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1. WIFYR attendance options

Registration is now open for the Writing and Illustrating for Young Readers conference, or WIFYR. The week-long event occurs in Sandy, UT of the week of June 15-19.

This is a super writing conference and this year there are several options to fit varying budgets and time constraints. The prices listed below are the early-bird cost which will go up after March 15.

If you’ve only got one afternoon, make it Friday, June 19. Jennifer Nielsen (The False Prince series) delivers the keynote speech. For $18, you can join the book signing, sit in on an agent/editor panel, and can attend the end-of-conference party.

You can choose the afternoon sessions package that gets you in to all the craft presentations throughout the week, including Jennifer Nielsen’s keynote. It is going for $99..

If you’ve only got one day, you could do the mini-workshop package. These four-hour sessions take place in the morning with a different topic and instructor each day. These also list at $99 and will get you in that day’s afternoon session. You can do one or you can do them all. This is the schedule:
Monday, June 15 -  Guy Francis - illustration class
Tuesday, June 16 - Emily Wing Smith - memoir writing
Wednesday, June 17 - Sarah M Eden - YA romance writing
Thursday, June 18 - Matthew J. Kirby - mystery writing
Friday, June 19 - Cheri Pray Earl - writing a series

The heart of the conference is the hands-on, interactive morning workshops. In these sessions, participants spend the week critiquing each others’ works under the guidance of a published faculty member. Most classes are $495 with the boot camp class going for $695 and the full novel class running at $995. We’ll go into more detail next week with these classes, but if you want a quick peek now follow the link.

If you compare writing conferences, you see that you really get a lot of bang for the buck with WIFYR. James Dashner is giving back to the writing community by offering registration for five writers to attend. Applications for the James Dashener Scholarship for Writing and Illustrating for Young Readers end March 9th. There is also the Writing and Illustrating for Young Readers Fellowship Award which can help defray the cost for a lucky writer.


There are several ways to take advantage of this wonderful conference. Dubbed a mini-MFA (Master of Fine Arts) for a fraction of the cost, there are options to meet many writer’s budget and schedule.

(This article also posted at http://writetimeluck.blogspot.com)

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2. Rock the Drop: Photo Op!

Author Emily Wing Smith rocked it!

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3. ARC Review: Back When You Were Easier To Love by Emily Wing Smith

Publisher: Dutton Children's Books (April 28, 2011)
ARC: 304 Pages
Genre YA Contemporary
Book from: Publisher*
What's worse than getting dumped? Not even knowing if you've been dumped. Joy got no goodbye, and certainly no explanation when Zan—the love of her life and the only good thing about stifling, backward Haven, Utah—unceremoniously and unexpectedly left for college a year early. Joy needs closure almost as much as she needs Zan, so she heads for California, and Zan, riding shotgun beside Zan's former-best-friend Noah.

Original and insightful, quirky and crushing, Joy's story is told in surprising and artfully shifting flashbacks between her life then and now. Exquisite craft and wry, relatable humor signal the arrival of Emily Wing Smith as a breakout talent.

Review by Jessica
BACK WHEN YOU WERE EASIER TO LOVE, by Emily Wing Smith is a fast paced novel all about love and loss, and a determination controlled by the heart. I was easily hooked from beginning to end.

I started this book with certain predictions of the typical girl gets dumped and can't move on, but I was surprised with a few different twists that don't appear often. Joy is so obviously in love with Zan but my first impression of him was, "This kid is such a jerk!". While Joy is so desperate to find the answers her heart needs I wanted to yell at her to let him go, that she could do so much better, like I was her best friend.

When Noah came into play I was excited, hoping that Joy would see that a totally awesome boy was looking her way, hidden motives or not but of course all she can think about is Zan. I think Joy's love for Zan and her hurt over losing him were understandable but I felt that she over obsessed to the point of stalker-like.

Overall, I found this a fast read without a dull moment. Smith captured the emotions of the characters well and the situations the characters were in were believable and genuine. I am excited to see more from this author.

Emily Wing Smith's Website/Blog

*FTC Disclosure: I received this finished copy from the publisher. I do not receive payment of any kind in exchange for a review. I do not receive monetary compensation from any book links in my review..

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