I’m at the Tucson Book Festival as you read this, meeting folks and recharging my creative batteries. I attend as many conferences and festivals as possible, depending on the time of the year, finances, and potential return on the investment.
And I don’t mean in a monetary sense. One of my oldest friends, Steve Knagg, is a retired motivational speaker and he says that we spend an inordinate amount of time passing out all of our figurative apples from our mental basket by encouraging and doing for others, or working hard to be successful. Eventually, that basket is empty and needs to be refilled, and to do so, we have to find a way for it to happen.
I attend writers conferences for that reason.
That doesn’t mean I go to every “book festival,” though. I learned long ago that writers have to be picky when deciding which ones to attend. I’ve spent hours…no, days…sitting behind a table while maybe twenty people pass during that entire time.
I’d never even heard of conventions for fiction, though I’d once attended the Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Conference in Dallas a few years earlier. At that time I was working onsomething far from literature, but I wanted to join a workshop they offered to get some sense on where I was going with, believe it or not, a travel book filled with humor, stories, and destinations.
Good Lord.
I found the conference stuffy, and that workshop almost made me want to quit the business altogether. Dispirited, I came home and wondered what I’d gotten myself into. I almost gave up this writing career, and that happened more than once.
As friends and fans know, I started out as a freelance newspaper columnist, writing outdoor humor, a niche that few others had attempted. Those I knew about were Pat McManus and Gene Hill, who wrote for Field and Stream and Outdoor Life magazines. In my mind at that time, i felt I didn’t have a chance to measure up to them, but I tried.
Experience and determination led me to eventually become prolific enough in the outdoor world to write for over 50 newspapers in Texas and Oklahoma. I joined the Texas Outdoor Writers Association, and the Outdoor Writers of America, meeting other authors, columnists, journalists, and contributors who shared my enthusiasm for the outdoors and writing.
Those folks shored up my obsession to write even more and hopefully publish a book, but what kind was a mystery to even myself. Someone eventually talked me into joining the board for TOWA, where I served for several years, until I lost my mind and eventually became president of that organization.
But I stalled there, partially because I fond the executive director had skimmed nearly $30,000 from the organization, leaving an unpleasant taste in my mouth. At the same time, the internet arrived with a vengeance and killed off newspapers with the ferocity of the Spanish Flu outbreak in 1918. Losing members, I wanted to do something to help and decided to bring in a guest speaker to excite the five-hundred plus attendees for our annual gathering.
Envisioning a conference that would set the world on fire, I decided to reach out to the most famous Texas writer I could think of.
I cold-called Larry McMurtry, getting the number from something called Information. Remember him, the Pulitzer Prize winning author of Horseman Pass By (eventually becoming the Paul Newman movie, Hud), The Last Picture Show, and of course, Lonesome Dove?
Steve Knagg was with me the day I called, standing under tall red oak trees outside of a used appliance store. He was there to buy a thirty-dollar dryer he could barely afford, and just the other day remembered our conversation in the parking lot.
Shaking his head in wonder, he laughed. “You just used that old bag phone sitting on the hood of your truck and called the man who’d won a Pulitzer, like you were calling to order a pizza.”
I was a little more nervous than that, especially after McMurtry answered with a friendly hello. I’m sure he heard me gulp before I explained the call, but he was gracious in declining. “I’m committed to too many deadlines. Here, call this number and ask for Bill Witliff. He’s down in Austin and might be able to attend, but thanks for calling.”
I called Bill Witliff, screenwriter and author. You’ll probably know him as the man who took McMurtry’s Lonesome Dove and turned it into one of the most famous miniseries in history, in addition to writing one of the most underrated movies I’ve ever seen, Barbarosa, featuring Willie Nelson.
Standing out there under the trees for almost half an hour, we talked writing and the business before he also had to decline. But in the course of our conversation, he was genuinely interested in my writing and I confessed I was on the verge of quitting.
I could almost see him shaking his head on the other end of the line. “Nope. You never quit. You stand back, take a look around, gather yourself, and continue with what you’re doing.”
It wasn’t long before writing became harder, and my first novel stalled. I didn’t know what to do with it, and needed to speak to someone who understood.
So I cold-called another Texas author named Joe R. Lansdale, who also spent almost an hour on the phone, explaining even more what I’d gotten into and telling me not to quit. Long ago, Joe decided all he was going to do was write, and for decades he lived so close to the edge of poverty they raised most of what they ate in a little East Texas garden.
He doesn’t worry about that kind of thing any longer, because his books have been turned into a television series, and more than a couple have become feature films. I recommend you watch Cold in July. You’ll thank me for it.
We’re now good friends and he keeps supporting my writing, and spends more time than you can imagine encouraging beginning novelists.
So why am I at another conference? Because I need time with authors who understand what I do, and I don’t cold call strangers anymore. These kinds of events are an opportunity to enjoy dinners with those folks, have drinks, and meet others who are successful, or just getting into the Game. After the Bride and I leave Tucson, other conferences are on the books.
In a little more than a month, my brother from another mother, John Gilstrap and I will be at the Pike’s Peak Writers conference where he will be the Guest of Honor. From there, it’s Western Writers of America, Bouchercon, The Will Rogers Medallion Conference, and anything else that catches my fancy when the apple basket is almost empty.
It isn’t just the conference or festival itself that I go for, it’s the people, the knowledge, and the inspiration to come home and hit the keys again.
A great story! I may need to make a cold call someday, and I’ll remember your calls. I do love conferences…
It worked for me! Most authors want to help and visit. Just make sure it’s with g a reasonable daytime window. We grew up when a phone ringing after six in the evening was trouble or bad news.
Rev, talking with fellow writers at conferences and meeting readers at festivals are more energizing for me than a supersize triple shot latte.
PPWC is a great conference. The year I won their contest for best mystery/thriller was the turning point in my career. I’m tempted by the chance to meet you and John in person. Maybe reconnect with Terry too since it’s in her back yard?
Any other TKZers thinking of going?
Love your cold call to McMurtry but what the heck is a “bag phone”?
I took the bag phone as being those early cell phones we had that were zipped into what looked like a shaving kit. That was in the what—90’s? I can’t remember exactly.
B.K. Is right! Huge battery in a case with a real receiver. Never dropped a call on that one. They seems to weigh ten pounds, though. Barely portable.
First, welcome to Arizona! I am, of course, biased but I love this beautiful state.
Pathetically, I have not yet made it to a Tucson Books Festival (the timing never seems to work out for me) but it is still on my list of to do’s. You mentioned something that I hadn’t thought about — attending these types of things for the comradery with fellow authors, etc. I hadn’t thought about that aspect in conjunction with a book festival. Cuz when I hear “book festival” that just sounds to me like all authors do is line up behind a bunch of plastic tables selling books and that’s it, then they pack up and go on their way. (I’m probably a bit cynical because it feels like over time people have lost the ability to interact with their fellow humans.)
If you are willing, I hope you will tell us about your experience there at a later date. I’d love to hear the take of someone who went.
I haven’t been to any writer’s conferences in the last few years and need to get that back on my list. Would love to go to a WWA conference at some point.
In any case, conferences or not, I hope all the writers here at TKZ have opportunities to rest, re-charge, and re-fuel that creative tank so you can keep writing!
Wish you were here! Great venue and I’m having a ball visiting with other authors and visitors to the Will Rogers booth. There is lots of sitting, and I don’t do it much. (I’d prefer to be on panels and meet people (writers and authors in a bar). However, it’s fun to meet people and get away from the computer for a while.
WWA is in Amarillo this year. We’d love to see you there! Good luck and good writing.
Lo and behold, Rev, as I read this, I am in Suffolk, VA, at the Suffolk Author Festival–the official start of my conference season. Ditto everything you said.
The bar where Gilstrap is is the place to be.
Wish you were here! Someone has to help me shut down the bar tonight. Hope you get fully recharged!
You inspire me, Rev!
I’m always reluctant to go to conferences because usually I can only handle, at most, talking to two people at a time.
I guess I need to get over that. 🙂
Smaller events sound like your cup! It’s a hoot to talk with these visitors and hear their own stories. Just finished talking with a retired Tucson cop. Great stories!
Just got home from the Left Coast Crime conference. I hear you, Rev!