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Greater Lehigh Valley Writers Group

Monthly Archives: March 2016

Meet Amara Hoshijo

30 Wednesday Mar 2016

Posted by dtkrippene in Agent Interviews

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agent, author, GLVWG "Write Stuff", Writing, Writing Conference

GLVWG’s Suzanne Mattaboni spoke with Amara Hoshijo of Soho Press, an independent book publisher based in Manhattan’s Union Square. Founded in 1986, Soho publishes 90 books a year across its Soho Press, Soho Crime and Soho Teen lists, and is known for introducing bold new literary voices, award-winning international crime fiction, and compelling young adult mystery and thrillers.

Amara will be taking pitches at the GLVWG Write Stuff Conference on Saturday, April 9. Advance Registration is Required.

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Suzanne: I see from your background you’ve spent part of your life in Hawaii, France, and California. What drew you to New York, and what has made it worth staying?

Amara: I was first drawn to New York at the age of five, based on little more than that it was the biggest city I knew. (I’ve always preferred big cities—more specifically regarding the above, I’ve lived in Honolulu, Paris, and LA.) Hawaii remains a special place for me, but growing up, I didn’t see any industries there that I wanted to be a part of. I came to New York the summer after college with no prospects and the sole objective of breaking into publishing. It is certainly a literary epicenter, which was the deciding factor in my cross-country move, but I was lucky in that my personality meshed well with the city itself. New York has the diversity and integration I’ve craved my entire life; I’d say the people there have been brought together by a similar drive.

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Meet Anjali Singh

28 Monday Mar 2016

Posted by dtkrippene in Agent Interviews

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agent, author, GLVWG "Write Stuff", Writing, Writing Conferences

GLVWG’s Geoffrey Mehl had a chance to interview Anjali Singh of the Ayesha Pande Literary Agency. Anjali will be joining us at the GLVWG “Write Stuff” Conference to take pitches from attendees (Advance Registration is Required).

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 GLVWG: Thank you for sharing some time with us today, and we’re looking forward to having you as one of the agents at the Write Stuff Conference in April.

 Anjali Singh: You’re welcome and I’m looking forward to meeting everyone at the conference.

 GLVWG: Authors are often urged not to submit until their manuscript is “ready.” Careful proofreading is understandable, but what other indicators tell writer it’s time to query?

 Anjali Singh: I think it’s incredibly useful to be part of a writer’s group, to have engaged readers that you trust read and give you feedback. Even if you’re not part of a group, it’s worth asking friends and family who are avid readers to read on your behalf. Proofreading is important, but even more important is whether the first 5-10 pages grab and hold a reader’s attention (as that is what most agent’s will see first and be the basis on which they decide whether or not to read more), whether or not the characters come alive and make readers care about them and their plight, whether or not there’s enough at stake in the story to keep someone turning the pages, and to hear if there were places where the reader got bored, confused, or felt like skimming. These are all great questions to ask your early readers! An agent should never be the first person to whom you show your MS, and by the time you send it to one you should feel that you’ve perfected every aspect–opening, plotting, character development and pacing–that you can on your own. I think that’s when it should feel ready.

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Meet Shawn Smucker

25 Friday Mar 2016

Posted by dtkrippene in Presenter Interviews

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Ghost Writing, GLVWG, GLVWG "Write Stuff", Writing, Writing Advice, Writing Conferences, Writing Memoirs

GLVWG’s Mitzi Flye spoke with author, blogger, and co-writer, Shawn Smucker. Shawn will be at the Write Stuff conference to share his wisdom on ghost writing and writing memoirs.

 *****

You decided to “live your dream” of earning a living writing after your construction business failed and you found yourself deeply in debt. If someone came to you with the same dream, what would you say to them?

If someone came to me with the same dream, I would ask them how often they’ve been writing and how they are currently making money as a writer. I had already written two books by the time I left my other business and had multiple leads for additional work – taking a leap like this certainly isn’t something I’d recommend unless you already have a plan and existing streams of freelance income. Of course, you’ll never have it all figured out, so making this kind of a decision always requires a balance between practicality and uncertainty. If your dream is to make a living as a writer, write every day, use your existing contacts to generate writing income, and get creative about how you can capitalize on your particular writing strengths.

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Meet Kelly Simmons

23 Wednesday Mar 2016

Posted by dtkrippene in GLVWG Author Blog, Presenter Interviews

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GLVWG "Write Stuff", Writing, Writing Advice, Writing Conferences, Writing Tips

GLVWG’s Laurel Bruce had a chance to speak with Kelly Simmons, a former journalist and creative advertising director who started writing fiction over fifteen years ago, while studying creative writing and screenwriting at Temple University and University of Pennsylvania. In addition to her critically acclaimed novels {STANDING STILL, THE BIRD HOUSE and ONE MORE DAY} she is developing a TV series and has been writing a memoir for what seems like her entire life.

Laurel Bruce: Kelly it’s a delight to have you teaching two sessions at the GLVWG Write Stuff Writers Conference this year.

How has your background as a creative advertising director influenced your writing?

​Kelly Simmons: It taught me to produce under impossible circumstances​: absurd deadlines, ridiculous revision requests, and committees of clients who were tyrants. Compared to that, the publishing industry sometimes feels like a day at the beach. (Oops! Cliche!)

Laurel: Your first published book is “Standing Still.” How did you go about finding a publisher for this bo ​​ ok ​, AND did that differ from the process of publishing your new book, ONE MORE DAY?

​Kelly: Well, first off, I wrote 8 novels before I sold one. It took the right agent and the right manuscript at the right time. ​The same for my latest, ONE MORE DAY — there were several years in between book two and book three, in which it was hard to choose the right material for me, and for that moment in time. It’s a bit lightning-in-a-bottle-ish, even once you have an agent.

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Meet Victoria Selvaggio

21 Monday Mar 2016

Posted by dtkrippene in Editor Interview

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Editor, GLVWG "Write Stuff", Jennifer De Chiara Literary Agency, Writing, Writing Conferences

Once again, GLVWG’s Michelle Meeh spent some time interviewing Victoria Selvaggio, Associate Agent for the Jennifer De Chiara Literary Agency.  Vicki has a strong background in business ownership and over six years of actively working as a volunteer and Regional Advisor for SCBWI: Northern Ohio. Drawn to the publishing scene first as an author writing all genres, with her most recent publication in the 2015 Children’s Writer’s and Illustrator’s Market, Vicki’s passion for honing the craft carried over into reading manuscripts for the agency. Currently, she is excited to read compelling manuscripts that will resonate with her long after she’s done.

*****

 

Michelle: Who is your most memorable writer?

Veronica: Stephen King is my favorite writer. I find his path to publication fascinating, and I find his published works to be more than enjoyment for reading. For me, they’re instruments/tools—I’ve learned so much on mastering voice, playing with a manuscript’s structure, and even pushing those standard writing rules a tad.

His publications encouraged me to write about the sweet and innocent, while weaving in the crazy and unimaginable. They helped me push my own limits as a writer–learning to not hold back, writing about my deepest fears, while sharing those things that show my vulnerability. And mostly, they encouraged me to be me–to write what I need to write!

Michelle: Do you have a particular quote that resonates long after the book is back on the shelf?

Veronica: While I don’t have a particular quote after the book is back on the shelf, I do have a favorite motivational quote:

“Every great dream begins with a dreamer. Always remember, you have within you the strength, the patience and the passion to reach for the stars to change the world.” – Harriet Tubman

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MeetChristine Stroud

20 Sunday Mar 2016

Posted by dtkrippene in Editor Interview

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Autumn House Press, Editor, GLVWG "Write Stuff", Writing, Writing Conferences

GLVWG’s Michelle Meeh had an interview with Christine Stroud, Senior Editor of Autumn House Press. Christine will be taking pitches at the GLVWG “Write Stuff” Conference on Saturday, April 9. (Advance registration is required.)

Christine Stroud is originally from eastern North Carolina, but currently lives in Pittsburgh and works as the Associate Editor for Autumn House Press. She has an MFA in Creative Writing from Chatham University and a BA in Literature from the University of North Carolina at Asheville. She has a chapbook, The Buried Return, released by Finishing Line Press. Her poem, “You Called the Night it Snowed in April,” was published in Ninth Letter’s first web edition and she received the Best Thesis in Poetry award for her manuscript, Brick Wall.

*****

 

Michelle: What is it about poetry that resonates with you as a reader?

Christine: I’ve always loved the incisiveness of poetry. Even if a poem has long lines or spans for pages, I always find them acute because of the attention to language and structure. In a successful poem there’s a sense that after a great deal of thought, the poet found the right word. That being said, I love that despite poetry’s conciseness it’s also completely unrestricted—it can be fictional, it can be autobiographical, it can be both simultaneously. Even poems in very strict forms can be wildly imaginative and unconfined. A poem is a fun little puzzle, a quiet secret that pulls us in.

Michelle: As a writer, why is poetic expression so important?

Christine: The attention to language, for me, is the most vital aspect of poetry. We’re all talking and writing so much these days and I see that reflected in some of the literary work I read. Much of it is good, but lacks the love of language. I read very solid stories and poems that have interesting narratives or play with form, but the language falls completely flat. Poetic expression is important in keeping us focused on the necessity to connect with words, to push ourselves with language.

Michelle: What do you look for in a poem? In a fiction/nonfiction manuscript?

Christine: I look for something that takes me off guard—for work that displays a new way of engaging an idea or situation (This goes for all three genres). For instance, consider how many poems about nature have been written over the years. If you’re a contemporary poet you need to consider how to approach the subject in a fresh way. I come across a number of very well-written manuscripts that tell a story I’ve read before and don’t offer anything new to conversation.

Michelle: Not to restart the war, but how is southern poetry different from northern?

Christine: ((Ha, good question.))

Sometimes I’m not sure they really are that different in contemporary works except in evocation of place and the use of language/dialect. Other times I feel certain there’s a clear distinction. Even if we aren’t shaped by our culture (and I think we are), we’re responding to it.

I grew up in the South, but I’ve lived a large part of my adult life in Pennsylvania. At this point I don’t know if I would identify as a southern writer even though I write a great deal about my childhood there. Similarly, I don’t typically identify myself as a female writer even though I write about issues concerning gender.

Perhaps in the end, it really depends on the intent of the poet?

*****

Christine can be found at Autumn House Press, and her website, Christina Stroud.

 

Meet Lawrence Knorr

18 Friday Mar 2016

Posted by dtkrippene in Previous year presenter, Publisher Interview

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Editor, GLVWG "Write Stuff", Sunbury Press, Writing, Writing Conference

GLVWG’s Tammy Burke had a chance to speak with Lawrence Knorr of Sunbury Press, publisher of hardcover, trade paperback, and digital books featuring established and emerging authors in many fiction and nonfiction categories.

*****

 

How delightful having you back at the “Write Stuff” conference again! And wow! Is it coming up fast. Anything new and exciting you can share regarding you and/or the Sunbury Press?

Lawrence Knorr: Yes! It is an honor to be asked back a third time. Sunbury Press just completed its best year ever from a sales perspective, nearly doubling. But, there are some interesting trends in the business. EBooks, which peaked at 13% of our business in 2012, have slipped to only 3%. We’ve been strong in nonfiction, but have seen an erosion in many fiction categories. We reintroduced hardcover books in 2014, and had a nice bump from them, but that has cooled a bit. Trade paperbacks remain the strongest format. We’re now at 400 titles and about 200 authors under management. Two of our titles have already been shot as Hollywood movies and another three are in the works. So, who knows what’s in store!

Based on your webpage, I understand the your company holds a “Continue the Enlightenment” mentality from the 18th century and the “Age of Reason.” Could you expand more what that means to you and to the Sunbury Press?

Lawrence Knorr: “Continue the Enlightenment” is a motto that represents our mission statement. Simply put, we are a publisher of diverse categories, but we are always seeking to bring new perspectives and voices to the marketplace. The Enlightenment was about a new order of things — not unlike what is happening in publishing today. The old order governed by a strong center of control is being challenged by more democratic ideals. This is what the independent publishing movement is all about — whether doing it yourself or with an independent publisher. We are experiencing an era of rapid democratization of the publishing industry. If only Hugh Fox had lived a little longer! I’ll never forget the day he called me – Hugh Fox – one of the founders of the Pushcart Prize. He revealed he was dying of cancer and offered me the opportunity to publish his remaining works. He said Sunbury Press was exactly the kind of publisher he was looking for. I was very grateful for his offer, and encouraged him to spread the dozen or so works around to other presses, keeping two of them for ourselves. Hugh liked the motto, and we think it is very appropriate at this time.

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Meet Hana Haatainen Caye

16 Wednesday Mar 2016

Posted by dtkrippene in Presenter Interviews

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Green Grandma, Voice Over, Writing, Writing Advice, Writing Conferences

Hana

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

GLVWG’s Rebecca Bartlett interviewed Hana Haatainen Caye, who will be presenting at the 2016 Write Stuff Conference. Hana is an author, copy editor and actor who specializes in voice over work. Her sessions include: Fictional Characters Anonymous, The Business of Writing – Ways to make money as a freelance writer, and From Blog To Book.

*****

 Q: You do a lot of voice over work. Are there any similarities between building a successful character on the page and building one through the microphone?

Hana: Whether I’m writing or voicing a character, I have to find a way to become that character somehow. Of course, a lot more goes into the writing of characters, but acting out characters requires some understanding of who they are and the traits that make them unique.

 Q: What are your views on the current state of publishing right now? What are the hot themes for children’s and YA literature?

Hana: As we all know, the publishing industry has changed dramatically. I’ve published over 90 children’s books with the same publisher for the iStoryBooks platform and have not ventured past them at this point. Since the books are all part of an app, I don’t have any actual books to put on my shelves. So I’m hoping to publish a few of my books with a traditional publisher, but I haven’t explored that route yet.

I can’t address YA, but I’m finding biographies and the retelling of fairy tales, fables, and folk tales to be extremely popular right now.

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Meet Ramona DeFelice Long

15 Tuesday Mar 2016

Posted by dtkrippene in Presenter Interviews

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GLVWG "Write Stuff", Writing, Writing Conference

 

GLVWG’s Joe Fleckenstein had the opportunity to interview Ramona DeFelice Long, author, editor, and writing instructor.

Ramona  will be speaking at the Write Stuff Writer’s Conference  in two sessions on Saturday, April 9, 2016 – Creative Nonfiction and Writing Hour.

*****

Ramona, you were a speaker at one of the Write Stuff Writer’s Conferences before. We are delighted to have you back again. This year you will be the speaker at two sessions on Saturday: “The Writing Hour” and “Creative Nonfiction.”  Allow me to ask you about creative nonfiction writing. Please correct me if I am mistaken. Would you say, as someone has suggested, that the literary magazines have developed an increased interest in creative nonfiction pieces? And, would you say creative nonfiction is a good place to start if a person is out to establish a list of “publications?”

 RL: I am delighted to return as a speaker for the conference! It is indeed true that creative nonfiction is now quite marketable to magazines and journals. However, I am not sure if I would suggest writing a personal essay or CNF piece as a way to build publication credits unless your goal is to be an essayist or to pursue CNF as a primary writing genre, any more than writing newspaper articles will help you to get a novel manuscript noticed. What creative nonfiction has allowed is an expansion of traditional nonfiction and memoir pieces by combining factual information with storytelling style. For instance, I’ve written straight memoir about surviving hurricanes when I was a child growing up in Louisiana—I told the story of those nights. Later, I used the same subject and experience in a creative nonfiction piece, which relayed my personal experience but also addressed the broader idea of why people continue to live in dangerous areas of the country.

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Meet Vanessa Robins

12 Saturday Mar 2016

Posted by dtkrippene in Agent Interviews

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Corvisiero Literary Agency, Genre Fiction, Social Media, Writing, Writing Conference

Vanessa Robins

Vanessa Robins of the Corvisiero Literary Agency is a writer, reader, and lover of food.   From Lancaster — no, she’s not Amish — she graduated from York College of Pennsylvania in May of 2015 with a degree in English literary studies and a minor in professional writing. Vanessa was Managing Editor of her college’s undergraduate literary magazine for two years, where her love of literature thrived, and her passion for the publishing world was created. When she isn’t reading or working, Vanessa can be found playing rec league softball (her team is called (Na)16 Batmen (and Women) in case you were wondering), experimenting in the kitchen, knitting, or screaming at her favorite sports teams (go Eagles!). Her submission preferences include sports-centric, accurate or alternative history, thought-out thrillers, heavily based science sci-fi, and reimagined fairytales. She gravitates towards a strong independent female POV with humorous, but socially relevant dialogue. Depending on her relationship status, she might also like romance novels.

*****

 Interview by Geoffrey Mehl

 

GLVWG: Thank you for sharing some time with us today, and we’re looking forward to having you as one of the agents at the Write Stuff Conference in April.

Vanessa Robins: You’re welcome. I’m looking forward visiting with everyone at the conference.

 GLVWG: Genre fads come and go, yet we hear that the process of producing a book is a lengthy one. This begs the question: what is the industry moving toward, say a year or two from now? What trends are fading? Which appear to have staying power?

Vanessa Robins: Working in a bookstore allows me to see what the customers are currently gobbling up. Aside from the normal fiction purchases I’m seeing a huge interest in humor based memoirs. For example, Aziz Ansari’s Modern Romance, Mindy Kaling’s Why Not Me, Yes Please by Amy Poehler. Now all of these people are famous, yes, but there’s a trickle down method going on. We’re seeing it with the “sort-of-famous” online stars such as Miranda Sings who take their online fame and turn it into written fame. My projection is that in two to three years the shelves are going to be filled with memoirs all containing a hint or more of humor.

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Greater Lehigh Valley Writers Group (GLVWG)

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