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YOUR PATHS TO PUBLISH: From Indie to Big Five

  • 03 May 2022
  • 24 May 2022
  • 4 sessions
  • 03 May 2022, 6:00 PM 8:00 PM (EDT)
  • 10 May 2022, 6:00 PM 8:00 PM (EDT)
  • 17 May 2022, 6:00 PM 8:00 PM (EDT)
  • 24 May 2022, 6:00 PM 8:00 PM (EDT)
  • Zoom
  • 7

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  • Registration for paid members of SCWA.
  • Non-Members of SCWA

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Confused by the differences between publishing independently, through a small press or a large press? We get it! There are so many publishing opportunities for the modern book writer. Opportunity is great, but with so many options, how do you know how your work fits into the ever-changing publishing ecosystem? How and where can your readers best be found? This month-long series will offer insight from industry professionals, giving you an understanding of the range of options open to you as a writer, the pros and cons of each, and how best to connect with the right publisher for your work.

WEEK 1, May 3rd, 6-8pm, The Indie Author & Self-Publishing Path

Join Indie Author Raegan Teller, as she describes the ins and outs of self-publishing, the required entrepreneurial spirit and finding the right marketing strategy to fit your work and your personality.

WEEK 2, May 10th, 6-8pm, Hybrid Presses 

Join Alexa Bigwarfe who runs Kat Biggie Press and Purple Butterfly Press, hybrid publishers of adult and children’s books, along with Kasie Whitener, who published her first two books with Alexa's traditional imprint, Chrysalis Press, as they discuss the differences between indie, hybrid and traditional publishers.

WEEK 3, May 17th, 6-8pm, Independent & University Presses

Join Hub City Press Director Meg Reid and Hub City author Anjali Enjeti to discuss bringing a book into the world from manuscript to marketplace, including the challenges and benefits of publishing through independent and university presses.

WEEK 4, May 24, 6-8pm, Large, Traditional Press

Join literary agent Amy Bishop and debut YA fiction author JC Peterson to discuss the process of obtaining an agent, prepping a book for submission to editors, figuring out the right editors to send to, the submissions process, getting the book out into the world, and all the challenges and joys in between when publishing with a large press. 

GUEST SPEAKERS

 PUBLISHER ALEXA BIGWARFE is a USA Today Best-Selling author and the founder and CEO of Write|Publish|Sell, a company dedicated to helping authors and small publishers professionally self-publish and market their books. Her courses and training focus on author platform growth and creative ways to market books, especially for those who know nothing about marketing. She is also founder and host of the Women in Publishing Summit and owns two hybrid publishing houses, Kat Biggie Press and Purple Butterfly Press. Learn more at writepublishsell.comWEEK 2 GUEST

LITERARY AGENT AMY ELIZABETH BISHOP joined Dystel, Goderich & Bourret in 2015 after interning for them in 2014. At DG&B, she's cultivating a wide-ranging list in literary and upmarket fiction, expert-driven narrative nonfiction, and select YA, with a special interest in BIPOC voices. Her list includes titles such as The Last Story of Mina Lee by Nancy Jooyoun Kim (a Reese's Book Club selection and NYT bestseller) and The Silence of Bones by June Hur (a Junior Library Guild selection and Edgar Award nominee). Before diving into the world of publishing, she graduated from SUNY Geneseo with a degree in Creative Writing. Though she grew up upstate, she currently resides in Woodside, Queens. You can find her on Twitter at @amylizbishop. WEEK 4 GUEST

AUTHOR ANJALI ENJETI is a former attorney, organizer, and journalist based near Atlanta. She is the author of Southbound: Essays on Identity, Inheritance, and Social Change, which the Washington Post called, "a nuanced and much-needed journey into exploring what it means to be American, and the novel, The Parted Earth, which the Star Tribune called, "a novel with the gravitas to transform." Her writing about politics, social justice, and books has appeared in The Oxford American, Harper’s BAZAAR, Poets & Writers, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Boston Globe, and elsewhere. She is the recipient of awards from the South Asian Journalists Association and the American Society of Journalists and Authors, two notable essays in Best American Essays, as well as residencies from the Hambidge Center, Sundress Academy of the Arts, and Wildacres. A former board member of the National BookCritics Circle, she teaches in the MFA program at Reinhardt University. WEEK 3 GUEST

AUTHOR JC PETERSON lives in Denver, Colorado, with her husband, two small sons, and one enormous tabby. She earned her degree in journalism from Michigan State University and worked as an award-winning journalist and editor at an alt-newsweekly before becoming a freelance writer and mom. When not dreaming up funny contemporary stories or herding children, she loves to eat and shop local, explore the Colorado mountains, and plan new adventures. Being Mary Bennet is her first novel, and you can find her at jcpetersonwrites.com. WEEK 4 GUEST

Meg ReidPUBLISHER MEG REID is the Director of Hub City Press in Spartanburg, South Carolina, where she finds and champions new and overlooked voices from the American South, including Carter Sickels, Drew Lanham, Ashley M. Jones, and Anjali Enjeti. An editor and book designer, her essays have appeared online in outlets like DIAGRAM, Oxford American, and The Rumpus. She holds an MFA in Nonfiction from the University of North Carolina Wilmington, where she served as Assistant Editor of the literary magazine, Ecotone, and worked for the literary imprint Lookout Books. She was a Publishers Weekly Star Watch 2021 Honoree.

In addition to her work at Hub City, she also works with independent and university presses across the country in a freelance capacity, providing both covers and interior typesetting. She also facilitates production and printing for individuals looking to self-publish or print books for a particular purpose. You can see samples of freelance work here and here. WEEK 3 GUEST

AUTHOR RAEGAN TELLER is the award-winning author of the Enid Blackwell series and principal of Pondhawk Press LLC. Murder in Madden (Pondhawk Press, 2016) was her debut novel, followed by The Last Sale (2018), Secrets Never Told (2019), The Fifth Stone (2020), and Time to Prey (2021). Two of her novels received Honorable Mention in Writers Digest Self-Published Book Awards, with the judge’s comments like “one of the best I’ve read this year,” “great job combining plot and character,” and “great storyteller.”  Her mystery novels are set in and around Columbia, where she lives with her husband and two cats. Teller writes about small town intrigue, family secrets, and tales of murder, and while her books are fiction, each book was inspired by an actual event. Her short story, “The Great Negotiator,” was included in the Sisters in Crime’s Guppies Anthology Fishy Business (2019). She was also a contributing author to the YA make-your-own-adventure book, It’s About Time (2018). The town of Ridgeway, SC, presented the 2019 Friend of the Arts Award to Teller—the first author to receive this honor. She is a summa cum laude graduate of Queens University, Charlotte, and a member of Sisters in Crime, South Carolina Writers Association, Southeastern Writers Association, the Charlotte Writers Club, and ALLi (Alliance of Independent Authors).https://RaeganTeller.com. WEEK 1 GUEST

AUTHOR DR. KASIE WHITENER'S first novel, After December (2019), was a finalist for the National Indie Excellence Awards and has been called “a breakthrough debut” and “outstanding fiction.” Her second novel, Before Pittsburgh (2021), won Honorable Mention at the New York Book Festival and the Hollywood Book Festival. She was honored by South Carolina Humanities in 2021 with the Governor’s Award Fresh Voices in the Humanities for her work as host of the weekly radio show Write On SC and as board member to the South Carolina Writers Association. Dr. Whitener is a business owner and instructor at the University of South Carolina. She is a 1995 graduate of Herndon High School and has presented for Bowling Green State University's Winter Wheat Literary Festival, the Pat Conroy Literary Center, and the Fairfax County Public Library. WEEK 2 GUEST

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