ABOUT THE SESSION
Agents and editors want to discover authors who write with a "fresh voice." But what does that actually mean, and how do you add that secret ingredient to your query letter and manuscript?
Grab the attention of your readers and industry pros. Sarah Cypher, an independent editor at The Threepenny Editor, and Kate Gray, writing coach and author of the acclaimed novel Carry the Sky, will show you what makes good query letters and first pages pop. In this energetic, interactive workshop, you’ll develop your query letter with tools we offer and identify your distinct voice: the sound that sets you apart from the rest.
Your entry fee includes refreshments, a resource guide, a copy of Kate's novel, Carry the Sky, and Sarah's The Editor's Lexicon: Essential Writing Terms for Novelists.
Limited to 15 participants.
ABOUT THE INSTRUCTORS
Kate Gray's Carry the Sky (Forest Avenue Press, 2014) was named one of 11 must-read books set in high schools by Bustle Magazine. It's been described as “lyrical, moving, and hauntingly beautiful" by Hannah Tinti (The Good Thief), and "blazingly necessary work of fiction for a wounded world" by Lambda Literary. Her passion is being a teacher, writing coach, and volunteer writing facilitator with women inmates and women veterans. She is the author of three poetry collections and is at work on her second novel.
Sarah Cypher has edited New York Times bestsellers and helped clients on their way to deals with Big Five publishers, foreign publishers, and production companies. Self-published clients have generously funded their books on Kickstarter, and earned a monthly income from their sales. She holds a B.A. in Creative Writing, Phi Beta Kappa, from Carnegie Mellon University, and her own writing has appeared in Crab Orchard Review, The Oregonian, Fodor's, Salon.com, and Publishers Weekly. By being a working writer *and* editor, she offers a savvy look at query letters, concept development, and marketability. She lives in West Oakland with her wife, cat, and two dogs.
ABOUT THE SESSION
Agents and editors want to discover authors who write with a "fresh voice." But what does that actually mean, and how do you add that secret ingredient to your query letter and manuscript?
Grab the attention of your readers and industry pros. Sarah Cypher, an independent editor at The Threepenny Editor, and Kate Gray, writing coach and author of the acclaimed novel Carry the Sky, will show you what makes good query letters and first pages pop. In this energetic, interactive workshop, you’ll develop your query letter with tools we offer and identify your distinct voice: the sound that sets you apart from the rest.
Your entry fee includes refreshments, a resource guide, a copy of Kate's novel, Carry the Sky, and Sarah's The Editor's Lexicon: Essential Writing Terms for Novelists.
Limited to 15 participants.
ABOUT THE INSTRUCTORS
Kate Gray's Carry the Sky (Forest Avenue Press, 2014) was named one of 11 must-read books set in high schools by Bustle Magazine. It's been described as “lyrical, moving, and hauntingly beautiful" by Hannah Tinti (The Good Thief), and "blazingly necessary work of fiction for a wounded world" by Lambda Literary. Her passion is being a teacher, writing coach, and volunteer writing facilitator with women inmates and women veterans. She is the author of three poetry collections and is at work on her second novel.
Sarah Cypher has edited New York Times bestsellers and helped clients on their way to deals with Big Five publishers, foreign publishers, and production companies. Self-published clients have generously funded their books on Kickstarter, and earned a monthly income from their sales. She holds a B.A. in Creative Writing, Phi Beta Kappa, from Carnegie Mellon University, and her own writing has appeared in Crab Orchard Review, The Oregonian, Fodor's, Salon.com, and Publishers Weekly. By being a working writer *and* editor, she offers a savvy look at query letters, concept development, and marketability. She lives in West Oakland with her wife, cat, and two dogs.
read more
show less