The Writer

Writing Conferences

ALASKA

Kachemak Bay Writers’ Conference

Homer, Alaska, May 14-17. Offers daily workshops, readings, and panel presentations in fiction, poetry, nonfiction, and the business of writing. Manuscript reviews and academic credit also available. Keynote speaker: Jericho Brown.

Contact: Kachemak Bay Writers’ Conference. Erin Coughlin Hollowell.

eshollowell@alaska.edu

writersconference.homer.alaska.edu

ARIZONA

Desert Nights, Rising Stars Writers Conference

Tempe, Arizona, dates TBD. Hosted by the Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing at Arizona State University. Schedule includes craft talks, workshops, panels, and readings. Check website for details on 2022 format and dates.

Contact: Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing, P.O. Box 875002, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287.

480-965-6018.

dtribke@asu.edu

piper.asu.edu/conference

CALIFORNIA

Digital Author and Indie Publishing Conference

Van Nuys, California, dates TBD. For authors who want to learn about the new publishing paradigms in an increasingly digital world. Industry experts, educators, agents, and publishers make up the list of speakers, who will explain new technologies and methodologies. Presentations on indie publishing, eBooks, A-Books and P-Books, your author platform, and marketing ideas. No decision has been made about the 2022 conference after going virtual in 2021.

Contact: West Coast Writers Conferences, P.O. Box 2267, Redondo Beach, CA 90278.

310-379-2650

info@wcwriters.com

wcwriters.com/daisp/index.html

San Francisco Writers Conference

San Francisco, California, Feb. 17-20. Top authors, agents, and editors meet to discuss fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and specialty writing such as children’s books and travel writing. Other topics include marketing, self-publishing, and internet possibilities and trends. Also offers “speed dating with agents.” Keynote speakers: Charlie Jane Anders,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Writer

The Writer2 min read
Ursula K. Le Guin recreates reality
AT FIRST GLANCE, URSULA K. LE GUIN’S fiction — filled with wizardry, mystical lands and societies thousands of years in the future — appears to flaunt the old standard, “Write what you know.” But in the October 1991 issue of The Writer, Le Guin expla
The Writer3 min readIntelligence (AI) & Semantics
The Joy of Work
I IMAGINE BOTH YOU AND I ARE CURIous to see how artificial intelligence is going to “disrupt” (to use the Silicon Valley vernacular) the writing world in the next few years. This question sizzled for me during a community development meeting in my to
The Writer3 min read
7 Reasons This Writer May Unfollow You On Twitter
I HAVE A CONFESSION TO MAKE: I am sorely tempted, much more often than I feel comfortable admitting, to “unfollow” an ungodly number of people on Twitter. Friends. Family members. Idolized authors whose tweets, for various reasons, send them floor-wa

Related