Lecture — What’s next?
- Places to go after RAWR to continue writing career, because there’s a lot
- What worked/didn’t RAWR, so we can figure out what’s next
- Staying in touch as a group after going through this together:
- helps to have this community of people who know about each other
- We have familiarity with what we’re all trying to do (rather than starting fresh with a new critique group, where people may have suggestions for a story you’re not actually trying to write, e.g: literary snobs who might make you justify your genre)
- cohort with similar starting point and familiarity with discourses within the genre, rather than trying to catch them up to the tropes
- Continuing to read:
- Provide recommendations to each other because now we have a good idea of what each other like
- Also, good to get reading material by volunteering as a slush reader for awards/magazines (also good way to broaden horizons w/ stuff you might not read), read Year’s Best , etc. Pick up by osmosis
- What would your response to those be?
- Be a bone-stealer - steal a skeleton to enter into a story of your own (Disney, noir, fairy tales, etc)
- Focus on metagenres, e.g: queer fiction
- Email lists, e.g: book smugglers’ X Marks the Spot, Fireside, Fiyah
- Other workshops:
- apply multiple times, since you’ll probably be paired up with similar sensibilities
- Mention that you know previous members (Kyell and Dayna)
- List this workshop as a reference
- Clarion:
- six weeks, RAWR kind of condensed version of first week + the rest
- Genre focus (sff)
- 20 attendees
- See which authors are going to teach:
- The Anchor Team (last two instructors)
- a consideration, yes, but what you take away from it is your cohort
- More just tells you what to apply with
- probably rolling classes over another year
- Clarion West in Seattle
- Clarion in San Diego
- Get access to archive of first drafts
- “Fun Trauma”/”MFA in a Bottle”:
- shorthand for understanding that you’re serious, they approach you in a different frame of mind
- some of the takeaways are the same, but Clarion can be less painful
- The big takeaway is connections
- Dayna prefers experience, right choice for some
- Still, not necessary
- CSSF Kij’s workshop at U Kansas:
- Focused on novel writing:
- also novel structuring
- Work on kitbashing - what makes it tick?
- SFF
- Also Repeat Offenders:
- like ReRAWR
- Invited back, kind of retreat
- Smaller: 6-8 attendees
- Kij has both traditional and furry cred
- Barb does everything through self publishing
- Tries to pair folks up (paired Kyell and Watts) so no one is stranded/left with folks not knowing what they’re going for
- Taos:
- One particular guy runs it
- Good reputation
- Viable Paradise:
- A few instructors (may have changed?)
- Opens apps Jan 1
- Odyssey
- WriteFest:
- multiple workshop programs (poetry, memoirs, lit fic, etc)
- Not residential, but can roll into a conference right after with lots of good info
- Scary Stories for Young Foxes
- Highlights Foundation does a middle grade workshop
- Readercon
- Orycon
- Emerald City Comic Con (though very artist focused)
- Make your own workshop…??? :thinking emoji:
- Alumni network:
- folks from other classes
- Can settle into a group like that
- Maybe get together for a long weekend
- Online vs Residential:
- Missing:
- cohabitation
- coffee runs
- accidental opportunities to talk about writing
- feels like a mini-convention
- wake up and only obligation is writing and writing-adjacent stuff
- Benefit:
- Ended up being more accessible, esp when travel is difficult
- nice to still be able to get people together
- sometimes folks can’t make it for logistical reasons or disabilities and this allows sidestepping that
- Workshops for short/anthology horror:
- Clarion considers horror to be genre
- Another Kansas workshop w/ Chris McKitterick, CSSF Short Story workshop, might be good for horror
- Con panels specific to horror (Foolscap, NorWesCon, Wiscon, WriteFest)
- Folks to ask: Voice, Howl
- Voodonauts
- Queer-focused workshops:
- Hopepunk, solarpunk, good stuff
- Rosarium