Do your poems feature wings, wheels, rails, keels? If transportation is a recurring theme, image, or topic in your work, please consider submitting a proposal for a 10- to 15-minute presentation for a panel on Poetry & Transportation. The panel will take place during the new Poetry by the Sea Conference May 26-29 in Madison, CT.
Please submit a brief proposal (250-300 words) and 2-3 sample poems by February 1 to Pat Valdata at:
pvaldataAzoominternetDOTnet (Change AT to @ and DOT to . )
Include your proposal and samples in the body of the email—no attachments, please, or my spam filter will grab your message.
Please note that if your proposal is chosen, you will need to register for the conference. One-day registration is available for those who cannot attend the entire conference.
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Blog: Jeanne's Writing Desk (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Panel Proposals, Poetry, Submissions, Writing Events, Writers' Conference, Add a tag
Blog: Jeanne's Writing Desk (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Poetry, Fiction, Conferences, Writing Events, Writers' Conference, Creative Nonfiction, Scholarships, Writing Tidbits, Writing Competitions, Add a tag
Blog: Jeanne's Writing Desk (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: SCBWI Conference, Writing Events, Writers' Conference, Scholarships, Add a tag
Each year the SCBWI sponsors two student writer scholarships to the Summer and Winter Conferences for full-time university students in an English or Creative Writing program.
This is an invaluable opportunity for young writers! We are now accepting applications for the 2015 SCBWI Winter Conference in New York, February 6-8.
Award:
–Full tuition to main conference events including keynotes and breakout sessions. (Award does not include travel or hotel expenses.)
–Exclusive exposure to industry professionals at the conference.
–An SCBWI Conference advisor to help navigate the jammed-packed weekend.
PLUS:
NY Conference: Admission to the Writers’ Plot Intensive or Writers' Roundtables event.
Deadline: December 8, 2014
Eligibility:
1. You must be at least eighteen years old to apply.
2. All full-time students enrolled in an accredited educational institution are eligible to apply.
Guidelines:
One winner will be chosen from a graduate or doctoral program and one winner will be chosen from an undergraduate program.
Applicants are required to submit:
–Short cover letter stating why you want to attend the conference and a synopsis of your work.
–Five-page sample of a manuscript
–Copy of your student ID
–Letter of recommendation sent directly from a professor at your university.
Applications MUST BE electronically submitted as ONE PDF to:
kaylaDOTheinenATscbwiDOTorg (Change AT to @ and DOT to . )
Letters of recommendation can be sent separately as a Word document.
Applications will be judged by a panel decided by SCBWI.
In the event that a recipient cannot attend for any reason, the grant committee should be notified as soon as possible. The scholarship may, in that event, be awarded to another applicant. The grant is not transferrable and cannot be postponed. SCBWI reserves the right not to award the scholarship in any given year.
Questions? Contact the Grant Coordinator, Kayla Heinen
Blog: Jeanne's Writing Desk (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Book News, Mystery, Crime, Novels, Suspense, Writers' Conference, Writing Competitions, Add a tag
Do you have a crime novel waiting to be discovered? The Whidbey Writers Workshop MFA's Alumni Association has your chance to be discovered! Turn in your synopsis by May 23rd, 2014 for consideration. Details below and at our website.
New York Times Bestseller Robert Dugoni will read and vet the finalists and the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd place winners, and agent Laurie McLean of Foreword Literary will review the winning entry for possible representation.
How to Enter
- Submit via Submittable
. . . (a) a synopsis of up to 500 words;
. . . (b) an extract of the FIRST 5,000 words (or fewer) of your completed CRIME
. . . . . . . FICTION manuscript; and
. . . (c) the non-refundable entry fee of $25.00.
Format Requirements
- The entire entry must be written in English, in 12-point Times New Roman
. . . . . . .or Times, and be double-spaced
- Must have 1” margins
- Your manuscript pages must be numbered
Your name must NOT appear anywhere on the synopsis or the manuscript. You will be disqualified if your name appears anywhere in the synopsis or manuscript.
Attach your synopsis as the last page(s) of your submission.
Synopsis
- Synopsis must not be longer than 500 words.
Manuscript
The novel must be crime fiction: thriller, suspense, mystery. No true crime. Maximum length is 5,000 words. The entry must be the first 5,000 (or fewer) words of your novel.
If you are selected as a finalist, you will be asked to provide an electronic copy of your completed manuscript (minimum 55,000 words, maximum 100,000 words). Failure to provide the completed manuscript within three days after the request will result in disqualification.
Blog: Jeanne's Writing Desk (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Writers' Conference, Scholarships, Add a tag
Minnesota Northwoods Writers Conference Scholarships available!
Scholarship Application Deadline Monday April 7, 2014
This summer the Minnesota Northwoods Writers Conference, which prides itself on its intimate lakeside setting and award-winning teaching faculty, will hold week-long workshops in poetry led by Camille Dungy and Aimee Nezhukumatathil, in fiction led by Sheri Joseph, in creative non-fiction led by Rebecca Brown, and a multi-genre workshop led Judson Mitcham. We are featuring Pam Houston as our Distinguished Visiting Writer. The conference prides itself on its intimate lakeside setting and award-winning teaching faculty. Go to our website for more information.
The Conference Fee is $545 before April 1 and includes a daily workshop limited to 13 writers, daily craft talks, an editor’s talk with Patrick Thomas of Milkweed Editions, a faculty publishing panel, afternoon events, and three conference meals. An Auditor Option is also available for $125 and includes all conference amenities and events offered during the week, but does not include a workshop.
Five $300 scholarships will be awarded toward the conference fee. Scholarship awards are based on need and literary merit and intended to lower financial barriers for writers who want to practice the arts of poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction with award-winning authors in an intimate setting. Apply here by April 7.
Recreational activities on site include canoeing, kayaking, sailing, hiking, and the campus fitness center, or relax at the beach and picnic among the pines in Diamond Point Park. Explore scenic Lake Bemidji and visit the headwaters of the Mississippi. Stay within walking distance to the beach and all conference activities in modern and air-conditioned Linden Suites on campus for only $25 per night. WiFi and high speed Internet are standard. This is a great opportunity for writers to study their craft and come together in a supportive and enthusiastic community!
Blog: Jeanne's Writing Desk (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Children's Writing, SCBWI Conference, Writers' Conference, Scholarships, Writing Tidbits, Add a tag
Each year the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators sponsors two student writer scholarships to the Summer and Winter Conferences for full-time university students in an English or Creative Writing program.
Award:
–Full tuition to main conference events including keynotes and breakout sessions. (Award does not include travel or hotel expenses.)
–Exclusive exposure to industry professionals at the conference.
–An SCBWI Conference advisor to help navigate the jammed-packed weekend.
PLUS:
LA Summer Conference: An individual manuscript consultation of the first twenty pages of your manuscript with an industry professional and entrance to the Writers’ Intensive.
Eligibility:
1. You must be at least eighteen years old to apply.
2. All full-time students enrolled in an accredited educational institution are eligible to apply.
Guidelines:
One winner will be chosen from a graduate or doctoral program and one winner will be chosen from an undergraduate program.
Applicants are required to submit:
–Short cover letter stating why you want to attend the conference and a synopsis of your work.
–Five-page sample of a manuscript
–Copy of your student ID
–Letter of recommendation sent directly from a professor at your university.
Applications MUST BE electronically submitted as ONE PDF to:
kaylaDOTheinenATscbwiDOTorg (Change AT to @ and DOT to .)
Letters of recommendation can be sent separately as a Word document.
Applications will be judged by a panel decided by SCBWI.
In the event that a recipient cannot attend for any reason, the grant committee should be notified as soon as possible. The scholarship may, in that event, be awarded to another applicant. The grant is not transferrable and cannot be postponed. SCBWI reserves the right not to award the scholarship in any given year.
Deadline: April 15
Blog: Jeanne's Writing Desk (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Writing Events, Writers' Conference, Writing Competitions, Writing Fellowships, Add a tag
Writers@Work 2014 Fellowship Competition
The Writers @ Work Annual Fellowship Competition is a great opportunity for emerging writers to have their work vetted by a talented panel of judges, well-known in their respective fields.
Prizes
Awarded in each category:
First Prize:
$1,000;
Publication in Quarterly West;
Tuition for the 2014 Writers@Work conference*;
Featured reading at the conference.
Two Honorable Mentions: $250.
Eligibility
Any writer who has not yet published a book-length volume of original work in the genre in which they submit a manuscript;
Unpublished work only. Work appearing in online journals is considered published. Work on personal websites or blogs is considered unpublished;
Previous winners are not eligible in the genre in which they have won;
Board members are prohibited from submitting manuscripts during their tenure on the board;
Current and former students of the judges are ineligible to submit in those categories;**
You may enter multiple submissions per category and/or submissions in multiple categories. A reading fee is required for each entry.
Submission Guidelines
Your submission must have all identifying information removed. If your name appears on the submission, your entry will be disqualified;
The submissions manager keeps a record of your name, contact information, and submitted texts, which are kept blind from the readers and judges.
W@W Fellowship Competition no longer accepts paper submissions.
Reading Fee: $25 per entry
Deadline: Submissions close January 31, 2014.
Blog: Jeanne's Writing Desk (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Workshops, Writing Events, Writers' Conference, Literary Events, Scholarships, Add a tag
The Jan-ai Scholarship Fund will sponsor two poets or writers between the ages of 18 - 30 to attend the 21st Annual WINTER POETRY & PROSE GETAWAY, January 17-20, 2014 in the Atlantic City area.
Recipients may choose from workshops in poetry, fiction, nonfiction, memoir and more, including special advanced sections with Stephen Dunn and Tony Hoagland. In addition, the conference also offers open mics, tutorials, talks, sunrise yoga, dancing at the Getaway Disco and writerly camaraderie.
The Jan-ai Scholarship Fund commemorates the life and untimely death of young writer, poet and photographer, Jennifer Cakert (1980 - 2006).
DEADLINE: November 30, 2013.
For more information, visit our website.
Blog: Jeanne's Writing Desk (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Teaching, Submissions, Writing Events, Writers' Conference, Writing Tidbits, Panel Proposals, Scholarly Papers, Add a tag
As teachers of literature and creative writing, the conference asks the larger question: How do we make a literary life and literary citizenship possible both for our students and for ourselves?
This is an interdisciplinary call extended to teachers and graduate students. Additional topics are welcome.
Deadline for submissions is November 15, 2013. Send abstracts (minimum of 250 words) or inquiries to:
Dr. Margaret Barrow or Dr. Manya Steinkoler
Borough of Manhattan Community College/CUNY
English Department, Room N751
199 Chambers Street, New York, NY 10007
Telephone: (212) 220-8000 x7282
Email:
mbarrowATbmcc.cunyDOTedu or msteinkolerATbmcc.cunyDOTedu
(Change AT to @ and DOT to .)
The website.
Blog: Jeanne's Writing Desk (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Writing News, Writers' Conference, Scholarships, Add a tag
Four scholarships are being offered for first-time participants of the 21st Annual WINTER POETRY & PROSE GETAWAY, January 17-20, 2014 in the Atlantic City area. Recipients may choose from workshops in poetry, fiction, nonfiction, memoir and more, including special advanced sections with Stephen Dunn and Tony Hoagland. In addition, the conference also offers open mics, tutorials, talks, sunrise yoga, dancing at the Getaway Disco and writerly camaraderie.
There are two different categories of scholarships available:
+ The Toni Brown Memorial Scholarship, sponsored by the Getaway faculty and staff, will offer places to two poets or writers age 31 and over. Deadline: Nov. 15, 2013.
+ The Jan-ai Scholarship will sponsor two poets or writers between the ages of 18 - 30. Deadline: Nov. 30, 2013.
LEARN MORE AND APPLY TODAY
-+-+-
ABOUT THE WINTER POETRY & PROSE GETAWAY
Escape the distractions of your busy life. Advance your craft and energize your writing at the Winter Getaway. Enjoy challenging and supportive sessions, insightful feedback and an encouraging community.
The Winter Poetry & Prose Getaway is presented by The Richard Stockton College of New Jersey and Murphy Writing Seminars, LLC.
Blog: Jeanne's Writing Desk (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Poetry, Fiction, Writing Events, Drama, Writers' Conference, Creative Nonfiction, Screenplays, Writing Competitions, Add a tag
* All genres open; include a maximum of 15 pages of poetry or hybrid-genre work, or a maximum of 20 pages of fiction, nonfiction, drama, or screenplay.
* Work submitted may be previously published, but must be stripped of all information identifying the author or the venue.
* Postmark deadline November 15, 2013.
* Entry fee $15, payable to SDSU / Great Plains Writers’ Conference. Mail to:
Blog: Books, Boys, Buzz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: travel, Writing, conference, writer's life, Tera Lynn Childs, writers' conference, other writers, Add a tag
After a twelve day sojourn that took me from Oklahoma to Los Angeles to Houston to Austin to Houston and finally back to Oklahoma, I am finally home in Poketown (aka Stillwater, OK). This is just my temporary home, of course, because I am working on getting to Seattle this summer, but my bed and my puppy were waiting for me, so home it is.
One of the things I love most about conferences and conventions (besides meeting fabulous fans and readers and bloggers and librarians) is getting to hang out with other writers. This always energizes me, recharges my writerly batteries and I come home eager to write-write-write.
This is an especially good thing right now because I have a book due, like, yesterday. (Okay, June 1st, but it feels really really close.) And, while I won't admit my current page count (it's pretty small) or how much I plan to write in the next two weeks (it's a lot) I will say that I'm going to be nose-to-the-grindstone to get Sweet Venom 2 done early enough to revise it before sending it off to my editor by deadline.
Before I left on my big trip I ordered a new Alphasmart. My old one had been my dear companion for many years, but the keys started getting sticky (even after I took them all off and cleaned off the sub-key gunk) and it hurt my wrists to type on it for very long. So my shiny new, non-sticky-keyed Alphie is charged and ready to go. I'm charged and ready to go. Operation: Write That Book is about to begin. (Sophie Jordan and I are going to do daily #deadlinedash check-ins on Twitter, if you want to follow our progress.)
With all the book inspiration I've accumulated in the last two weeks, I'm ready. Wish me luck!
Hugs,
TLC
Blog: Books, Boys, Buzz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Oprah, writers' conference, rwa, YA authors, keynote speech, fave five, Add a tag
Blog: First person present (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: shameless self-promotion, shameless self-promotion, Add a tag
...in that one way to make one's adolescent angst useful later in life is to repurpose it for inclusion in a short story collection AVAILABLE NOW FROM BLOOMSBURY!
Check it out:
First Kiss (Then Tell): A Collection of True Lip-Locked Moments.
25 teen authors recount the story of their first kiss. Mine's called "First Las Kiss." And I'm in some truly excellent company.
Now, if only I were making royalties off of all of those painful memories....
Blog: First person present (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: shameless self-promotion, shameless self-promotion, Add a tag
If you're in the NYC area, come by NYPL's Teen Central on Thursday at 4pm for a special Jewish Book Month panel featuring: myself, Judy Goldschmidt, David Levithan, Sarah Mlynowski, and Lisa Ann Sandell.
http://www.nypl.org/events/breventsdetail.cfm?EventID=59422.732988
Blog: Pop Goes the Library (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: School Library Journal, squee, shameless self-promotion, The Book, props, Add a tag
And welcome, SLJ readers!
So, there's this really nice article about PGTL: The Book on School Library Journal's website today. Needless to say, Liz & I are beside ourselves with delight. In the immortal words of our patron saint, Flavor Flav, "yeeeeah, boyyy!"
Blog: Pop Goes the Library (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: shameless self-promotion, surveys, shamless self-promotion, popbook, Add a tag
So, Liz and I have been sitting on some fairly big news for a while now: we're writing a book. It's called Pop Goes the Library: Using Pop Culture to Connect With Your Whole Community, and the good folks at ITI are going to publish it, sometime in 2008.
So while we feverishly research, write, and revise the manuscript, we have a request of all of you, dear Readers & Friends of Pop: we have this survey, you see, and it would help us out tremendously if you'd be willing to answer our questions. It's one thing for us to write about what we think makes a great marriage between pop culture & libraries; it's quite another, more powerful thing to quote our experienced colleagues on this topic.
So, if you're willing, our survey is right here.
We apologize in advance if you see e-mail survey-related e-mails on various list-servs. We're trying to gather as many responses as the library community is willing to provide.
Thank you so much for taking the time to participate. We know our book will be that much better for your contributions!
Cross-posted by Liz at Tea Cozy.
ETA: Despite our early testing of the survey, there were some problems. They are now fixed, or should be -- if you have problems, leave a note in the comments or e-mail sophie DOT brookover AT gmail DOT com. Thanks!
I love that you are on your second Alphasmart and how well that works for you!
Good luck meeting your deadline!
meep! I didn't even know those Alphasmart things existed. It's like a laptop without the internet or distractions - I love it!
P.S. Good luck on your deadlines!
I started out on an Alphasmart -- they rock! Good luck on the dash, TLC!
best of luck, Tera!
Good luck, TLC! I have no idea what happened to my Alphasmart. I think I lost it in the divorce settlement...LOL. It's a great writer's tool!
Good luck, Tera!! We know you can do it. :)
I've always wanted an Alphasmart. Good luck with your deadline. I bet Daisy is so glad you are finally home!