I’ve attended many SCBWI conferences and other writing
events—including the fabulous National SCBWI Conference in Los Angeles, which
was absolutely amazing—but until now I’d never been to an extended, craft-based
workshop. I have writer friends who regularly attend such workshops and always
come back with tons of lovely things to say about them, so this autumn I bit
the bullet and headed off to the Better Book Workshop, a three-and-a-half-day
craft intensive for writers of YA and middle grade.
The Better Book Workshop was held north of San Francisco,
California, at a retreat center in the hills near Santa Rosa. We were a bit
isolated from the rest of the world, but to me, that just increased the feeling
that we were really there to focus on our work without outside distractions. It
was a small group, only 21 writers, and we were joined by the wonderful faculty
of editor Sara Sargent from Balzer + Bray, editor Heather Alexander from Dial,
agent Victoria Wells Arms, and agent Erin Murphy.
Over the next several days, we spent lots of time talking
about voice, character, scene, and plot. We explored how to approach
micro-editing a manuscript at sentence-level, as well as macro-editing while
focusing on the story as a whole. We watched the movie adaptation of Louis
Sachar’s Holes and discussed how what we had learned about scene and plot
applied to the film. A fair number of us (yes, including me) started to cry
when faculty members read excerpts from Because of Winn-Dixie and The One and
Only Ivan as examples of voice. (In our defense, they are very touching books.)
Most exciting to me, we spent a lot of time critiquing each other’s work in
small, interactive groups with faculty and other attendees.
And since our retreat center had a bit of a new-age bent to
it, that meant there was a meditation hut and walking labyrinth on site (OMG—I
LOVE labyrinths), as well as a flock of wild turkeys and lots and lots of deer.
So, being a new alumni of a book workshop, would I recommend
attending one?
Absolutely!!
Being around other writers and immersing ourselves so
thoroughly in the writing process was very illuminating. But what really made
this a standout event for me was the focus on craft and the opportunity to
delve into your writing at a level that usually isn’t possible at conferences.
That alone was worth the price of admission to me. And, okay, the labyrinth
didn’t hurt, either :)
Have you ever attended a writing workshop? Please share your
thoughts and experiences.
Wow. That sounds lovely!
ReplyDeleteThanks--I absolutely loved it!!
DeleteI have never been to a formal writing retreat with other writers, but I have retreated to our family's mountain house for a weekend of writing alone. I found the change of scenery -- and the restfulness of the location -- very inspiring!
ReplyDeleteYes, I think a chance of scenery sometimes helps a lot with the writing process. Quiet does, too. The mountains is a perfect place for it!
DeleteI love labyrinths, too! I haven't done any formal writing retreats, but I like the picture you paint of one!
ReplyDeleteAren't labyrinths the neatest thing? Any place with a labyrinth is all right by me :)
DeleteI went to the Oregon SCBWI retreat a while back. But my best "retreat" was a weekend at my in-laws' beach house--just me and my writing. Bliss!
ReplyDeleteAh, writing at the beach...
DeleteSounds absolutely lovely :)