Last week The Beloved Spouse™ and I made our first trip to Sleuthfest. It’s an annual event put on by MWA’s Florida Chapter and their experience shows. I’ve never been to a better run conference.
Unlike readers’ conferences such as Bouchercon and Left Coast
Crime, Sleuthfest is a writers’ conference, where craft is king. Craft
discussions are what I enjoy most about such get-togethers, and I was not
disappointed.
The agenda is a combination of presentations (essentially
classes put on by a single individual), panels, and speeches by featured guests.
To be frank, the presentations are probably of more benefit to less experienced
writers. I’ve been writing seriously for over twenty years, so I already knew
much of what was presented. Not all, but enough that the primary benefit I got
was a reminder that I didn’t always know these things. Someone taught me. The less
advanced authors are not necessarily less talented or less serious or not as
smart; they’re just not as far along on the same journey. It’s an exercise in
humility and a reminder that a conscientious practitioner of any craft has an
obligation to steady the ladder for those on the way up.
(An exception to this was Bruce Robert Coffin’s police procedural
presentation. I’ve read Bruce’s books, shared panels, and spent hours in bars
with him. He can speak knowledgeably about this stuff for hours. The seventy
minutes we got here barely scratched the surface. He’s also a laugh a minute.
If you get a chance to hear him speak, jump on it.
The panels were as thorough as any I’ve experienced.
PACING – THE STORY KILLER
James D.F. Hannah, Terrence McCauley, Alan Orloff, Aggie
Blum Thompson.
Micki Browning, moderator.
Key takeaways:
Aggie Blum Thompson – watch the video of Matt Stone and Trey
Parker talking about “therefore…but” storytelling. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vGUNqq3jVLg
Micki Browning quoted an author whose name I can’t read in
my notes. The Interwebs have differing opinions on who it is. Absent solid
evidence to the contrary, I’m crediting Micki. Whoever said it first, the
advice is solid: “Make them laugh, make them cry, make them wait.”
Aggie Blum Thompson tries to answer one question in each
chapter and ask another.
James D.F. Hannah quoting Neil Gaiman: “The goal of the
second draft is to make it look like you knew what you were doing in the first
draft.”
RESEARCHING FOR AUTHENTICITY
Marty Ambrose, Lisa Black, M.E. Hilliard, Eliot Kleinberg,
Alyssa Maxwell.
Rena Koontz, moderator
Alyssa Maxwell – Facebook has groups for everything.
Eliot Kleinberg – check into newspapers.com. (Pay site.)
Eliot Kleinberg – a lot of expensive resources can be
accessed for free at a public library.
Lisa Black – documentaries on streaming services are useful.
Not just History Channel.
Eliot Kleinberg – jstore is a good source for well-sourced,
academic writing.
DECISIONS TO MAKE BEFORE SITTING DOWN AT THE KEYBOARD
Lynette Austin, Micki Browning, Bruce Robert Coffin, K.L.
Murphy, Charles Todd.
Alan Orloff, moderator.
This was a well-paced panel that served mostly to reinforce
things I’m already doing, so my notes are less than copious, as I was busy posting
ideas that came to mind. A key takeaway was a reminder to do a light edit of
yesterday’s work when writing the first draft. I’ve gotten away from that and
returning will save me time in subsequent drafts.
I was a member of the other panels I attended, which tends
to fully occupy my attention. Suffice to say the other panelists were well
received and none of the fruit hurled my way made contact.
Other events included an excellent Noir at the Bar, speeches
by Neil Nyren and Guest of Honor Melinda Leigh, interviews with Lori Rader-Day
and Rachel Howzell Hall, and free food every evening. And it wasn’t good just
because it was free. It would have been good even if I had to pay extra for it.
I’d like to talk a bit about the extended panel times.
Conferences seem to be moving toward shorter panels with more authors, trying to
get as many people as possible onstage. I appreciate the intent, but the effect
on the audience is to dilute what the panelists can get into. Seventy-minute
sessions are much more satisfying. I realize this could mean a large readers’
conference may have fewer writers on panels, but let’s be honest: if you want
to be on a panel at Bouchercon or Left Coast or one of the big ones, you should
have to show a little game first. Self-publishing a novel or two that sank
faster than the Titanic may make you an author, but it doesn’t necessarily make
you panelist material. I’d rather be passed over myself than see things diluted
any kore than they are. Except here at Sleuthfest. Well done.
Having gone to conferences for 15 years now, my best
memories will be of renewing friendships and making new ones. I’ll not name names
here for fear of leaving anyone out, but rest assured, if we interacted last
weekend, I have fond memories, and the more we interacted, the fonder the
memories.
See you next year.
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