Lexington, Kentucky
July 12, 2019
Paths to publication are markedly different for the three main genres represented at the Kentucky Women Writers Conference. With fiction, you must wait until your work is complete: no agent or editor wants to speculate on an unfinished story. With nonfiction, however, a sample chapter and outline are often enough to earn a publishing contract. With poetry, the readership is smaller, meaning that agents cannot earn a livelihood by selling it, and you must approach editors directly.
For our annual look at what writers need to know about getting published, we are delighted to feature Alice Speilburg giving two talks at KyWomenWriters2019:
Alice is the founding agent at Speilburg Literary Agency and has worked in publishing since 2008. Prior to launching the agency, she worked for John Wiley & Sons and Howard Morhaim Literary Agency. Alice represents narrative nonfiction and commercial fiction for adult and YA readers, and her remarks at KyWomenWriters2019 will focus primarily on those subgenres. She will also offer a limited number of one-on-one manuscript consultations: these slots go fast, so don’t delay in signing up. If you have already registered for the conference and would like to add this option (for an additional fee of $45), let me know and I can add it to your enrollment.
Those of you fortunate enough to hear publishing consultant Jane Friedman at our conference last year know what a gold mine of advice and insight she is. In 2013 she created a sort of Rosetta Stone of book publishing, which she revises every year to reflect industry trends, and she just issued the most recent update. You can find that on her Twitter page @JaneFriedman, and here is what it looks like (don't even try to view this on your phone!):
Many thank to our judges, Sylvia Ahrens, Holly Barbaccia, Cam Holzer, Sarah McCartt-Jackson, Ashley McGraw, and Jessica Winters, whose service on our board and in this contest demonstrate their generous commitment to supporting women writers.