A Writer's Platform: How to Make It Natural and Happy
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The following guest post is by writer Erika Robuck,
who attended the Writer's Digest
Conference on Saturday and generously offered to recap the sessions she attended.
"The business of writing is the business of reading."
—Richard Nash
These words from Richard Nash's keynote address have been sitting in a quiet space
in my writer's heart since I heard them.
They seem so simple, but the meaning is profound. If I think about what reading is—the
intimacy of the act of bringing someone else's words, thoughts, and imaginings into
my brain, often while I'm in bed; if I reflect on the weight of that as a writer and
apply it to all areas of the publication process (from words on the page, to editing,
to marketing, etc.)—I can transform the entire experience into something I'm eager
to do, every step of the way.
The breakout sessions I attended communicated this same idea, over and over again,
in new and varied ways: the importance you and your passions are as a writer to the
business of writing.
Your Publishing Options
I began the day at Jane Friedman's session,
"Your Publishing Options," outlining the various forms publication takes in the present
day.
Jane focused on the three major avenues: traditional, small press, and DIY/self-publishing.
What was striking about Jane's presentation, aside from her warmth, humor, and knowledge,
was her emphasis on writers carefully reflecting on the best publishing avenue for
them, individually—really asking ourselves as writers what's important to us, who
will read our work, and the best placement for its success.
If you seek an avenue suited to your personality and writing goals, you will be infinitely
more likely to achieve it. When I left her session, I truly felt empowered to choose
the best path for my own efforts.
Building the Perfect Plot
Following Jane's session, I attended James Scott
Bell's workshop on "Building the Perfect Plot." In addition to doing a mean Dirty
Harry impression, Bell discussed the strengths of the three-act structure in writing
and his "Lock System" for solid plots. His emphasized character as the means by which
readers connect to the story, which helpful in preparing my pitch because it showed
how I must emphasize my protagonist to invite agent connection.
Richard Nash
Richard Nash's keynote address was powerful. His words on the importance of writers
as readers—and on the publishing industry understanding that and treating them as
such—clearly resounded with the room.
He emphasized that building platform should not be thought of as an "economic leverage
point," but as a natural extension of your work and what makes you happy. This was
revolutionary, and illustrates why so many author and publisher efforts at spreading
the word in a one-size-fits-all approach lead to failure.
Pitch Slam
I found myself in awe of all of the writers in the pitch lines so passionate about
their books, and ended up scratching out my own pitch (which I'd been obsessing over
for weeks) and just speaking clearly and authentically from the heart. It was received
very well, and I have the session leaders and conference organizers to thank for that.
I no longer think of writing, reading, and the business of writing as separate facets
of my career, but as parts that work best when integrated.
[image error]Erika
Robuck is an historical fiction author, blogger, and voracious reader. You can catch
up with her on Twitter, Facebook (Erika
Robuck, Author), or her website.
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Published on January 24, 2011 18:23
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