Well, I did it again: led the Seven-Sentence Short Story workshop (created by science fiction and fantasy author James van Pelt) at a writing conference, this time, Wordbridge in Lethbridge, Alberta. Here’s the story I …
It’s time for this year’s Kickstarter to fund Shapers of Worlds Volume V, the fifth in the series of anthologies featuring science fiction and fantasy by authors who were guests on my Aurora Award-winning podcast, The …
It takes money to publish books, and most of that money flows out the door before the book is released and sales begin, so my publishing company, Shadowpaw Press, is turning to Crowdfundr to help …
Shapers of Worlds Volume IV, the fourth anthology featuring authors who were guests on my podcast, The Worldshapers, is now available everywhere, including directly from Shadowpaw Press. Here’s a handy universal URL with links to …
My publishing company, Shadowpaw Press, has three great titles coming out in the first two months of 2024, all of them science fiction or fantasy. The first two, The Good Soldier by Nir Yaniv and …
Here’s another seven-sentence short story! I ran the workshop again at Ganbatte, an anime convention in Saskatoon. It went well, and here’s the one I created, again with the instructions, created by noted SF short-story …
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Kathy Tyers, Karen Hancock, and me
Karen Hanock at Writing From the Edge does a nice roundup of the “good old days” when she, Kathy Tyers and myself exchanged and critiqued manuscripts regularly–and wrote long letters to each other (the kind you had to print on paper and put in a stamped envelope, too). It’s part of the August SF/F Blog Tour hosted by Beth Goddard at Writing with Fire. (This is the first I’ve heard of this “blog tour” idea. I like it!)
Like Karen, I look back at those days fondly. I think every one of my published novels to date was critiqued by Kathy or Karen or both, and made better by it. And I well remember getting Kathy’s manuscript of the original version of Firebird (eventually published by Bantam) back in the early ’80s and thinking, “Wow! She can really write!” (This was not always the case with manuscripts that arrived in the mail for critiquing back when I was active in the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers’ Workshop.) I had the same reaction to Karen’s work.
They helped my work tremendously, and I hope I provided a modicum of assistance to them, as well. Kathy I’ve met in person, visiting her a couple of times in Montana, and I’m looking forward to seeing her again at VCon in Vancouver in a few weeks. I’ve never met Karen in person. I hope to someday.
Permanent link to this article: https://edwardwillett.com/2006/08/kathy-tyers-karen-hancock-and-me/
1 comments
Hi Ed! Thanks for the mention. It was fun to take a trip down memory lane. And yes, you were very helpful to me in critiquing. Congrats on the latest sale and good luck on that deadline!