This year I was privileged to attend two very different conferences for writers. In June I went to Scriptoria, which was a gathering of academics and professionals guiding us through the process of traditional publishing. Most of the attendees were focused on literary fiction and nonfiction, and if they didn’t look down on self-publishing, their glances were definitely sideways.
I left Scriptoria with renewed confidence in my writing abilities and encouraged to keep going. Yes, there are places where average, authentic, even conservative Christians can still get their work accepted by mainstream publishers. Maybe someday I’ll try writing something for them. But I think my biggest takeaway from that conference was that we as writers need to take care of ourselves. Life happens, and while being consistent is important, sometimes our work must come in ebbs and flows.
Then this last weekend I went to BasedCon for the second year. The vibe there is radically different. Whereas we came to Scriptoria strangers and went our separate ways, at BasedCon most of us had already been talking for months or years on social media. You always wonder if the person you see online is the person you’ll meet offline, and I’m happy to say that the folks at BasedCon are authentic.
While Scriptoria wasn’t as woke as I feared it would be, BasedCon is, well, based. Unlike the other event there was no tiptoeing around social issues, yet the overall spirit was optimistic. Many of the attendees were believers and faith trumps politics. It was in the air. There was no hate for “the other side.” Just wry amusement.
The authors at BasedCon are much more prolific than those I met at Scriptoria. Which is not to say that they are any less professional. I suspect that it does, however, have something to do with not being as precious about the process. Unlike working with a trad publisher, they reap their rewards immediately and grinding out high quality content is how they pay their bills.
Since the events were so different, it would be unfair to compare them further. Scriptoria was like a week of college, and BasedCon was like a weekend family reunion. Both were excellent, edifying experiences and I would return to either given the chance. But I’ll register for BasedCon first.