Susan Cross in Lifestyle

Susan Cross’s articles about the Quilt Guild and the Central Florida Animal Pantry are in this issue of Lifestyles. Go to www.centralflorida-lifestyle.com  and click on YOUR COMMUNITY. Then click on Central. The photo and story about the Quilt Guild appears at the top of the page. 

 
Then click on YOUR COMMUNITY and click on North. The article on the Central Florida Animal Pantry is in that edition.
 

Anhinga Writers’ Studio 2010 Summer Workshops

 What writer doesn’t dream of seeing his or her work published?

 For many first-time authors, the pathway to publishing success can be daunting. And in today’s changing media marketplace, the choices can be overwhelming: There’s the traditional route – with a literary agent and a big-name publisher. But what about publishing with a regional or small press? Would publishing a shorter article in a newspaper or magazine be advised? And what about self-publishing, e-books, e-zines and blogs?  If you post your work on a blog, will a prospective editor later reject it because it’s already been “published?”

Join in on the discussion and explore all of the routes to publication at The Anhinga Writers’ Studio 2010 Summer Workshops in Gainesville, Florida, July 28-31, where published authors and industry insiders will provide insights, advice and tips.

The conference’s keynote speaker this year is magazine-publishing mogul George Hirsch, who is currently the publisher of La Cucina Italiana, the English language edition of Italy’s oldest and largest food/cooking magazine. Hirsch was the founding publisher of New York magazine in 1968. In the 1970s, he launched New Times magazine, known for its investigative reporting. He founded and published The Runner and then took the helm of Runner’s World when the two magazines merged in 1987 and he joined Rodale Inc. At Rodale, he was also the publishing director of Men’s Health magazine and the director of international magazines until his “retirement” in 2004. Hirsch, who currently serves on the board of the online magazine Salon, shares his formula for publishing success in a Wednesday evening keynote address.

Prolific – and well-paid – author Peter Bowerman, who penned the award-winning Well-Fed Writer titles, will discuss how writers can stay “well-fed” in a changing marketplace, how to break into the lucrative field of “commercial” freelancing, and how he turned one book into a full-time living.  His self-publishing success is chronicled in the award-winning 2007 release, The Well-Fed Self-Publisher: How to Turn One Book into a Full-Time Living (www.wellfedsp.com). Bowerman’s books have been selections for the Book-of-the-Month Club, the Quality Paperback Book Club, the Writer’s Digest Book Club, and they have been recognized as finalists for the Benjamin Franklin Award and ForeWord magazine’s Book of the Year.

Anne Hawkins is a senior literary agent with John Hawkins & Associates, Inc., New York. Founded in 1893 by Paul R. Reynolds, it is the oldest literary agency in the country. She works with mainstream literary and commercial fiction, including mystery, suspense, thrillers, historicals, and women’s fiction, and a wide variety of non-fiction, particularly history, politics, biography, science, natural history, medicine, and women’s and family issues. A number of her books have gained distinction through award nominations, book-to-film contracts, significant foreign rights sales, major book club selections, or placement on The New York Times bestseller list.   

One of the easiest ways for an early-stage writer to get published – and paid – is by writing for newspapers, magazines and online media. And one of the most enjoyable ways to do this is by writing about your travels. This year, Bob Morris, former editor in chief of Caribbean Travel and Life magazine and a veteran travel writer, shows how it’s done. Morris, who regularly contributes to National Geographic Traveler, Bon Appetit and Caribbean Travel & Life, shares practical advice and tips in “Go, Eat, Write: Tales from a Veteran Novelist, Travel Writer, and Magazine Editor.”         

The conference features hands-on courses in poetry, nonfiction and fiction for early-career and intermediate writers taught by nationally renowned authors and editors.

Other faculty include fiction writers Mary Anna Evans, Bob Morris and Claire Matturro, poets Peter Meinke, Rick Campbell, and Lola Haskins. Nonfiction faculty include bestselling author Rosemary Daniell, memoirist Bev Browning, magazine feature writer and editor Diana Tonnessen, and travel writer Bob Morris.

Guest editors Jeanne Leiby of the Southern Review, and Rick Campbell, poetry editor of Anhinga Press, join Diana Tonnessen in an editors’ roundtable, where they offer insights and advice on how to pitch ideas and present your work to an editor for publication.

 Full tuition for the 4-day conference, held at the Hilton University of Florida Conference Center in Gainesville, is $395. Discounts are available for returning students and students bringing friends. For more information or to register for the conference, visit www.anhingawriters.org, e-mail info@anhingawriters.org or call (352) 379-8782.

The Anhinga Writers’ Studio is a nonprofit organization providing hands-on writing instruction, support and networking opportunities to early-career and mid-level writers through courses, workshops and conferences.

Romancing the Holidays

November 6 Romancing the Holidays Book Signing To Raise Funds for Adult Literacy League

On chilly Central Florida nights, there’s nothing cozier than curling up in a comfy chair with a great romance novel, especially one written by an award-winning local author.  Better yet, follow that delicious read with a romantic dinner and love poems recited over dessert.  More than twenty of Florida’s best known romance novelists, as well as Culinary Confessions of the PTA Divas cookbook author Pam Brandon and Three Houses poets Darlyn Finch & Brad Kuhn, will be on hand to meet readers and sign copies of their latest books at the annual Romancing the Holidays book signing, to be held Saturday, November 6 from 2 – 5 p.m. in the center fountain court of Altamonte Mall.

Not only can readers chat with their favorite writers and get their book purchases autographed, but Barnes & Noble’s Altamonte Mall store, which is supplying the books for the signing, will donate 20% of the event’s proceeds to Central Florida’s non-profit Adult Literacy League.

Book buyers are encouraged to arrive early.  The first 100 people to purchase will go home with a fabulous goody bag stuffed with books donated by authors (many of them autographed) and publishers (including romance giant Harlequin), bookmarks, other promotional items, and candy.

“Reading is the most essential tool a person needs to succeed in life,” says Joyce Whidden, executive director of the ALL.  “So, we are thankful to the Central Florida Romance Writers for choosing the ALL and our eager adult learners to benefit from this very fun event.  Romance fans are voracious readers, and we like that!”

Fans of the romance genre also buy a lot of books.  According to statistics published on the website of Romance Writers of America, a non-profit organization of over 9,500 romance writers mainly from the US and Canada, “Romance fiction generated $1.37 billion in sales in 2009.”  Also, “74.8 million people read at least one romance novel in 2008.”

“I’m thrilled to be taking part in this wonderful event.  I look forward to it every year,” says Catherine Kean, one of the event’s coordinators, who is published in mass market paperback by Medallion Press.  Her sixth book, A Knight’s Persuasion, Book 4 of her medieval Knight’s Series, arrived in bookstores earlier this year.  “I love meeting my readers and supporting an organization as beneficial as the ALL.”

Co-coordinator Dara Edmondson agrees.  She writes young adult and contemporary romances for The Wild Rose Press under her own name and erotic novels for Red Sage and Ellora’s Cave under the pen name Wynter Daniels.  “As an author, I love being out there, meeting readers face-to-face.  When I meet someone who has read my books, it’s such a thrill to hear their comments in person.  Way better than a fan letter!  Knowing part of the proceeds go to help literacy in the area is like the cherry on an ice cream sundae.”

Among those participating in the November 6 book signing are fantasy author C.L. Wilson and romantic suspense novelist Roxanne St. Claire.  Both have had books on the New York Times bestseller list.  Twelve of the authors–Blair Bancroft, Jax Cassidy, Leigh Duncan, Dara Edmondson, Louise M. Gouge, Shauna Hart, Kean, Pamela Labud, Gennita Low, Aleka Nakis, St. Claire and Michelle Young—are members of Central Florida Romance Writers, an affiliated, non-profit chapter of RWA.

Locally, CFRW has about sixty members hailing from almost every county in Central Florida.  Twenty-four are published in mass market paperback, trade paperback, hardcover, or electronic (e-book) formats.  The chapter boasts writers of every romance sub-genre, including long and short contemporary, romantic suspense, Christian inspirational, historical, and paranormal.

Chapter President Lorena Streeter, whose erotic romances are published under the pen name Lara Dien by The Wild Rose Press, encourages aspiring authors to attend an upcoming meeting to see what the chapter can offer them.  Many of group’s members—including Kean and CFRW Past-President Dara Edmondson—have belonged to CFRW for years and grown from newbies penning their first manuscripts to published authors with multiple publishing contracts.  Through monthly meetings, writing-related programs given by chapter members and guest lecturers, conferences, book signings, and sharing of industry news through a chapter email loop, the group nurtures romance authors at all stages in their careers.

For details on the November 6 Romancing the Holidays Book Signing, visit http://www.cfrwa.org/rth.htm or contact Barnes & Noble at (407) 261 – 0213.  For more information on Central Florida Romance Writers, visit the chapter’s website at http://www.cfrwa.com/.