The page has moved to:
this page


Friday, April 25, 2014

WV Writers Conference Workshops

(UPDATED 5/27/14)

The following is a list of the workshop presenters and descriptions of their workshops for West Virginia Writers 2014 Summer Conference.  (You can find registration information at our Conference Page.)



BELINDA ANDERSON
The Wounded Hero and Other Archetypes: Writing Middle-Grade Characters with Depth.  Archetypes don’t have to be stereotypes – on the contrary, they can appeal to the readers’ primal psyche, making your story irresistible. In the archetypal role of Mentor – too bad it doesn’t come with a costume.  Workshop leader Belinda Anderson will explore the archetypes of middle-grade literature, focusing on the Wounded Hero. The wounds can be interior – think of Harry Potter, the orphan. Sometimes the protagonist must cope with exterior wounds – Auggie in the much-acclaimed Wonder. (One agent actually used the phrase “wounded narrators” in describing the books she represents.) The Wounded Hero doesn’t have to be somber – you’ll meet a protagonist who doesn’t let her circumstances stand in the way of her constant wise cracking. Prompts will help participants give depth to their characters. The workshop is designed so that participants can develop a new story, or a manuscript already underway.

Manuscript Checklist.  Workshop leader Belinda Anderson wants you to go forth with your best page forward! She’ll outline and explain a unique manuscript checklist, based on the most frequent problems she sees while critiquing fiction and nonfiction for clients. Presentation is paramount -- it's as important to your manuscript's success as the content. Here’s a chance to learn what’s important, why and how to make the fixes. Questions are welcome.


MAGGIE ANDERSON
Writing Groups of Related Poems.  Using examples from several contemporary poets, we will discuss ways in which one subject or one form can be looked at in different ways to create a set of similar poems.  Attention will be paid to the current poetic fashion of “project books” or “sequences of poem.”  In these books all the poems deal with one subject – e.g., Ellen Bryant Voigt (Kyrie, about the 1918 influenza epidemic); Brian Turner (Here, Bullet, a veteran writes about the Iraq War); Louise Gluck (The Wild Iris, poems in the voice of flowers); Ron Rash (Eureka Mill, about farmers moving from their land to work in the cotton mills of North Carolina); and others.  Ideas for creating sequences will be provided with short writing prompts.

Gathering the Storm: Putting Together a Poetry Manuscript. This workshop will focus on approaches to putting together a poetry manuscript.  Using suggestions from several different poets as well as my own experience as a poetry editor, we will develop a working list of “ways and means” and “do’s and don’ts.”  Workshop participants are invited to bring some of a manuscript of their own to discuss, as well as questions to pose about the process of “gathering the storm” of a pile of poems into a publishable book. 





LAURA TREACY BENTLEY

Writing Your First Novel: The Journey of a Hybrid Writer.  In this interactive workshop, Laura will share her stumbles/strategies/discoveries in creating her first novel The Silver Tattoo from start to finish. Since her work (poetry and fiction) has been traditionally published and, more excitingly, published via Amazon, she has experienced the pros and cons of both worlds. You will explore the nuts and bolts of novel writing, research, arc, pacing, revision, agent acquisition, more revision, the submission process, harsh realities, passion, stubborn persistence, and ultimate joy. Laura will be referring to two classic guidebooks for novelists by screenwriter Robert McKee and novelist Meredith Sue Willis.


DANNY BOYD
Building Blocks (of good stories for screen and graphic novels) – 90 minutes.  This workshop will focus on the basic building blocks used to develop and construct stories for cinema and graphic novels (but really relevant to any storytelling writing). Unlike some writing genres, screen and graphic writing generally demands having an ending before you start, and then building backwards from there. In this workshop Boyd will identify and explore the primary story element, i.e., character, back-story, commitment, opposition, situations (scenes), settings (environment), etc. Similar to the key to successful filmmaking, writing good scripts, "Is all in the pre-pro," says Boyd.  Formatting styles and available writing software will also be discussed, but like most entertainment writing, it’s all about the story.

Graphic Novels.
  Most writers transition from comics to film, but Danny Boyd did the reverse, finding writing graphic novels a faster way to create much bigger stories on significantly smaller budgets. Approaching the graphic novel as "cinema on the page," he will cover the basic components of graphic narrative creation/construction, and present a general overview of this growing medium. Formatting styles and available writing software will also be discussed.


STEVE GOFF
Improv Your Creativity, Improv Your Writing.
  Utilizing the techniques of comedy improvisation, attendees will learn how to jump start and maintain their creativity. Comedy improv requires getting out of your own way, being in the moment, and quieting your inner critic. If you have trouble doing any of these, this workshop will show you how to use the skills of improv to recharge your muse, focus your creative efforts, and challenge that cranky critic. We will discuss such improv concepts as "start anywhere", "take risks", "be spontaneous", "be brave", and "trust your instincts". We will cover the "rules" of improv comedy and illustrate how to incorporate this instruction into your creative process and make it part of your daily life. Through a variety of fun and interactive exercises and improv games, we will explore the world of improvisation and discover what it has to offer you and your creativity. Laugh and learn. Watch for when the "ha-ha" becomes "A-ha!".  Regardless of what you write, this workshop will provide you with tools to help you keep your creativity flowing.

*Wear comfortable shoes as the workshop involves several games and exercises that involve moving around and being active.  

 
PAM HANSON

Writing for the Inspirational Market.  The market for inspirational stories is bigger than ever and growing. This workshop will explain the kinds of inspirational markets that exist and what they’re looking to buy, along with where to sell your inspirational fiction and non-fiction.

How to Write a Romance Novel.
  This session will guide you through the steps of plotting, writing, marketing, and selling your romance novel. Tips will also be offered on all the new romance publishing opportunities available to writers.


KIRK JUDD 
Spoken Word Spoken Here.  An approach to creating poetry for the sound of it, understanding the premise that poetry is a spoken word art.  Interactive tips and techniques for writing poetry from an acoustic perspective.

Journey To The Center Of Your Mind.  Imaginative and engaging participatory group exercises leading into individual interpretations and descriptions of personal journeys.  Where did you come from?  Where did you go?


MICHAEL KNOST
Flashbacks and Backstory.  Flashbacks offer many pitfalls. This is because even the best-written flashback carries a built-in disadvantage: It is, by definition, already over. The scene you are detailing in your flashback isn't happening in story time. It happened sometime earlier, and so we are being given old information. And like old bread, old information is never as fresh or as tasty as new bread. Let’s learn when to use a flashback, what its purpose is, and how to get into and out of one. Then we’ll learn the natural progression of backstory.

Outlining Your Novel.  There are two kinds of writers: outliners and seat-of-the-pantsers. Most writers begin as a pantser and then migrate toward outlining as they get more interested in getting organized. Let’s learn all the aspects of outlining so the process will work for you and your personal tastes. Let’s find what an outline is, how it works, what to include in it and when, and how to turn it into a tool rather than a crutch. When we learn the outline is helping us organize the story, we’ll find the process more rewarding and result thorough.


JOEY MADIA

Creating strong characters to tell your story. (a subset of his broader workshops on playwriting)

Selecting and reading your work. In this workshop, Joey will put his skills as an acting teacher to work. You will learn how to read your work with a presentational mind.

The art of the knights and dragons style fantasy genre.
Research, characterization, and bring your own voice and ideas to a well-traveled genre.


KAMBRI CREWS
Non-Fiction Book Proposal.  Non-fiction books (anything from memoir, pop culture, true crime and self-help) are sold to publishers on the basis of a proposal which is a 20-50 page document pitching the book’s content and marketability and is supplemented by sample chapters. You write the proposal before you actually write the book.  The workshop will cover these parts of a proposal: overview (the basic idea), market (who will buy), competition (similar books), platform and promotion (how it will sell), author (about you), table of contents, chapter summaries and sample chapters.

Publicity & Marketing: Sell Y.  To sell a book to a publisher and to sell copies of your book to readers, you have to be able to promote it! Whether you self-publish or have a publisher, you must toot your own horn loudly and often. This workshop will give several dozen very practical, easy to follow tips and ideas ranging from how to write a press release, who to contact at media outlets and how to build a "platform".


DAVE McCORMICK
Songwriting. What inspires a song and what comes after the inspiration?  In this workshop, learn how to structure a song.  Dave will demonstrate examples of song structure followed by Q&A.

Creative writing. Learn the basics of creative writing from gathering ideas to drafting the story.


RENEE NICHOLSON
From Your Page to Their Page: Publishing Your Poems.
  In this workshop, learn how to research publications, prepare your work to send out, manage your submission process, and much more. Understand more about literary journals, and how they work, book opportunities, and other ways to get your poetry out into the world.

Break Dance: Discover How Line Break Works (or Doesn’t) in Your Poems. 
Many poets, of all skill levels, find line break among the toughest aspects of writing poems. And yet the perfect line break can make your poem come alive in surprising and important ways. “The line, in poetry, has been called a ‘unit of attention’.” (Kim Addonizio)  Meaning is not only in the words—the meaning of individual words and also their sounds—but meaning in the shape of a line, a shape that is inherent in a poem, if we pay attention. Learn how to break for meaning, music, and more.



MARILYN SHANK
Kids, Tweens, and Teens: Developmental Stages.  Writers for young people need to know characteristics of developmental stages. How does motivation, view of adults, needs, and understanding of the world around them change from childhood to adolescence? In a writing exercise, participants will recall a significant event at two different ages and explore how developmental stages apply to their memories.

Coping with Grief and Trauma: It’s Not the Same for Children and Adolescents.
Many picture books, chapter books, and novels address issues of grief and trauma in the life of the protagonist. Participants will learn how children and teens view and deal with grief and trauma differently than adults. A writing exercise will provide an opportunity for participants to recall an experience of grief or loss as a child or teen.


DAVID SLOAN
How to Deal with Complexity in Plots.
  Creating intricate plots with multiple story lines, multiple characters and multiple layers can be very challenging, and can quickly muddle up a story to the point where it becomes too difficult to follow. In this workshop/class, we will discuss ways to approach creating a rich, complex plot without overburdening a reader. Examples from recent movies and books will demonstrate what to do/not do, and several short writing exercises will be used to address this specific problem. Dr. Sloan will utilize his personal writing experience and his professional background as a scientist and analyst to discuss fun, engaging approaches to complex plot formation. We will also talk briefly about how to talk to others about your complex book in a way that will make them want to read it.

How to Write with a Significant Other (and Survive)   Writing as a couple, or in a partnership, can be as fun and rewarding as it can be stressful and contentious. David (an analyst and novelist) and Naomi (a former English teacher) will use their unique personal experience working on a novel together to illustrate what did and did not work, and will suggest ways to use writing to strengthen, not stress, a relationship. Participants need not come as a couple, but we will include partnering writing exercises as part of the class.


NAOMI SLOAN
Memoir and Imagination: Creative Non-fiction from Blog Posts to Personal Essays. 
The story you know best--and the story you can write the most powerfully--is your own. As a genre, the personal essay finds its potency by tapping into emotions that are universal with experiences that are deeply individual. This workshop will help you use your full palette of writing skills--characterization, setting, pacing, dialogue, theme, figurative language--to paint your personal stories in shades of humor, poignancy, irony, and ultimately truth. This workshop is not about how to neatly wrap up life's difficult experiences in five paragraphs or fewer. Rather, it's about how to claim the uniquely embarrassing, perplexing, inconsistent, and hilarious parts of our lives in order to give each other wonderful stories. Whether your chosen medium is blogging, journaling, family letters, or the personal essay, as you write about your life in new ways, you will see your life through new eyes. 


NATALIE SYPOLT
It’s Not Your Grandpa’s Mountain Story: What is Today’s Appalachian Literature?
  In this session we will explore Appalachian writing and how the genre has evolved, while still staying true to traditional roots and themes. What makes a story “Appalachian?” Are the expectations changing? What are the traditional themes of Appalachian writing and how do contemporary books, such as Crapalachia by Scott McClanahan, fit in? I will speak from my experience as an editor of the Appalachian Anthology of Writers. I hope this session will be an open discussion and sharing of ideas, as well as favorite authors and titles.

Whose Story is it?: Exploring Perspective and Narrative Distance in Fiction
. In this session we will explore the idea of perspective and narrative distance in fiction.  Every writer knows how important Point of View, but even once the POV has been chosen, the work is not done. Sometimes the most obvious character is not the one to tell the story. Exploring multiple perspectives can be very beneficial and eye-opening, even if the experiment never shows up in a final draft. We’ll also look at the technique of using multiple perspectives in a novel or (more rarely) a short story.


SANDY TRITT
Writing the Story Only You Can Tell (Memoir).
  This workshop hopes to answer the zillions of questions you have when writing your memoir. Should you use real names? Should you fictionalize your story? Should you use first person or third person? Where do you begin your story? Where do you end? When should you file for a copyright? Can you get sued for saying bad things about other people? What about good things? And what, exactly, should be included, and how do you know which life experiences belong and which ones don’t? Be sure to bring your own questions as well.

Pass the Tissues. 
This workshop discusses character emotion and how to control it. We will dissect examples in published works to find out exactly how a writer can manipulate a character’s emotion to create an equal reaction in the reader. This workshop also discusses how climatic points within a manuscript must be detailed so that no character emotion is missed—yet, the way those details are presented decide if the emotion is melodramatic or if it hits the reader deep in the gut. This workshop is appropriate for writers of all levels.

 
RHONDA BROWNING WHITE
Short Stories: She May be Little, but She’s Tough.
  Why is it that a story that appears short and sweet is so often difficult to craft? Discover the liberations and limitations of short fiction that is often a breakthrough to publication. Intermediate skill level.

Cut It, Cut It, Cut It! Self-Editing for Writers.
  Take your writing from Blah to Hurrah! by following these simple steps that can help you transform tired, overworked prose to a tight and polished manuscript you’ll be proud to submit for publication. All skill levels.

Beginnings and Endings: Hit ‘Em Coming and Going. 
From the first paragraph to the last sentence, it is a writer’s job to engage, enthrall and entertain the reader. Learn how to create tension in a story and keep it through the last breathless page. All skill levels.


ANDREW WHEELER

False memories/confessions created by erroneous forensic analysis.  Memories are constructed. Memories don't exist until they are called upon and are built on the fly around an existing belief framework. Change the underlying belief framework and you can change ones memories. In this workshop we will discuss how claims made by forensic scientists impact how individuals recall events.

Crime Scene Reconstruction and the Investigative Process. Imagine trying to solve a puzzle in which the pieces were constantly changing shape. Crime scene reconstructionists work in this world on a regular basis. In this workshop we will discuss the cycle of divergent and convergent thinking used by at least one investigator in his efforts to reconstruct an incident. We will also look at the intellectualization of the process as a defense mechanism to deal with the stress of possibly being wrong.

Trial Review: A WV murder trial in review.  In 2014, Professor Wheeler testified in a WV murder trial after 9 months of preparation. Using this trial as a case study, explore the justice system from the eyes of the expert witness. Is the court room where scientific reasoning is bludgeoned by the power of rhetoric?


PATRICIA WILES
Awaken the Child Within. 
Learn how to use past memories to create scenes.  Patricia Wiles will lead exercises to help us recall scenes and emotions from childhood that we can use to enrich our stories.

Children's Writer's Journey.
  This workshop will cover the basics of writing for children, presented in an outline similar to the hero's journey. Great for beginning writers.


PODCASTING PANEL 

Natalie Sypolt, Renee Nicholson and Eric Fritzius.  Discussion on how technology has been incorporated into writing. Join us to discuss information about building and maintaining a web presence, the use of social media, podcasting (audio and visual), and self-publishing electronically.

Tuesday, April 01, 2014

WV Writers Writing Contest now closed (not an April Fools joke)

The WV Writers 2014 Annual Writing Competition is NOW closed for submissions. 

Entries will be sent to the contest judges shortly. 

Winners will be announced at the 2014 WV Writers Summer Conference, June 13, 14 and 15 at Cedar Lakes Conference Center in Ripley.  Our awards banquet will be on the evening of June 14. 

Monday, March 31, 2014

FINAL DAY-- WV Writers Contest Reminder Checklist

Today, Monday, March 31, is the FINAL deadline for submissions for the 2014 WV Writers Annual Writing Contest to be mailed.  Anything postmarked after March 31 will not be eligible for our contest, so it's important that you get your entries in the mail today.  

That said...  if you're not able to get to the post office before they close today, here's a time-tested method for getting your entries postmarked by 3/31/14 anyway...

Assemble your entries before midnight tonight, 3/31/14, put them all in their envelope and weigh them using a kitchen scale, then use that weight to purchase and print a Priority Mail label on USPS.com. (Or use Stamps.com, if you have that.) It will have the post mark of 3/31 printed on it and then you can mail it out tomorrow with no problem.  However, don't take a long time about mailing it, cause our contest coordinator (me) is sending all the entries to the judges by next Monday, April 7, so if your entry isn't here by then, you'll be out of luck.



To help things run smoothly for both entrants and our contest coordinator (me) here's a handy checklist that you should go over before sending in your entries.


CHECKLIST:

1)  Have you read the contest rules to make sure you're complying with them? 
Even if you've entered a dozen times before, please do read the rules again because errors happen.  Please pay special attention to the CONTEST GUIDELINES section, which a number of entrants have apparently skipped over already.

2)  Is your contest category and the word count for your entry printed in the top right corner of your entry? (See Checklist #1)  The word count means the actual number of words in your entry.  Your word processing program will be able to tell you this.  Please do not estimate.  For Book Length Prose, this means the word count of your submitted excerpt, not of the overall novel.

3) Have you filled out your entry form correctly?  I've received several entry forms this year in which no contest categories have been marked.  This is fine if there's only one entry and the entrant has put their category on the entry (see Checklist #1 and #2), but when there are multiple prose entries and they've not been indicated on the entries themselves, they could potentially be intended for short story, nonfiction, Appalachian, humor, emerging writers prose, Pearl S. Buck, or children's book and I have no easy way to know.

4)  Have you made absolutely certain your name is NOT printed on your actual story or poem? 
The ONLY place your name should appear is on your contest entry form.  UPDATED 3/17/2014:  So far this year, only TWO people have left their names on their entries.  If you find out you've left yours on, don't sweat it.  I can blank out the name with correction tape and then photocopy that page to replace the original.  However, this takes both time and correction tape and I have a limited supply of those.

5)  Have you double-checked to make sure you included ALL of your entries in your envelope? 
In the past, I've received a couple of entry envelopes that are a story or poem short of the intended amount.  (In fact, last year I received an envelope that only had an entry form and no submission at all.)  I always try to contact the people to make sure of their intentions, and have been known to print missed entries here.  But the more careful you are in submitting the easier it is on me here.  Which brings me to...

6)  Have you included accurate contact information for yourself? 
Every year people send entries in that require followup to correct an error or two.  And every year many of those emails sent bounce back because they are incorrectly written on the form.  (And, sometimes, handwriting interpretation on my part may be at fault.)  Please legibly print your email address and make sure it's correct, along with your other contact information.  

7)  Have you addressed your envelope full of entries with the correct address of our contest coordinator?
  Last year I received more than one entry forwarded to me from Patsy Pittman, who was our contest coordinator for many years, but has not been since 2008.  Please use the correct entry form with the correct address for 2014, which is available at our website and in our newsletter.

8)  Have you included the additional $2 per entry late fee for having mailed entries after March 15?  (Or $1 for New Mountain Voices Student Contest entrants.)

If you have questions feel free to send them to me at wvwcontest@gmail.com.  Do know, though, that many of the answers to questions I have received about the contest are found at our Frequently Asked Questions list.

Monday, March 17, 2014

WVW Contest F.A.Q. #33

Continuing the series of Frequently Asked Questions about the West Virginia Writers, Inc., Annual Writing Competitions.  To see all of the questions, please click HERE.
  
QUESTION:  Can I submit a collection of my poems as my entry to Emerging Writers Poetry?

ANSWER:  No, unfortunately not.  We do not have a category for poetry collections, though it's not a bad idea to consider in the future.  As it stands, though, submitting a collection of poetry in a category dedicated to single poems allows an entrant to "sneak through" more poems for the $10 fee, whereas all of the other poetry entrants would have paid $10 per poem.  Doing this would not be fair to those entrants nor would it be fair to our poetry judges, who are contracted to jury single poems, comparing them against each other to determine the ones they feel are best.

We will consider a poetry collection category for the future, though, because, like Book Length Prose, there should be room for larger works of poetry as well as prose.








Thursday, March 13, 2014

WVW Contest F.A.Q. #32

Continuing the series of Frequently Asked Questions about the West Virginia Writers, Inc., Annual Writing Competitions.  To see all of the questions, please click HERE.


QUESTION:  I won 1st Place last year in Emerging Writer's Poetry.  Can I submit to Emerging Writer's Prose this year? 

ANSWER:  Once you've placed in any WV Writers contest category, you have officially emerged and the Emerging Writers categories are forever more off limits. 

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

WVW Contest F.A.Q. #31

Continuing the series of Frequently Asked Questions about the West Virginia Writers, Inc., Annual Writing Competitions.  To see all of the questions, please click HERE.

QUESTION: Is it permissible to re-enter a work that was rejected last year?

ANSWER:  You may certainly resubmit something from a previous year.  In all but one instance of the times I ever placed in the WVW contest, it was with a stories that had not placed in previous years.  This is not uncommon.  We have completely different judges from year to year, so it can be a matter of a piece finding a receptive judicial home.

Monday, March 10, 2014

WV Writers 2014 Contest Judges

The following are the list of judges for the 2014 WV Writers Annual Writing Contest.  
Kari Gunter-Seymour (Appalachian Writing)
Kari Gunter-Seymour is a communications and marketing designer, photographer, poet and women’s rights advocate. Her people come from the foothills of the Appalachians, on down to the Great Smoky Mountains—farmers, musicians, storytellers and proud military men.  Gunter-Seymour's poetry appears in Clover, A Literary Rag, Still: The Journal , A Narrow Fellow, The LA Times, and her piece "Serving" won first place at the 2013 Hocking Hills Poetry Festival. She is an active participant of the Pudding House Poetry Salons.  An avid photographer in addition to her writing, she is the founder/curator of the “Women of Appalachia Events” which celebrate Appalachian Ohio’s visual, literary and performing women artists. (www.womenofappalachia.com)

Pinckney Benedict (Book Length Prose)

Pinckney Benedict grew up on his family’s dairy farm in Greenbrier County, West Virginia. He has published a novel (Dogs of God) and three collections of short fiction, the most recent of which is Miracle Boy and Other Stories. His work has been published in, among other magazines and anthologies, Esquire, Zoetrope: All-Story, the O. Henry Award series, the Pushcart Prize series, the Best New Stories from the South series, Apocalypse Now: Poems and Prose from the End of Days, The Ecco Anthology of Contemporary American Short Fiction, and The Oxford Book of the American Short Story. Benedict serves as a professor in the MFA program at Southern Illinois University Carbondale and on the core faculty of the low-residency MFA program at Queens University in Charlotte, NC.

Madelyn Rosenberg (Children’s Books)
Madelyn Rosenberg was a journalist in daily newspapers for more than a decade before she began writing for children. Her books include The Schmutzy Family, finalist for the National Jewish Book Award for illustrated children's books, Happy Birthday, Tree, and Canary in the Coal Mine, a middle-grade novel set in Charleston that was named a VOYA Top Shelf pick and a notable social studies trade book for young people. Her forthcoming books include Dream Boy (with co-author Mary Crockett), How to Behave at a Tea Party, and Nanny X. Madelyn is a freelance writer in Arlington, Va., where she lives with her family.

Maggie Anderson (Emerging Writers Poetry—the F. Ethan Fischer Memorial Poetry Award)Maggie Anderson is the author of four books of poetry, including Windfall: New and Selected Poems, A Space Filled with Moving, and Cold Comfort. She has edited several thematic anthologies, including A Gathering of Poets, a collection of poems read at the 20th of the shootings at Kent State University in 1970, as well as Learning by Heart: Contemporary American Poetry about School and After the Bell: Contemporary American Prose about School. Her awards include two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, fellowships from the Ohio, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania Councils on the Arts, and the Ohioana Library Award for contributions to the literary arts in Ohio. The founding director of the Wick Poetry Center and of the Wick Poetry Series of the Kent State University Press, Anderson is Professor Emerita of English at Kent State University and lives in Asheville, NC anniversary commemoration

June Langford Berkley (Emerging Writers Prose)June Langford Berkley is a writer who imagines her family saga in storytelling performances and fiction.  Her multi-faceted career in education includes public school and university teaching and nationwide consulting.  She has written many articles and chapters for text books.  Her published fiction includes: Shannaganey Blue, a novella, University of Akron, 5th ed. 1993; The Rhinegold Case, University of Akron, Akros Review, l984.

J.C. Vaughn (Graphic Narrative)J. C. Vaughn, Vice President of Publishing at Gemstone Publishing.  The business of comics as his job is to make sure that the annual editions of The Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide are published on schedule, and out in time for the San Diego conventions.

T.K. Lee (Humor)T.K. Lee is an award-winning member of the Dramatists Guild of America and the Society for Stage Directors and Choreographers. A published writer of fiction and poetry as well, he is also a Pushcart nominee and a rather serious lover of cheese.

P.J. Laska (Long Poetry)P.J. Laska is a West Virginia native, from Farmington, in Marion County.  He did graduate work at the University of Cincinnati and the University of Rochester, where he obtained a Ph.D. in philosophy.  He taught at universities in Canada and the U.S. for several years before joining Antioch/Appalachia in Beckley, WV, where he was a member of the Soupbean Poets Collective.  His first poetry book, D.C. Images and Other Poems, was a National Book Award finalist. Recent publications include Night & Day: Selected Poems, 2010, and The Original Wisdom of the Dao De Jing: a Translation and Commentary, 2012.  In 2014, Igneus Press will publish Morning in America: Poems from the Long Decade.  He has co-edited The Poetry of Resistance anthology with Fred Whitehead for John Brown Press (2014).  Currently associate editor of the artist-produced magazine Left Curve, he is active on Twitter @Awolanalyst.

Vicki Dean (Nonfiction)Vicki J. Dean is the day news editor for the Herald-Tribune Media Group in Sarasota, Fla.
During her 20 years at the newspaper, she has also served as editorial writer, columnist, page one designer and as a copy editor. She previously was an assistant managing editor for the York (Pa.) Daily Record and worked as a copy editor at the Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette. She is a Magna Cum Laude graduate of Marshall University's journalism program. She also attended graduate school at Penn State University in Harrisburg, Pa., taking several classes in American Studies. Vicki is a West Virginia native who grew up in Lincoln County, graduating from Hamlin High School. She currently writes about her bluegrass music, a lifelong passion, every chance she gets for various publications.

Meredith Sue Willis (The Pearl S. Buck Award for Writing for Social Change)Meredith Sue Willis was raised in Shinnston, West Virginia.  She now lives in New Jersey a short train ride from New York City, where she is an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Creative Writing at New York University’s School of Continuing and Professional Studies, as well as a frequent visiting writer-in-the-schools in New York and New Jersey. She has degrees from Barnard College and Columbia University as well as an honorary doctorate from West Virginia University.  Her novels and short fiction for adults and children have been published by Scribners’, Harper Collins, West Virginia University Press, Mercury House, Ohio University Press, and others.  Her latest books are a collection of short spin-offs from myth and the Bible called Re-Visions; a book for writers called Ten Strategies to Write Your Novel; and a book of literary Appalachian stories called Out of the Mountains. The latter was praised in Booklist as a “finely crafted collection...worth reading twice to discover all its intricacies and connections."  For more information, please visit her website at http://www.meredithsuewillis.com.

Dr. Victor M. Depta (Short Poetry)Dr. Victor M. Depta is the publisher of Blair Mountain Press, established in 1999.  The focus of the press is on the environment, such as the recent issue, Coal: A Poetry Anthology, edited by Chris Green. Dr. Depta has published eleven books of poetry, four novels, two volumes of comedic plays, two collections of essays on poetry and mysticism, a memoir, and over two-hundred poems in magazines and journals. He has a Ph.D. in American literature from Ohio University, an M.A. in English from San Francisco State University, and a B.A. in English from Marshall University. After teaching for forty years, he has settled in Frankfort, Kentucky.

CliffGarstang (Short Story)Clifford Garstang grew up in the Midwest and received a BA from Northwestern University. After a career in international law, which saw him practicing in Singapore, Chicago, and Los Angeles with Sidley Austin, one of the largest law firms in the United States, as well as a stint as Senior Counsel for East Asia at the World Bank in Washington, D.C., Garstang received an MFA from Queens University of Charlotte. His award-winning collection of linked short stories, In an Uncharted Country, was published by Press 53 in 2009. His second book, What the Zhang Boys Know, was also published by Press 53 in October of 2012.  Garstang’s work has appeared in Bellevue Literary Review, Blackbird, Virginia Quarterly Review, Shenandoah, Cream City Review, Tampa Review, Los Angeles Review, and elsewhere and has received Distinguished Mention in the Best American Series. He won the 2006 Confluence Fiction Prize and the 2007 GSU Review Fiction Prize, and has had a Walter E. Dakin Fellowship to the Sewanee Writers’ Conference and scholarships to both Sewanee and the Indiana University Writers’ Conference, as well as residencies at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts.  He is the editor of Prime Number Magazine and currently lives in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia.

Dr. Brett Hursey (Stageplay—The Joe McCabe Memorial Playwriting Award)Brett Hursey's poetry has appeared in over a hundred literary journals across the United States and Canada.  His plays have also been produced in more than a hundred theatres across the world.  Currently he teaches Playwriting and Poetry at Longwood University, in Virginia.


NEW MOUNTAIN VOICES STUDENT WRITING CONTEST JUDGES

Wilma Acree (Elementary)
Wilma Acree writes poetry, fiction, and nonfiction. Her poems appear in numerous journals and anthologies including two for sale in the bookstore.  She is the author of two chapbooks.   Her award-winning poems include "If You See Buzzard" (written in a workshop at WVW conference), "Like A Geode" (third place Humor, WVW, 2001), "House on Parchment Creek" (second place Appalachian, WVW 2009), "Unmarked Civil War Battlefield"(second place poetry, WVW, 2006)
"In Memory of Becky."


Belinda Anderson (Middle School)
Belinda Anderson holds a bachelor's degree in news-editorial journalism and a master's of liberal arts studies.  She's written for such publications as The West Virginia Encyclopedia, Goldenseal, Wonderful West Virginia, Book Page and Writers' Journal, among others.  Her short story collections include "The Well Ain't Dry Yet," "The Bingo Cheaters," and "Buckle up, Buttercup."  Her most recent book is a middle-grade novel called "Jackson Vs. Witchy Wanda: Making Kid Soup."  The West Virginia Division of Culture and History has named her a Master Artist to work as a mentor with emerging writers. 

Pam Hanson (High School)
Pam Andrews Hanson, a former reporter and West Virginia University journalism teacher, is the co-author with her mother/writing partner Barbara Andrews of 40 novels including romance, inspirational women’s fiction, and mystery for Harlequin and Guideposts. This spring Guideposts released Chesapeake Antique Mysteries, Forgotten History, and Hidden Treasures, a two-book set by the duo. In addition, she and her partner have several indie inspirational romances for Kindle on Amazon. Currently she is working on a new cozy mystery project of her own.  Pam, a past recipient of the JUG Award, now resides in Nebraska where she writes fulltime when she’s not procrastinating on Facebook: facebook.com/pamandrewshanson
 

Friday, March 07, 2014

WVW Contest F.A.Q. #30


Continuing the series of Frequently Asked Questions about the West Virginia Writers, Inc., Annual Writing Competitions.  To see all of the questions, please click HERE.



QUESTION:  I would like to know if a teacher or parent is allowed to make edits and recommendations on a student's writings?

ANSWER:  Having an outside proofreader is a longstanding tradition for writers of all stripes.  I would suggest that anyone offering editing suggestions explain them to the student and allow them to make the changes.  This way they pick up grammar tips for the future, in addition to having a cleaner story or poem.

WVW Contest F.A.Q. #31


Continuing the series of Frequently Asked Questions about the West Virginia Writers, Inc., Annual Writing Competitions.  To see all of the questions, please click HERE.

QUESTION: Do all of your entries have to be sent in at the same time? I'm considering entering the novel category and have already sent in other entries.  

ANSWERYou don't have to send everything in at once. We've get multiple packages from individual writers throughout the contest acceptance period. Not a problem at all.

Thursday, March 06, 2014

WVW Contest F.A.Q. #29


Continuing the series of Frequently Asked Questions about the West Virginia Writers, Inc., Annual Writing Competitions.  To see all of the questions, please click HERE.



QUESTION:  Does the word count include the title, or just the body of the piece of writing?

ANSWER:  Word count doesn't include the title.  Or "The End" in case you've added that.  It also doesn't include the category and word count number at the top right of the first page of your entry, so you can just count the bare bones of the story and write that number in for the word count.