Creating dreams, and pursuing them…
Last Saturday at the 2011 NSW Writers’ Centre Speculative Fiction Festival, Pamela Freeman (Blood Ties, Deep Water and Full Circle) said that speculative fiction was:
the kind of story that my mother would say weakens your hold on reality
For me, this summarised the entire festival, with its dreamy ambiance and otherworldly talk, its fantastical array of stellar authors and my unreal presence… You see, I wasn’t supposed to be there!
This coming weekend, my little family and I are moving house. So last Saturday I was supposed to be packing. Having just bought a house and given a huge stash of cash to the government (why, oh why is stamp duty so expensive?), I was also supposed to be cutting back financially. So I figured I’d have to give this year’s NSWWC spec fic festival a miss 🙁
Or so I thought…
Luckily for me, the NSW Writers’ Centre decided to run a competition for the best speculative fiction tweetpitch. I entered… and won a free ticket to the festival! Yay! There were so many fantastic entrants, I couldn’t believe my luck, and this set the tone for my whole day-that-shouldn’t-have-been.
After a heart-felt opening by the fabulous Kate Forsyth (The Starkin Crown, Bitter Greens), who used to attend the centre as an aspiring author…
…Pamela Freeman, a Doctor of Fantasy no less (well, okay, Creative Arts), talked us through the development of speculative fiction, from the biblical tale of Aaron’s rod, through the rise of gritty realism, and into the vibrant genre we know and love today. As the most dangerous animals now on the planet, Pamela suspects that humans continue to create stories about imagined monsters because we need to fulfil our innate desire to have both love and fear in our lives. Well, speculative fiction certainly does that!
Next, a panel of highly accomplished publishers revealed their top tips on how to get published:
- create a voice that yanks readers out of their reality, plus a fully realised world (Clare Craig, Pan Macmillan; Keith Stevenson, Coeur de Lion Publishing)
- offer something different, something original (Zoe Walton, Random House)
- push the boundaries of your creativity and have a gripping story (Stephanie Smith, Voyager)
- don’t worry about trends, concentrate on telling the story you want to tell (everyone!)
A plethora of panels then flowed seamlessly one into the other, creating a menagerie of advice from authors (on how to become a publisher author) and publishers (on how they select and develop stories for publication). Here’s what they said, condensed:
1. If your mind doesn’t constantly stray to a story, it’s not the right time for you to write that story (Pamela Freeman, Kate Forsyth).
2. Don’t worry about trends, as genre relabelling and genre diversification merely reflects forward movement / progression and prevents the book market from going stale (Richard Harland), really everything is very similar to how it always was, it’s just being marketed differently (Leigh Blackmore).
3. Manuscript assessment services can be useful if you need outside opinion, but it may also send you in the wrong direction (Clare Craig, Pan Macmillan), plus publishers will want to make up their own minds about your work (Zoe Walton, Random House; Stephanie Smith, Voyager).
4. Word of mouth is still the most powerful tool (Russell B Farr, Ticonderoga Press)…
5. …but don’t worry about establishing a social media presence in advance, as a good online platform doesn’t always translate into sales (Zoe Walton, Random House).
6. Getting your work published by a gateway (such as through a publishing house) lends yours work a level of credibility (Keith Stevenson, Coeur de Lion Publishing; Alan Baxter); although reader reviews can do this also (David Henley, Seizure Magazine).
7. Standalone novels are just as publishable in the genre as trilogies (Zoe Walton, Random House).
8. Maximise your income by obtaining multiple sales for each short story (Stuart Mayne, The Mayne Press).
9. It’s a good idea to have a side-job that pays the bills, as not many writers earn enough from their writing to do this (Pamela Freeman, Kate Forsyth).
10. If at all possible, marry someone with a proper job who can pay the bills (Pamela Freeman)!
Topping off the day with readings of their delicious writing, Richard Harland, Alan Baxter and Margo Lanagan launched the new speculative fiction anthology Anywhere But Earth (Coeur de Lion Publishing, 2011), and P M Newton helped Seizure Magazine’s editor-in-chief, Alice Grundy, launch their Sci-Fi issue.
The beautiful setting and glorious weather made the day almost too good to be true. And, for me, it almost wasn’t.
So, thank you NSW Writers’ Centre – for saving me from a dreary day of packing up house, and instead giving me a dreamy day of story-creation talk and catching up with inspirational friends.
Right… now I’d better get back to those boxes!
You summed the day up perfectly Zena!
Thanks for the memories.
You’re welcome, Monique. It was great to meet you 🙂
Thanks so much for the report! (And congratulations on winning a ticket to be there, it must have been a great pitch!)
Ah, I don’t know about great. My pitch was:
Great post! It was nice to see you and many others who joined during Conflux. Sadly, I’m back in the US for good now. No idea when we can next meet in Australia but I would offer to catch up during Worldcon in Chicago. Wouldn’t that be nice?
Ah Saul, if only I was one of those jet-setting international writers…
Maybe one day 🙂
The day sounds awesome… the topics from the speakers are very intriguing….
It was awesome, Tania – thanks for stopping by and reading about it 🙂
Thanks for an excellent summary of the Speculative Fiction Festival. Not my genre but lots of the rules cross boundaries.
I lived in Frenchs Forest for 15 years and I miss the Northern Beaches. I look forward to staying in touch with my favourite Australia city through your blog.
I agree. A lot of the same rules apply no matter what genre you write in. After all, that’s why writers can write across genres, over genres, under genres or in spite of genres 😉