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May 2017: Outlining and Beat Sheets

Submitted by HASullivan on Mon, 04/24/2017 - 10:43
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Presented by Lois H. Gresh

If you want to write commercial fiction, consider creating detailed outlines, also known as beat sheets, before you start writing Chapter 1.

At our May meeting, New York Times bestselling author Lois H. Gresh will cover all this and more in an informal discussion including overarching themes and plots, weaving in sub-plots, hitting the high points, and tying it all together at the end.

Lois H. Gresh is the New York Times bestselling author (six times) and USA Today Bestselling Author (thrillers) of 28 books and more than 65 short stories, as well as the editor of the anthologies Innsmouth Nightmares and Dark Fusions. Her work has been published in 22 languages. Sherlock Holmes vs. Cthulhu: The Adventure of the Deadly Dimensions (Titan Books, July 11, 2017) is the first in her new trilogy of Holmes thrillers from Titan, with Random House distribution in the USA. For five years, Lois was a staff book reviewer at scifi.com(now SYFY.com, the Science Fiction Cable Channel), and her work has been on national/international award ballots eight times. She is a frequent Guest of Honor Author at large genre conventions and has appeared on television series, such as The History Channel's Ancient Aliens and Batman Tech. You can find her at www.facebook.com/lois.greshand www.loisgresh.com.

Presenter and author:Lois H. Gresh
Location: Barnes & Noble, Pittsford
Meeting Time: May 2, 2017 from 7-9 p.m.

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April 2017: Read Your Work

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Attendees are invited to read from their current or in-progress works or to share their writing roadblocks. (An older or sold story or poem is also welcome, especially if you'd like feedback on it.) Please bring a short piece or a portion of a longer work -- fewer than 1,000 words, if you can, but no more than 2,000 words, if you can't break the scene -- so everyone has sufficient reading time and attendees have time to provide their feedback.

Please try to arrive before 7 to put your name on the list for reading.

After the readings conclude and time permits, we'll go around and share with the group what we're currently reading.

Moderator: Alan Michaels
Location: Barnes & Noble, Pittsford
Meeting Time: April 4, 2017 from 7-9 p.m.

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September 2016: Writing Workshop – The Short-Short Story

Submitted by Kurt on Fri, 08/26/2016 - 17:35
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In our September 6 meeting, attendees are invited to participate in a writing workshop that focuses on creating concise, condensed, but complete speculative fiction or fantasy stories with a beginning, middle, and end, and a length of 500 or fewer words. Twists and unexpected uses of dialogue, prose, poetry, and maybe even a tweet or two are encouraged. Prompts will be provided and, if desired, participants may read their drafts and receive feedback from those in attendance.

Moderator:Alan Vincent Michaels
Location: Barnes & Noble, Pittsford
Meeting Time: September 6, 2016 from 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.

August 2016: Separating Fact from Fiction for Stem Cells in the Present

Submitted by Kurt on Sun, 07/17/2016 - 11:47
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In our August 2 meeting, join us for a discussion about the state of stem cells and regenerative medicine in 2016. These topics used to be the stuff of legend and science fiction. Prometheus, the Greek Titan, was punished for giving fire to humankind. His liver was regenerated each day after it was eaten by an eagle. The Doctor, in the Doctor Who sci-fi series from BCC TV, can regenerate his entire body instead of dying. Even some real-world animals can regenerate those parts of their bodies that were lost in the struggle for survival.

Now, regenerative medicine is part of our reality. But what do these scientific achievements and therapies to restore lost, aging, or damaged human cells and tissues mean for us and what does the future hold? Find out at the Pittsford Barnes & Noble in the upstairs Community Room on August 2 at 7:00 p.m.

Presenter:Alicia Henn, Chief Scientific Officer, BioSpherix, Inc.
Location: Barnes & Noble, Pittsford
Meeting Time: August 2, 2016 from 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.

July 2016: Read Your Work

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In our July 5 meeting, attendees are invited to read from their current or in-progress works. (Older or sold stories and poems are also welcome, especially if you'd like some kind of feedback on it.) Please bring a short piece or a portion of a longer work -- fewer than 1,000 words if you can, but up to 2,000 words if you can't break the scene -- so everyone has sufficient reading time and attendees have time to provide their feedback.

Please try to arrive before 7 to put your name on the list for reading.

After the readings conclude and time permits, we'll go around and share with the group what we're currently reading.

Moderator: Alan Michaels
Location: Barnes & Noble, Pittsford
Meeting Time: July 5, 2016 from 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.

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June 2016: Creative Collusion – The Realities of Co-Writing Fantasy and Science Fiction

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Gaiman and Pratchett. King and Straub. Niven and Pournelle. Just a few examples of creative pairings that have produced exceptional works of fantasy and science fiction.

But just how do fiction collaborations work? What does it take to successfully co-write in the first place? What are the benefits and challenges? How do you find a co-writer? And more importantly, should you?

Join us for a lively discussion featuring Meredith Powell Carroll and Karen Craft (The Kingdom Next to Fid) and Marcos Donnelly and Ted Wenskus (The Mostly Weird Chronicles of Steffan McFessel) as they share their co-writing experiences, tips, tricks, exercises, and coping devices in creating fantastic stories born of two minds.

It all happens at the Pittsford Barnes & Noble in the upstairs community room on June 7 at 7:00 p.m. See you there!

Presenters: Meredith Powell Carroll, Karen Craft, Marcos Donnelly, and Ted Wenskus
Location: Barnes & Noble, Pittsford
Meeting Time: June 7, 2016 from 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.

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May 2016: The Setting – The Key to Speculative Fiction

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One reason many readers choose speculative fiction stories, instead of mainstream stories, is to escape their everyday realities and be transported other worlds. And because these worlds exist only in the writer's imagination, without true connections to the world we live in, the task of creating seemingly realistic and cohesive speculative fiction settings can often be a challenge.

During our May 3 meeting, our panelists will guide you through a discussion and exercises on creating speculative fiction settings that leave lasting impressions with your readers in much the same ways as the characters in your stories.

Panel: Kurt Schweitzer, Eric Scoles, Lynn Spitz, and Ted Wenskus
Moderator: Alan Vincent Michaels
Location: Barnes & Noble, Pittsford
Meeting Time: May 3, 2016 from 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.

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April 2016: Using Current Events in Speculative Fiction

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In our April meeting, we'll explore including current events in your speculative fiction stories. We'll look at selected classic and modern stories that used current events to help answer the "what if?" questions we didn't think about when the events unfolded on the evening news.

Socialism and totaliarian rule or the fear of atomic annihilation were often the focus of SF's "Golden Age" stories. Today, advancements in technology, such as artificial intelligence, biological experimentation, and genetic manipulation of the human genome, are front and center in many writers' minds. When the elements of politics, economics, warfare, terrorism, and social struggles – just to name a few – are mixed in, you have the mirrors that writers hold up for us to gaze into and contemplate the consequences of our actions.

How do you explore a current event topic without becoming preachy or writing an essay of your opinions? How do you come up with a new perspective that wasn't discussed on the evening news and prevent a regurgitation of the facts that you can find by doing an Internet search? We'll answer these questions and more through group exercises and discussion.

Moderator: Alan Vincent Michaels
Location: Barnes & Noble, Pittsford
Meeting Time: April 5, 2016 from 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.

March 2016: Annual Meeting + Read Your Work

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For our March meeting, R-SPEC will be holing its annual meeting for the first 30 minutes or so where we will review our accomplishments in 2015 and elect board members for the coming year. As always, this is open to the public, but only paid R-SPEC members are eligible to be on the board and to vote in the elections.

Afterward, attendees are invited to read from their current or in-progress works. (Older or sold stories and poems are also welcome, especially if you'd like some kind of feedback on it.) Please bring a short piece or a portion of a longer work -- fewer than 1,000 words if you can, but up to 2,000 words if you can't break the scene -- so everyone has sufficient reading time and attendees have time to provide their feedback. Please try to arrive before 7 to put your name on the list for reading. After the readings conclude and time permits, we'll go around and share with the group what we're currently reading.

Moderator: Ted Wenskus
Location: Barnes & Noble, Pittsford
Meeting Time: March 1, 2016 from 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.

February 2016: Naming Objects, Characters, and Worlds

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Your story’s success hinges on suspending disbelief in your readers’ minds. Naming your fantasy creature “Fluffy Unicorn” might be appropriate in a picture book for kindergarten-aged readers, but it will likely cause your high-fantasy novel readers to slam their books closed in disgust. Likewise, you’d be truly lucky if your readers were still reading your short story after trying to pronounce your alien’s name of “Ag-K’Li’k’-O’dam-Go’Hai, the Third” for the fifth time.

In our February 2 meeting, Alan leads a discussion on creating appropriate names for the objects, characters, and worlds that are foundation of your stories. Tips and techniques for picking good names and making sure they convey the correct meaning will be shared.

Attendees: Please bring at least one name from your favorite speculative fiction story or novel for an object, a character, and a world. If you have examples of bad or inappropriate names, feel free to bring those to share, too.

Presenter: Alan Vincent Michaels
Location: Barnes & Noble, Pittsford
Meeting Time: February 2, 2016 from 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.

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