Today I have a guest post from Natalie C. Parker, author of Beware the Wild and Director of Madcap Retreats. Now, I am not an author. However, many of the authors I know love writing retreats. I know there are people who follow this blog who are writers so this post is for you!!
Madcap Writing Retreats: Retreat to Advance
by Natalie C. Parker
Nothing has changed my career so much as writing retreats.
In the winter of 2011, I was invited to attend a large retreat in Branson, MO at which there would be 25 established YA authors. I was unagented at the time and though I found the idea of joining such a gathering an intimidating one, I also found it was impossible to pass up.
The experience was a game-changer. Not only did I meet a group of authors who were as encouraging as they were successful, but I sat in a room in which those same authors opened laptops and worked quietly together. There were headphones and tea and snack breaks and chat breaks and there were word documents that looked much like my own, growing one word at a time.
I left the Branson Retreat with a new network of contacts who would guide my career in different ways, determined to repeat the experience as quickly as possible. Only this time I wanted to be the one issuing invites. One year later, that’s exactly what I did: I made my first retreat of 11 authors on the side of a mountain, in a house that also had a turret.
Since that time, I’ve hosted 1 or 2 retreats every year, always with the goal of bringing authors together to create the kind of community we just can’t get in 140 character bites. I’ve hosted authors in turreted mansions in the Blue Ridge Mountains, in French Quarter apartments, in the Texas Hill Country, in historic Savannah townhomes, and in the sleepy Smoky Mountains. And here are the top three lessons I’ve learned from organizing retreats for writers:
1. Internet. There must be Internet. It does not matter if you write to your group ahead of time and say the words “there is no Internet in this mountain chateau IS THAT OKAY?” It does not matter if they uniform answer is, “Yes, Natalie, we are not so addicted to the Modern Age that going without Wi-Fi for 3 days will kill us.” I promise you, none of that matters because when you get to the house someone will build an antenna out of aluminum foil and desperate tears and stand on the roof searching for a signal.
2. Bathrooms. Never underestimate the importance of every bedroom having its own bathroom. End of explanation.
3. Scenery. You may begin the adventure with plans of leaving the house, but trust me, this will not happen. To appease any group of authors, I advise picture windows and something that suggests power and mystery. Mountains are an obvious choice, but lakes work very well as do abandoned sugar plantations, rolling hills, and oceans. This way, even if you get snowed in after throwing out all the perishable food so that all that remains are Oreos and a handle of gin, no one will every complain about the view!
I love retreats. They’re fun and exciting and sometimes lead to creating things like Sh*t Writers Say. But I started this by saying that retreats have altered the course of my career in significant ways and that is absolutely true.
After Branson in 2011, I had half a dozen authors willing to weigh in on my query and help me cull my agent list.
After the Wi-Fi-less chateau in 2012, there were authors ready to blurb my first book.
After the Hill Country in 2013, I received crucial advice on how to develop a retreat business.
But more than that, I’ve seen anthologies born over the course of a retreat, I’ve seen mentor and critique relationships gain footing, and I’ve seen the direction of manuscripts shift dramatically and to great effect. And I know there’s even more I haven’t seen.
Like so many writers, my writing time is bound and hedged in on all sides. My writing time is also my “down” time, my “free” time, my “in between this and that” time. It’s a challenge to find hours that flow from one into another with nothing binding them except the promise of words. Madcap is one way I can offer time and opportunity to myself and to others, and I’m truly excited to be able to do that.
Madcap is for writers at any stage in their career – aspiring, agented, and published. My goal is to continue what was done for me at that first Branson retreat and create the kinds of opportunities it’s nearly impossible to create for yourself. Welcome to Madcap Retreats, join us for an adventure.
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And now we come to the giveaway portion of this post!
I’ve asked a few amazing bloggers to help me spread the word of Madcap far and wide via a Blog Hop. Each participating blog will be giving away 2 e-copies of my debut novel Beware the Wild. And each of those winners will be entered to win one of two grand prizes! They are:
* A $300 discount on the upcoming workshop – The Anatomy of Publishing: Story & Marketing, August 27 – 30. The workshop will be lead by Courtney C. Stevens and will feature a few fancy guest authors who will workshop pages and queries one-on-one! (More info can be found here).
* A short stack of ARCs including: JUBILEE MANOR by Bethany Hagen, DUMPLIN’ by Julie Murphy, and THE ANATOMY OF CURIOSITY by Maggie Stiefvater, Tessa Gratton, & Brenna Yovanoff.
The contest is open to US/Canada ONLY. You may enter via each blogger if that pleases you. Contest closes at midnight on Sunday, June 7th. Winners will be announced by noon on Monday, June 8th.
Additionally! If you’d like to stay up to date on all retreat and workshop offerings by Madcap, you can subscribe to the mailing list by visiting this page. The first 50 subscribers will be offered a free download of either:
*“Lady Berserk: A Novella of Dragons, Trickster Gods, and Reality TV,” by Tessa Gratton; or
* “From Words to Brain: A Guided Tour Through the Neuroscience of Reading,” by Livia Blackburne
To enter simply leave a comment telling me why you’d like to go to a writing retreat OR where your ideal retreat would take place.
Full list of participating blogs:
* YA Highway, http://www.yahighway.com/
* The Daily Dahlia, https://dailydahlia.wordpress.com/
* Krista Van Dolzer, http://www.kristavandolzer.com/
* Fiction University, http://blog.janicehardy.com/
* YA Bibliophile, You’re here!!
* The Pub Hub, http://www.publishing-hub.com/
* Annie Cardi, http://anniecardi.com/blog/
* Dallas Fort Worth Writers Workshop, https://dfwwritersworkshop.wordpress.com/
*The League of Extraordinary Writers, http://leaguewriters.
Thanks to Natalie for the post. You should definitely check out the testimonials portion of the Madcap Retreats website! And don’t forget to comment to be entered to win!!
Cassie H
I would love to go to a writing retreat because I think the enthusiasm of other writers would be inspiring. It would be a great learning experience to work with experienced writers.
Brenna Braaten
I have a cabin where I’d love to hold a writing retreat, but it doesn’t fit the having Internet rule. So, I might have to rethink that.
Richenda Gould
I’d love to have a big chunk of time to focus solely on one project. It would make such a difference.