demonstrate new ways of seeing the
visual material that all historical novelists must study
11:10 AM–12:10 PM
BA A
fter the Book Deal: All the Things You Need
to Know about Book Blurbs, Marketing, Social
Media and the Publishing Process
Brian Klems, Author, Online Editor, Writer’s Digest
Your manuscript is finished and you’ve landed a book deal.
Now what? Klems walks you through the publishing process,
explaining what publishers do, what they don’t do and what
you need to do to give your book the best chance at success.
You’ll learn about the editorial process, how book covers and
jacket copy are created, the importance of your bio, promotions and generating buzz!
CR How to DIY Your MFA in Creative Writing
Gabriela Pereira, Creative Director and Instigator of DIY MFA
Here’s a secret no MFA program wants you to know: most of
what you learn about writing in grad school, you can actually
teach yourself. This session will show you how to apply MFA
principles to your writing life so you can get the “knowledge
without the college.” Gabriela will debunk major myths about
writing and take you through the step-by-step of a technique
that will help you write more, better, and smarter.
GS Crafting Crime Fiction
Pitch Slam
12:10pm–1:10pm
Lunch on your own & Exhibits
1:10 PM–2:10 PM
GP H
ow to Become a Regular Contributor
to Any Publication
Zachary Petit, Editor, Print
Susan Shapiro, Author/Journalism Professor
Jessica Strawser, Editor, Writer’s Digest Magazine
Successful freelance writers don’t spend their days coldquerying untapped markets. Instead, they think of every
assignment they land as the potential start of a long-term
relationship. Editors love having a stable of trusted freelancers
they can turn to. So how do you become one of those writers?
This panel of both magazine editors and professional freelancers
will give you simple insider tips from both sides of the desk!
GP eBook Subscription Services and What They
Mean for You
Nadine Vassallo, Project Manager for Research & Information,
Book Industry Study Group (BISG)
Publishing ’s rapid evolution continues to reinvent how books
are marketed and sold . One of the recent seismic shifts is the
growth in popularity of subscription models for selling digital
books. Vendors like Oyster, Scribd, and Kindle Unlimited are
fighting for market share, while the authors most affected by
this new business model often know very little about it, how it
works, how sales are tabulated, and how they are paid. In this
eye-opening session, you’ll learn how these businesses work
and which models pay the best. It’s necessary information for
succeeding in the new ebook economy!
Jane K. Cleland, Author
All sub-genres of crime fiction share these qualities: the plot is
engaging; the characters believable; and the narrative draws
readers in. Get a detailed overview of readers’ and publishers’
expectations for all major crime fiction sub-genres—and how to
satisfy them.
Topics include: Plot: When and how to introduce the
“narrative question”; how to use foreshadowing; avoiding
“saggy middles”; Characterization: Creating a protagonist with
depth to carry your story; Integrating your characters’ back
stories in seamlessly; Developing memorable secondary characters; Narrative: Balancing dialogue, description, and action;
Creating believable worlds; and the difference between
suspense and surprise.
1:10 PM–2:10 PM
Pitch Slam
2:20 PM–3:20 PM
GP PANEL: Getting Real about Self-Publishing
Phil Sexton, Publisher, Writer’s Digest (Moderator)
G.P. Ching, Author
Rachel Funk Heller, Author/Illustrator
Gwen Hernandez, Author
Melissa Joulwan, Author
Victoria Strauss, Author
Listen in as this panel of award-winning and bestselling selfpublished authors discusses indie publishing. You’ll hear the real
dirt on just what it takes to succeed, how much it costs, pitfalls
to avoid, and small victories you might experience along the
way to success. This panel consists of those authors who have
succeeded as both artists and businesspeople. Ask your
questions, get real, unvarnished answers!
See the WDC Program Ebook for the most up-to-date listings at WRITERSDIGESTCONFERENCE.COM
10
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sessions
PL G
etting Discovered: Putting Your e-Books
on Libraries’ e-Shelves
Porter Anderson, Journalist, Speaker, Consultant Specializing in
Book Publishing
The folks at Library Journal have created a new program—at no
cost to writers—to submit ebooks, have them curated for busy librarians, and then presented to your state’s libraries and the US
national library system. In this session, journalist Porter Anderson
will walk you through exactly the steps to take to become part
of the new SELF-e program, so some of the most avid readers in
the world can…check you out!
BA How to Create Your Bestselling Author Career Plan
Nina Amir, Author
To succeed as an author, you must have a plan in mind for
each and every book you write. In this eye-opening session,
Nina Amir lays out a proven plan for turning your story idea into
a business strategy that gets results. Learn to evaluate yourself
and your book ideas through the eyes of acquisitions editors.
Find out how to create a business plan and writing guide for a
marketable book project that that sells!
CR R
evising a Novel: Step Away
From the Blue Pencil!
Hallie Ephron, Author
It’s so tempting to pick up a blue pencil after you finish a first
draft of your novel. But line editing should be the last step in
revising a novel, not the first. This workshop presents an iterative revision process that works from large to small, examining
a novel through multiple lenses while soliciting and processing
feedback from trusted readers. Learn to separate the big issues
from the small and evaluate and identify fixes easily.
GS PANEL: How, When and Why to Switch Writing Genres
Seth Kugel, Grugal Traveler Columnist, The New York Times
Caroline Leavitt, Author
Naomi Rosenblatt, President and Publisher, Heliotrope Books
Joseph Salvatore, Author/Editor
Susan Shapiro, Author/Jourmalism Professor
Reneé Watson, Author
A. Zell Williams, Resident Playwright with New Dramatists and
Writer for NBC’s “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit”
No matter how much you love your genre, it can only benefit
you to stretch your literary muscles and make more money by
publishing in a different arena (or two.) Moderated by an
author of 10 books (who reinvents herself every 5 years), this
panel includes top literary agents, book editors and bestselling
authors who will reveal the secrets of successful reinvention
and why you might want to consider moonlighting too.
2:20 PM–3:20 PM
Pitch Slam
3:30 PM– 4:20 PM
GP PANEL: Breaking into the Best Online Publications
Sarah Hepola, Author/Writer
Jerry Portwood, Executive Editor, Out Magazine and Out.com
Eli Reyes, Editor
Christopher Robbins, Editor and Reporter, Gothamist.com
and Impose Magazine
Susan Shapiro, Author/Journalism Professor
Tyghe Trimble, Editorial Director, Mensjournal.com
Joanna Douglas, Senior Beauty Editor, Yahoo Beauty
We all know there are fewer pages of magazines and newspapers printing shorter pieces from freelance writers for less
money. On the upside, there are more editors than ever before
at top publications who will pay for your work. It’s much easier
to add your byline if you know what to write, who exactly to
send it to and how to pitch correctly. Including editors from
nytimes.com, nymagazine.com, newyorker.com, atlantic.com,
newsday.com, marieclaire.com, mensjournal.com, gothamist.
com and out.com, this exciting panel will teach you what you
need to know.
PL B
eyond Bookstores: Selling Your Book in
Unexpected Ways and Places
April Eberhardt, Literary Agent, April Eberhardt Literary
Kristen Harnisch, Author
Anjali Mitter Duva, Author/Co-Founder, Chhamdika
Think that bookstores are the best way to reach readers? Think
again. Imaginative authors are finding new ways to connect
with readers eager to read and experience their books—in
venues where there’s not the usual intense competition for
readers’ attention. Coffee shops, street fairs, museum gift shops,
dance festivals, theme parties, ethnic celebrations, cookware
stores and even wineries provide innovative venues for showcasing your book! Discover out-of-the-bookstore channels to
promote your own book.
BA How to Stay Sane During the Writing Process
Nathan Bransford, Author
Writing is hard. The entire process is fraught with rejection. How
do you keep your head up? Author and former Agent Nathan
Bransford will share his 10 commandments for happy writing,
including secrets for enjoying every step, embracing the Internet and social media, and cultivating relationships with your
fellow writers.
CR S
cene Stealer: Master Strong Scenes to Build
Page-Turning Stories
Jordan Rosenfeld, Author
Not all scenes are created equal. Each scene type has
strengths and weaknesses and satisfies the needs of key
moments in your novel in uniquely different ways. Learn the
difference between when to use a suspense scene over an
epiphany scene, a contemplative scene rather than a dialogue scene. A solid grasp of the wide variety of scene types
available broadens a writer’s story choices, gives cadence to
the overall piece and helps you construct a pitch-perfect plot.
T rack s: GP =Getting p ubl ished, PL =p l atform & p ro mot i o n, BA =T h e b u s i nes s o f b ei ng a n au t h o r , CR = c ra ft, GS =G e n re st u d i es
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SESSIONS
3:30 PM– 4:20 PM continued
GS From Me-More to Memoir: Crafting Real Life Stories
Rebecca McClanahan, Author
Many memoirists struggle with what to include, exclude, and
how to shape a life-based narrative that invites readers in. In
this session, you’ll learn how to read your life for clues, select the
most essential elements, and shape the material for your audience. Whether you’re writing a personal or lyric essay, a hybrid
text, or book-length narrative, this session will suggest ways to
begin the journey!
4:30 PM–5:20 PM
Central Keynote: Behind the Books
Jacqueline Woodson, New York Times Bestselling Author
National Book Award Winner and New York Times bestselling
Author Jacqueline Woodson discusses her lifelong journey as a
writer with humor and poise, revealing her own writing process
and where she finds inspiration. As she reads passages from her
diverse body of work, this rousing, interactive talk will motivate
you to read, write, revise, and read some more.
5:30 PM–7:00 PM
Book Signing and Cocktail Networking Reception
SUNDAY, AUGUST 2
BA T
he Persistent Writer: Strategies to Succeed in a
Changing Publishing Landscape
Jordan Rosenfeld, Author
What makes the difference between a successful writer and
a struggling one? Persistence—the art of learning how not to
give up. Today’s writer can’t expect the publishing landscape
to look the same from year to year. In this workshop, Jordan
E. Rosenfeld will walk you through key strategies to help you
find your core sense of purpose, carve away distractions and
energy drains, commit to your writing practice, and get back
on the horse after rejection, criticism and more in order to be
successful at your craft.
CR A Stronger Outline for a Stronger Story
Bess Cozby, Web Editor, DIYMFA.com
Gabriela Pereira, Creative Director and Instigator, DIY MFA
Whether you’re a plotter, “pantser” or somewhere in-between,
an outline can make your story stronger while making your
writing life easier. Many writers think of an outline as either too
daunting or too stifling but, if done correctly, it can be a
powerful addition to your writing toolkit. During this session,
Gabriela will teach you how to create a strong, flexible outline
that’s custom-designed for your style, your process, and your
story. You’ll leave knowing how to use your outline to perfect
your plot, deepen your characters and guide your story from
draft to done.
GS How to Craft an Irresistible Nonfiction Book Proposal
8:00 AM–1:00 PM
Registration and Exhibits
9:00 AM–9:50 AM
GP S
elf-Publishing on a Shoestring: Where to Skimp
and Where to Splurge for Maximum Exposure
G.P. Ching, Author
Self-publishing is an investment business model where authors
put in all of the work upfront for a reward that is far from guaranteed. With so many competing priorities, how can authors
create a quality product while keeping an eye on profitability?
In this session, we’ll discuss when do-it-yourself will suffice and
when it will doom your project, along with simple strategies to
start small and scale fast as an author/entrepreneur.
PL H
ow to Leverage Your Blog Content into a
Successful Book
Nina Amir, Author
Today more bloggers are landing deals than ever before.
Acquisition editors continue to scour the internet looking for
blogs to turn into books because they want projects that are
as close to a sure thing as possible. Learn how you can blog
your way to a book deal or create a blog that attracts readers,
agents and publishers. This session will touch on how to book a
blog, how to blog about your book and why a successful blog
ensures a successful self-published book.
Phil Sexton, Publisher, Writer’s Digest
It’s become more competitive than ever to get your book traditionally published. Selling your nonfiction book idea, however, is
as much a matter of positioning and platform as it is writing skill.
And while you don’t necessarily need a completed manuscript
in hand to get a book deal, you do need a compelling business
plan that shows editors and agents that you’ve done your
homework and have a truly salable idea. Assessing your idea,
your competition, and your place in the market is what this
presentation is all about.
In this session, Phil Sexton, Writer’s Digest publisher and former
book sales executive, outlines the key components of a successful nonfiction book proposal. You’ll discover how to craft a
proposal that’s worthy of your great idea, while providing the
information that publishers, editors, agents, and salespeople—
even readers—need in order to commit to your book. In addition, Phil will take volunteers from the audience and workshop
their book ideas live to illustrate these principles at work.
10:00 AM–10:50 AM
GP P
ANEL: Breaking In: First Time Novelists Share
How They Got Their Book Published
Kristen Harnisch, Author
Anjali Mitter Duva, Author/Co-Founder, Chhandika
Pia Padukone, Author
Rachel Shane, Author
Kim van Alkemade, Author,
Therese Walsh, Co-Founder, Writer Unboxed
See the WDC Program Ebook for the most up-to-date listings at WRITERSDIGESTCONFERENCE.COM
12
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sessions
Each year, thousands of writers try to break through the wall
of agents, editors, and other gatekeepers to get their novels
published. Only a small percentage succeed. In this panel,
you’ll hear from a variety of authors who either just broke
through or have been producing work for years, with publishing
houses both small and large. You’ll learn what it took for each
of them to finally secure a deal, what the reality of that experience was, the disappointments and the victories, and
the lessons learned along the way. It’s a crash course on the
real-world issues of getting an agent, getting published, and
making a life as a writer.
PL G
etting into the Act: Make Your Readers
Your Marketers
Gina Panettieri, President and Executive Editor of
Talcott Notch Literary
Discover new and innovative ways to promote your book that
won’t break the bank, and won’t devour all your writing time,
by using your readers to do most of the work for you. Tired of
ARC giveaways that seem to attract only people looking for
freebies? Not sure your blogging is actually doing anything to
sell books? Time to start growing, and using, your own ‘secret
sales army,’ and have fun doing it!
BA Writing Your Way with Scrivener
Gwen Hernandez, Author
Scrivener is excellent for both plotters and pantsers. Want to find
out what makes this software so popular, or learn a few new
tricks? The author of Scrivener For Dummies walks you through
the basics and covers some of her favorite features, including
how to track your progress, color code your scenes, write in
distraction-free mode, mark up your manuscript, set up a series,
create an e-book, and more. Feel free to bring your laptop,
loaded with Scrivener, so you can follow along.
CR Exposition and Economy
Jon McGoran, Author
In this engaging workshop, Author Jon McGoran helps you
identify and eliminate excessive exposition in your narratives,
determine the difference between desirable and undesirable exposition, and recognize alternative ways of conveying
important information. Learn how to turn boring info dumps into
highly anticipated answers to compelling mysteries by integrating information into your narrative, so it adds nuance, depth
and tension to your story, instead of interrupting it.
GS Panel: The Glorious World of Steampunk
Pip Ballantine, Author
Steven Harper Piziks, Author
Tee Morris, Social Media Expert/Author
Steampunk, a subgenre of science fiction and fantasy literature, is also one of the most popular. Not only has the genre
begun to dominate shelves, but it has also generated its own
cultural movement. Readers seem to have an endless hunger
for all things steampunk. In this session we’ll discuss what it takes
to write successful steampunk, the pitfalls and challenges of
the genre, how to get it published, and more. Join our illustrious
panel of steampunk authors and get the inside scoop on the
most exciting realm of science fiction and fantasy today.
10:50 AM–11:10 AM
Morning Break and Exhibits
11:10 AM—12:00 PM
GP First Line, First Paragraph, First Page
William Martin, Author
In today’s minute-by-minute, 140-character, handheld culture,
you don’t get much time to grab anyone’s attention. Most
readers decide very quickly whether they will read your book
or go back to Twitter. And most professional readers—agents,
editors, other writers—know just as quickly, sometimes in the first
line, often in the first paragraph, and usually by the end of the
first page, if a writer has ‘it,’ the third eye, that special instinct
that will make readers read to the bottom of that first page,
then turn it. William Martin will discuss his techniques for getting
that best seller kicked into action.
PL Amazon for Savvy Authors
Erica Nye, National Accounts Executive, F+W, A Content &
eCommerce Company
Between ebook and print book sales, Amazon is one of the
biggest influencers of book sales in the history of publishing.
But for the most part, how Amazon does what it does remains
a mystery to all but Amazon “insiders.” In this session, Amazon
expert Erica Nye shares her best practices for authors and
publishers to ensure that your book has the best possible
discoverability on the site, increasing your potential sales and
consumer awareness. Learn what you and your network can
do to increase how often your book is found on the site and
purchased. Discover what it is that your publisher should be
doing that they probably aren’t. This session can transform
what happens to your book with the biggest book retailer in
the country!
BA D
irty Little Secrets: Learn How the Publishing
Industry Really Works in Order to Become a
More Successful Author
Phil Sexton, Publisher, Writer’s Digest
Back by popular demand, this eye-opening presentation
examines those things that take place behind closed doors
at publishing houses, in meetings with bookstore buyers, and
on the bookstore sales floor that will determine the success
or failure of your book. Writer’s Digest Publisher Phil Sexton will
also provide advice, tips, and strategies for ensuring that your
book receives the best treatment and the best opportunities for
success. He’ll also tell you what questions you should be asking.
You’ll learn what publishers aren’t proactive about sharing,
sometimes forget to do, or purposefully ignore; and many more
“dirty little secrets.”
T rack s: GP =Getting p ubl ished, PL =p l atform & p ro mot i o n, BA =T h e b u s i nes s o f b ei ng a n au t h o r , CR = c ra ft, GS =G e n re st u d i es
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SESSIONS
11:10 AM—12:00 PM continued
CR Writing the Truth: Persuading through Prose
Jane K. Cleland, Author
This presentation examines the nature of truth and perception
surrounding issues of racism and civil rights; religious freedom
and assimilation; sex and promiscuity; and mainstreaming
children with disabilities; among others. You’ll know which
underlying structures will best support your rhetorical position.
By examining how four authors writing in four different modes
approached the challenge, you’ll discover strategies you can
use in your work, specific tactics to help hone your unique
writer’s voice.
GS B
eyond Castles, Crowns and Corsets:
Writing the Non-Western Past
April Eberhardt (Moderator), Literary Agent,
April Eberhardt Literary
Frances de Pontes Peebles, Author
Nomi Eve, Author
Anjali Mitter Duva, Author/Co-Founder, Chhandika
Europe and North America feature prominently in historical
fiction. For writers of fiction set in historic times in Asia, Africa,
South America and other regions, what are the challenges and
rewards of presenting doubly unfamiliar settings, where both
the time period and the culture are likely foreign to the reader?
What are reader expectations, and what do these stories
deliver? Are writers of these “exotic” novels at a relative
advantage or disadvantage with regard to publishing, finding
an audience and garnering reviews?
12:10 PM–1:00 PM
Nail by Nail: A Carpenter’s Guide to Building the Debut
Bestseller at Midlife
Tim Johnston, Author
New York Times bestselling Author Tim Johnston discusses how
he built a career as an author while building houses for a living,
and what he learned along the way about crafting stories and
novels that move and challenge readers—inspiring you to do
the same.
1:00 PM–2:00 PM
Book Signing
Self-Published e-Book Authors:
Enter the Competition
for You!
Exclusively
In 2015, more and more authors are taking
their work into their own hands—and finding
a wider audience than ever before.
If you’ve independently published an
e-book, Writer’s Digest wants to read it.
You could win money and major exposure
for your work!
Submit your e-book today to find out
how your work compares to the best of
today’s self-published e-books!
WRITER’S DIGEST
Selƒ-Published
e-BOOK AWARDS
If you win the Grand Prize, you’ll:
• Receive $5,000
• Be interviewed for Writer’s Digest magazine
• Score a trip to the Writer’s Digest Annual
Conference in New York City
• See your name on the cover of Writer’s
Digest (subscriber issues)
• Receive $200 worth of Writer’s Digest Books
• Get a 1-year subscription to Writer’s Digest
PLUS: Each of the 8 category winners
Deadline: September 1, 2015
earn $1,000!
For complete prizes, categories, rules and to enter, visit writersdigest.com/competitions/writers-digest-self-published-ebook-awards
See the WDC Program Ebook for the most up-to-date listings at WRITERSDIGESTCONFERENCE.COM
14
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AGENTS/EDITORS
Kimberly Brower
How the Pitch
Slam Works:
Meet literary agents eager to sign
new writers! With agents representing every genre, you have
absolute control over whom you’d
like to meet. Make your list, and
you’ll have 90 seconds to pitch
your work. Then, you’ll get 90
seconds of immediate feedback
from the agent: enthusiasm for
your idea, suggestions for
improvement or, who knows —
maybe a request to see more of
your work! Then, you’ll move onto
the next agent on your list and
start the process all over again!
NOTE: In order to participate in
the Pitch Slam, you must have
registered for the Pitch Slam/
Basic Conference Package.
Check your registration badge for
your assigned session.
Rebecca Friedman Literary
Kimberly specializes in both commercial
and upmarket fiction, with an emphasis in contemporary/erotic romance,
women’s fiction, mysteries/thrillers, new
adult and young adult, as well as narrative non-fiction. Although she loves all
things romance, she is also searching for
books that are different and will surprise
her, with empathetic characters and
compelling stories.
Bethany Burke
Editor, Blushing Books
Bethany seeks well written historical
fiction romance. She would love to be
pitched time travel romances, stories
with cowboys, and westerns. Our books
are mainly erotic romance with elements
of BDSM and domestic discipline. They
range from “Sweet” to “Smoking.” We
like our books to have a “Happily Ever
After” or “Happily for Now.”
Linda Camacho
Prospect Agency
Linda specializes in middle grade, young
adult, graphic novels, and adult fiction
across all genres (romance,
horror, fantasy, realism, and sci-fi).
She’s also seeking select literary fiction
(preferably with commercial bent), narrative nonfiction, and memoir.
Diversity of all types (ethnicity, disability,
sexuality, etc.) welcome!
Leila Campoli
Marilyn Allen
Allen O’Shea Literary
Marilyn seeks young adult fiction and
nonfiction books with solid marketing
platforms in the areas of health, cooking,
history, lifestyle, business, science, current
affairs, crafts and narrative nonfiction.
Kurestin Armada
P.S. Literary
Kurestin is actively acquiring upmarket
and commercial fiction, magic realism,
science fiction, fantasy, alternative history, historical fiction, LGBTQ (any genre),
select young adult and middle grade,
graphic novels, mystery (including mystery with elements of SF/F), and romance.
In nonfiction, she is looking for design,
cooking, pop psychology, humor, narrative, photography, and pop science.
Stonesong Literary
Leila represents nonfiction books in the
areas of business, science, technology,
and current affairs.
Kirsten Carleton
Waxman Leavell Literary
Kirsten is seeking upmarket young adult,
speculative, and literary fiction with
strong characters and storytelling. She’s
particularly interested in novels that bend
and blur genres; literary takes on high
concept world-building; diverse characters in stories that are not just about
diversity; antiheroes she find herself
rooting for; characters with drive and
passion; girls and women in STEM fields;
settings outside the US/Europe; wellresearched historical settings; YA noir/
thriller/mystery; stories that introduces her
to a new subculture and makes her feel
like a native. She is not interested in horror, romance, erotica, poetry, or picture
books.
Marisa A. Corvisiero, Esq
Corvisiero Literary Agency
Marisa specializes in romance and
women’s fiction, thrillers and adventure,
science fiction, fantasy, paranormal, and
any combination thereof for adults,
new adults, young adult and middle
grade. In nonfiction she enjoys business,
environmental, mainstream science, self
improvement, and parenting.
Kaylee Davis
Dee Mura Literary
Kaylee is actively acquiring MG, YA, and
Adult fiction; particularly sci-fi, fantasy,
contemporary, literary, and LGBTQ. She
is drawn to exciting, thought-provoking
stories with a fresh perspective that
explores what it means to be human. She
loves plot twists, genre-bending, unlikely
allies, flawed heroes, and stories that are
both literally and figuratively out of this
world.
Stephanie Delman
Sanford J. Greenburger Associates, Inc.
Stephanie is building her client list with a
focus on literary fiction, narrative nonfiction, voice-driven memoirs, upmarket
women’s fiction, and historical fiction
(particularly WWII stories). She is open to
quirky voices and dark comedy, and she
loves expansive, interwoven narratives
that traverse time and place. She is excited to develop long-term relationships
with new writers.
Allison Devereux
Wolf Literary Services
Allison seeks fiction spanning the spectrum from upmarket commercial to
literary, historical and contemporary,
and stories set firmly in reality but with a
surreal or fantastical bent. For nonfiction,
she looks for examinations in pop culture,
pop science, cultural history, and female
entrepreneurial perspectives; humor and
blog-to-book; illustrated novels or memoir; and narrative nonfiction that uses a
particular niche topic to explore larger
truths about our culture.
Please note: Agents & editors with a * red asterisk by their name are confirmed only for the second, third, and fourth Pitch Slams.
15
AGENTS/EDITORS
Melissa L. Edwards
Thomas Flannery, Jr.
Jill Grosjean
Aaron M. Priest Literary Agency
Melissa’s taste ranges in genre from
classic Victorian literature to hardboiled crime dramas. She is interested
in reading international thrillers with
likeable and arresting protagonists,
light-hearted women’s fiction and YA,
female-driven (possibly small-town) suspense, completely immersive fantasy,
and select pop-culture nonfiction.
AGI Vigliano Literary
Thomas reps adult fiction, and is
especially interested in historical,
literary, horror and fantasy, but open
to all genres as long as the writing is
top notch. He actively seeks all areas
of nonfiction, especially relating to
entertainment, music, comedy and
sports genres as well as memoirs with a
comedic edge.
Jill Grosjean Literary
Jill Grosjean’s interests are mysteries,
women’s fiction and literary fiction,
both contemporary and historical.
At this time, she is not interested in
Science fiction, children’s literature or
serial killer novels.
Moe Ferrara
Connor Goldsmith
BookEnds, LLC
Moe is interested in science fiction and
fantasy for all age groups (no picture
books). She loves a bit (or a lot!) of
romance in her fiction, so the right contemporary or historical romance will
spark her interest. She’s LGBTQ friendly,
so send her that male/male erotic
romance in your back pocket! At this
time she’s not looking for nonfiction,
women’s fiction, or cozy mysteries.
Fuse Literary
Connor is seeking sci-fi/fantasy/horror,
thrillers, ‘upmarket’ commercial fiction,
and literary fiction with a unique and
memorable hook. He is especially interested in books by and about people
from marginalized perspectives, such
as LGBT people and/or racial minorities. Connor does not represent young
adult, middle grade, or children’s
manuscripts at this time. In nonfiction,
Connor is only seeking authors who are
recognized experts with established
platforms. Fields of interest include
history (particularly of the ancient
world), theater, cinema, music, television, mass media, popular culture,
feminism and gender studies, LGBT
issues, race relations, and the sex
industry. He is not interested in memoir.
Diana Finch
Diana Finch Literary Agency
Diana represents many journalists and
has good success recently with books
about environmental issues, business
(both narrative and how-to), politics—
especially the progressive kind—sports
and science. In fiction, she looks for a
distinctive voice and strong storytelling.
One of her newest clients is a YA novelist with a fantasy dystopian trilogy, and
she is happy to say that she signed a
novelist from the 2012 Writer’s Digest
Pitch Slam.
Heather Flaherty
The Bent Agency
Heather is looking for authors of middle
grade and young adult
fiction. For YA, she’s looking across all
genres, and loves an excellent and
authentic teen voice. For MG, she’s
looking for more realistic stories
(either contemporary or period), about
coping, coming-of-age, or situations
seen through the eyes of a young
person.
Mark Gottlieb
Trident Media Group
Mark represents the following fiction
genres: African-American, comedy,
humor, comix, graphic novels, historical, horror, literary, mystery, thrillers,
science fiction, fantasy, Western, and
women’s. In nonfiction, he seeks arts,
cinema, photography, biography,
memoir, history, mind, body, spirit,
narrative nonfiction, politics, current
affairs, pop culture, entertainment,
relationships, family, science, technology, self-help, sports, travel, world cultures, true crime, children’s and young
adult, picture books, middle grade,
young adult, and new adult.
Erin Harris
Folio Literary
Erin represents literary, upmarket commercial and historical fiction, as well
as YA and narrative non-fiction. On
the adult side in fiction she is looking
for: literary novels, especially with a
multi-cultural bent; upmarket suspense
novels with a strong female protagonist; historical novels written from a
unique perspective. On the YA side,
she likes to represent edgy YA thrillers
and suspense novels; speculative YA
or YA fantasy with impeccable worldbuilding; and contemporary literary YA
with heart. On the nonfiction side, she
looks for compelling narratives that reveal underlying yet unexpected truths
about our world.
Jennifer Johnson-Blalock
Liz Dawson Associates
Jennifer is focusing on nonfiction but
takes some fiction. For fiction, she is
interested in thrillers, especially ones
that are psychological or have a
literary bent, and she is also looking for
smart upmarket women’s fiction and
contemporary YA with a unique voice.
In nonfiction, she is looking for seasoned writers with strong platforms and
is excited by narrative nonfiction and
memoirs that use a unique story to explore a larger issue. Particular areas of
interest include current events, social
sciences, women’s issues, law, business,
history, the arts and pop culture,
lifestyle, sports, and food, including
cookbooks and health/wellness. She is
actively seeking a political book on the
liberal/progressive end of the spectrum, and she loves books that
explain why we act the way we do
and/or how we can live life better.
See the WDC Program Ebook for the most up-to-date listings at WRITERSDIGESTCONFERENCE.COM
16
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AGENTS/EDITORS
Jennifer Letwack
Kate McKean
Dee Mura
Thomas Dunne/St. Martin’s Press
Jennifer is currently looking for fantasy,
especially dark fairy tale retellings,
historical, and epic fantasy, as well
as science fiction in both adult and
YA. She is interested in creative and
detailed world building, complex,
diverse characters and strong female
heroines. On the nonfiction side, she
is interested in narrative biographies
and histories focused on dynamic
personalities in American history as well
as anything concerning feminism and
video games.
Howard Morhaim Literary Agency
Kate is seeking the following adult fiction genres: contemporary romance,
contemporary women’s fiction, literary
fiction, historical fiction set in the 20th
Century, high fantasy, magical realism,
and science fiction. For children/teens,
she likes middle grade, young adult,
and new adult full length novels only
in the areas of: mystery, thriller, horror,
romance, LGBTQ issues, contemporary
fiction, sports, magical realism, fantasy,
and science fiction. For adult nonfiction, she seeks books by authors with
demonstrable platforms in the areas
of sports, food writing, humor, design,
creativity, and craft (sewing, knitting,
etc.). She will also consider narrative
nonfiction by authors with or without
an established platform.
Dee Mura Literary
Dee is currently seeking high-stakes,
character-driven fiction in the genres
of: mystery, thriller, espionage, action/
adventure, and military. For nonfiction,
she is seeking: history, politics, true
crime, biography, and memoir. She
also has a soft spot for any genre that
celebrates humor, animals, and
contemporary life.
Victoria Lowes
The Bent Agency
Victoria represents both children’s and
adult titles. For adult, she’s most interested in mysteries/suspense, contemporary romance, upmarket women’s
fiction and historical fiction. For children’s, she specializes in YA titles and
has a keen interest in realistic contemporary titles, romance and suspense.
Catherine Luttinger
Darhansoff & Verrill
Catherine is primarily interested in
science fiction and fantasy. To her,
that includes anything that could even
remotely be labeled as such. Viable
submission material includes everything from classic space operas to the
apocalypse; alternative universes,
dystopias, and eco-thrillers—as well
as the paranormal, horror, zombies,
plagues, and time travel. She is also
willing to look at historical fiction,
mythology re-told, YA, thrillers and
mysteries. You may also pitch her
pop-science nonfiction.
Laura Mamelok
Susanna Lea Associates
Laura is chiefly interested in literary
fiction, high-end commercial fiction,
women’s fiction, literary crime/thrillers,
and young adult fiction with crossover
appeal. On the nonfiction side, she is
looking for narrative nonfiction, current
affairs/journalism, memoir, and humor.
She’s drawn to international stories and
settings, in both fiction and nonfiction.
Penny Moore
FinePrint Literary Management
Penny specializes in children’s books,
including young adult, middle grade,
and picture books, with a strong interest in fantasy, sci-fi, historical fiction,
and contemporary romance. She’s a
proponent of We Need Diverse books,
and is always on the lookout for books
with memorable voices. Her adult
categories include Women’s fiction,
fantasy, and literary fiction.
Sam Morgan
*
JABberwocky Literary Agency
Sam specializes in fantasy and science
fiction novels, though he is willing to
look at general fiction (mainstream /
literary) that doesn’t it take itself too
seriously (like Thank You For Smoking or
This is Where I Leave You). He is a fan of
books that can make him laugh or that
feature sarcasm. He also seeks diverse
books (race, religion, sexuality).
Paula Munier
Talcott Notch Literary Services
Paula seeks mystery/thriller, women’s
fiction, historical fiction, high-concept
SF/fantasy, and YA/MG. For nonfiction,
she seeks true crime, business, humor,
pop culture, health & wellness, cooking, self-help, pop psych, New Age,
inspirational, memoir, technology, and
science.
Kimiko Nakamura
Dee Mura Literary
Kimiko represents fiction in YA and
Adult within the genres of Historical,
Contemporary, Literary, and Women’s
Fiction. She loves thought-provoking
projects that reimagine what’s possible, characters with something (or
nothing) to lose, unique viewpoints,
trailblazing heroines, and anything with
elements of magical realism.
For nonfiction she represents cookbooks and memoirs. On her bookshelf
and in her inbox, she looks for cookbooks she can read like the Sunday
morning paper and daring memoirs
of people making their mark on the
world.
Gina Panettieri
Talcott Notch Literary Services
Gina represents a full range of adult
and children’s fiction and nonfiction,
with a particular interest in young adult
fantasy, young adult realistic fiction,
middle-grade humor, adult mystery
and thriller, women’s fiction, cookbooks, memoir, history, popular science, parenting, true crime and health
and fitness.
Veronica Park
Corvisiero Literary
Veronica seeks young adult and new
adult (anything with a unique voice,
but especially contemporary), as well
as adult thrillers, romance, and romantic suspense. She also seeks humorous
nonfiction. In particular, Veronica loves:
dark, edgy YA/NA that deals with real
issues, romances that make you laugh
out loud and deeply love—or love to
hate—some of the characters, gender
swapping and/or seriously twisted
fairytale retelling.
Please note: Agents & editors with a * red asterisk by their name are confirmed only for the second, third, and fourth Pitch Slams.
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AGENTS/EDITORS
Beth Phelan
Adriann Ranta
Katharine Sands
The Bent Agency
Beth represents authors of fiction and
nonfiction. She is most interested in
smart, voice-driven young adult fiction,
from contemporary to fantasy; adult
contemporary romance as well as
upmarket suspense and thrillers; the
occasional middle-grade project, preferably with a literary bent; and select
nonfiction, particularly cookbooks and
pop culture/humor.
Wolf Literary Services
Adriann is actively acquiring all genres
for all age groups with a penchant
for edgy, dark, quirky voices, unique
settings, and everyman stories told with
a new spin. She loves gritty, realistic,
true-to-life stories with conflicts based
in the real world; women’s fiction and
nonfiction; accessible, pop nonfiction
in science, history, and craft; and
smart, fresh, genre-bending works for
children.
Sarah Jane Freymann Literary
Katherine likes books that have a clear
benefit for readers’ lives in categories
of food, travel, lifestyle, home arts,
beauty, wisdom, relationships, parenting, and fresh looks, which might be
at issues, life challenges or popular
culture. For compelling reads in faction, memoir and femoir, she likes to be
transported to a world rarely or newly
observed; for fiction, she wants to be
compelled and propelled.
Maria Ribas
Lydia Shamah
Stonesong Literary
Maria specializes in nonfiction, with a
focus on cooking, home, health/diet,
lifestyle, business, personal development, psychology, and humor. She
does not represent any fiction.
Carol Mann Agency
Lydia seeks adult, young adult and
middle grade fiction, as well as nonfiction projects. Lydia is looking for
timely plots inspired by the headlines,
effortless magical realism, unreliable
narrators, and mysteries/psychological
thrillers set in small communities (no
CIA/FBI/MI5, please). She is always on
the hunt for intriguing female voices
and characters. In YA and MG, she is
looking for strong hooks and modern
themes. Most importantly, she wants
fiction that is impossible to put down.
She is not looking for high fantasy,
political thrillers or romance. In nonfiction, Lydia is looking for books that are
both inspirational and modern in the
areas of self-improvement, lifestyle,
relationships and business. She is also
looking for unique blogs, Tumblrs and
Instagram profiles to transform into gift
books. She is particularly interested in
feminism and women’s issues.
Rebecca Podos
*
Rees Literary Agency
Rebecca is interested in Young Adult
and Middle Grade fiction of all kinds,
including contemporary, emotionally
driven stories, mystery, romance, urban
and historical fantasy, horror, and sci-fi.
She likes books with compelling characters whose journeys feel eminently
human, whether they’re high school
seniors, were-dragons or space
travelers.
Lana Popovic
*
Chalberg & Sussman
Lana has an abiding love for dark
themes and shamelessly nerdy fare—
Battlestar Galactica and Joss Whedon
are two of her great loves. Lana is
looking for a broad spectrum of young
adult and middle grade projects, from
contemporary realism to speculative
fiction, fantasy, horror, and sci-fi. For
the adult market, Lana is interested in
literary thrillers, horror, fantasy, sophisticated erotica and romance, and
select nonfiction. An avid traveler, she
has a particular fondness for stories
set in Eastern Europe, the Middle East,
North Africa, and Asia, although she
also loves reading about American
subcultures.
Michelle Richter
Fuse Literary
Michelle represents mystery, thriller,
and women’s fiction. For nonfiction,
she seeks narrative nonfiction about
health, science, economics/business,
social trends, and pop culture.
Rita Rosenkranz
Rita Rosenkranz Literary
Rita seeks adult nonfiction, including
health, history, parenting, music,
how-to, popular science, business,
biography, popular reference, memoir,
cooking, spirituality, sports and general
interest titles. Rita works with major
publishing houses, as well as regional
publishers that handle niche markets.
She looks for projects that present
familiar subjects freshly or lesser-known
subjects presented commercially.
Eric Ruben
The Ruben Agency
Eric is currently most interested in
young adult, all romance, erotica,
LGBT, mystery and more. He does not
want screenplays, picture books, children’s, short stories, novellas, graphic
novels or poetry. What’s currently hot
does not matter. First and foremost,
he’s looking for good writing.
Alec Shane
Writers House
Alec seeks mystery, thriller, suspense,
horror, historical fiction, literary fiction,
and books geared toward young
male readers (both young adult and
middle grade). On the nonfiction side,
he seeks humor, biography, history
(particularly military history), true crime,
“guy” reads, and all things sports.
See the WDC Program Ebook for the most up-to-date listings at WRITERSDIGESTCONFERENCE.COM
18
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AGENTS/EDITORS
Jessica Sinsheimer
Allison Travis, Editor
John Willig
Sarah Jane Freymann Literary
Jessica is most excited about finding
literary fiction, women’s fiction, thrillers,
speculative fiction, and edgy young
adult fiction. With nonfiction, she seeks
psychology, parenting, and works that
speak to life in the 21st century.
LazyDay Publishing
Allison is looking for historical inspirational fiction, inspirational or Christian
fiction for our Faith & Family imprint,
young adult and new adult, especially
with dystopian and/or futuristic themes.
Sci-fi is also fine. She would love to hear
some current ‘Nancy Drew, Hardy Boys
or 3 Investigator’ stories. Note that she
is not looking for anything with vampires, zombies, werewolves or angels.
Literary Services, Inc.
John is primarily interested in narrative
nonfiction that shines a light on new
topics, events or perspectives and
research-based prescriptive nonfiction.
Categories of interest include: science,
psychology, history, politics, current
events, business, travel, food/cooking,
crafts, lifestyle/personal growth (please
no memoirs), and reference. John’s
also interested in historical fiction—
crime/mystery and literary.
Stacy Testa
Writers House
Stacy is looking for upmarket commercial women’s fiction and literary fiction,
particularly character-driven stories
with an international setting, historical
bent, or focus on a unique subculture.
She also represents realistic young
adult (no dystopian or paranormal,
please!). For non-fiction, she is particularly interested in young “millennial”
voices with a great sense of humor and
a strong platform and voice-driven
narratives about little-known moments
or people in history.
Roseanne Wells
Jennifer De Chiara Literary
Roseanne is interested in narrative nonfiction, science (popular or trade, not
academic), health, history, true crime,
religion, travel, food/cooking, and
similar subjects. She also seeks strong
literary fiction, YA, sci-fi, fantasy, and
detective mysteries (more Sherlock
Holmes than cozies).
Terrie Wolf
AKA Literary Management
Terrie represents adult fiction including,
but not limited to historical, mystery,
and upmarket women’s fiction. Her
nonfiction interests include animals,
food/celebration/cooking, and pop
culture. She is always on the lookout
for exciting children’s fiction and
nonfiction.
EXHIBITORS
Thank you to the following exhibitors who have
helped make Writer’s Digest Annual Conference possible.
Editorial Feelancers Association
American Society of Journalists and Authors
Self-e Presented by Library Journal
Your Book is Your Hook
Corel® WordPerfect® Office
The Writers Coloring Book
19
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mezzanine level
2nd floor conference level
lobby level
20
RESTAURANTS
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Asian
Azusa of Japan
3 E. 44th Street
Café
Le Pain Quotidien
Starbucks
16 E. 44th Street
230 Park Avenue
Deli
317 Bread & Co
Blake & Todd
Dishes
Food World
41 E 42nd Street
52 Vanderbilt Avenue
6 E. 45th Street
20 E. 46th Street
Greek
Ammos Estiatorio
52 Vanderbilt Avenue
Italian
Cipriani Dolci
89 E. 42nd Street
Little Italy Pizza
1 E. 43rd Street
Naples 45 Ristorante e Pizzeria 200 Park Avenue
Uncle Paul’s Pizza
70 Vanderbilt Avenue
Pub/BAR
Eamonn’s Bar & Grill
The Beer Bar
Sandwich/Salads
Cosi
Pret A Manger
Toasties
Wichcraft
9 E. 45th Street
200 Park Avenue
38 E. 45th Street
485 Lexington Avenue
6E 48th Street
555 5th Avenue
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