April
1: After the hallelujahs and chocolate bunnies, buckle
down and polish your best 500 words for the last chance to enter WRiTE CLUB’s
2018 contest! It’s free, the prizes are great, but perhaps best is the chance
to get immediate feedback from real live readers. See the site for details.
April
7: Dallas Book Festival, 9 a.m. – 5
p.m., at the Dallas Library’s Central Branch, 1515 Young St., Dallas. It
features more than 100 local, regional and national authors, including
bestselling Jesse Andrews (Me and Earl
and the Dying Girl), Hillary Jordan (Mudbound),
Lisa Wingate (Before We Were Yours),
and lots, lots more.
Additional events at the festival include writing
workshops, children’s activities, and music and dance performances. Free, but
of course there will be books for sale!
The book festival is again being held in conjunction
with the Dallas Festival of Ideas. This year’s theme is “The Connected City.” It’s also free, but with limited
space, so please register for either morning or afternoon sessions. Can’t make
it in person? Tune in to Facebook to watch the main events live.
image: pixabay |
April
15: The deadline for discounted registration for Writers
in the Field, a hands-on research experience for writers this coming October
13-14, featuring 13 acres of demonstrations, exhibits and displays in
Mansfield, Texas. See the Writers in the Field site for
prices and details. Use code “WORDfestBFF” by April 15 and save 10 percent.
(You say you’ll be too busy doing income tax to register for this deal? Good
news – when Tax Day falls on a Saturday, Sunday or holiday – like this year –
you have until the next business day to file!)
April
20-21: North Texas Teen Book Festival, Irving Convention Center, 500 W. Las
Colinas Blvd., Irving, Texas. Wait – did I miswrite that date? Isn’t the
convention only a single day? No! The all-day (and free!) blast is April 21.
But this year, teens can also opt for lunch with four favorite YA authors on
April 20.
The lunch event is $50, which includes meal, Q&A
session and book signings. Then hang on for the 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturday, April
21, event. As always, books available for sale and signing, lunch concessions on
site – or bring your own to eat outside. See the site for details.
April
28: The Writers Guild of Texas spring workshop features
Bram Stoker Award-nominated author Annie Neugebauer to walk us through using
our query pitches to troubleshoot problems in our novels. At the Richardson
Civic Center, 411 W. Arapaho Rd., Richardson, Texas.
I blogged last summer about Neugebauer’s query pitch genius at last year’s DFW Writer’s Conference. Here’s another chance to spend a whole morning with her. See the WGT site for registration and additional details. Cost is $25 for members, $35 for nonmembers registering by April 25. The cost goes up $5 for registration at the door – if seating is available.
I blogged last summer about Neugebauer’s query pitch genius at last year’s DFW Writer’s Conference. Here’s another chance to spend a whole morning with her. See the WGT site for registration and additional details. Cost is $25 for members, $35 for nonmembers registering by April 25. The cost goes up $5 for registration at the door – if seating is available.
April
30-May 6: This year, the Houston Writers’ Guild
joins Writespace for its Writefest mega literary festival. OK, so Houston isn’t
exactly a northerly outpost. But with a week’s worth of writing workshops,
agent meet-and-greets (and more than 20 agents and publishers to pitch to), and
more – it’s worth the trek south.
Get the full week, including lunch with keynote
speaker Justin Cronin (The Passage
trilogy) for $525 through April 29 ($595 at the door), a three-day weekend pass
for $250 through May 3 ($375 at the door), or single-day Friday or Saturday
sessions (May 4-5). Pitch sessions available at all options for additional $50. See the Writefest site for details and registration.
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