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Instructor: Drusilla Campbell
alcium builds strong bones and Pilates powers the body's core muscles. Without those bones and muscles human beings
would resemble amoebas, blobs, nothing most of us would care to hang around with. Experienced writers know that a good
novel has essential bones and core muscles too and without them you haven't got much more than a collection of words and
characters most of us would not care to read. Some authors say there's no better way to learn the craft of writing than
to write a novel. Unfortunately that can take anywhere from a year to a lifetime to accomplish and there's no guarantee
at the end that you will know where you went right...and wrong...and how to write a winner next time around.
The Novel Cram is designed for authors who want to get it right the first time. This track involves
intense hours of working alone, with Drusilla Campbell, and in small groups to create a scene-by-scene outline for a full-length
novel. Though Campbell does not advocate outlining your own novel in detail before writing, working through the
process under her guidance will enable students to understand how the bones and muscles of craft give a novel narrative
drive, create rising tension and suspense, and enroll the reader in the story. Characterization, scene building, narrative,
point of view — the Novel Cram track enables a practical understanding of these and dozens of other
characteristics of successful commercial novels.
Writers registering for this track will begin work on Friday and complete their outline by noon on Sunday.
Enrollment is limited and attendance at all sessions is required. Expect to work long hours and leave the conference
exhausted, exhilarated and eager to work on your own project.
Please note that this track requires a minimum number of participants and will be removed from the schedule if not met.
DRUSILLA CAMPBELL writes about every day people caught up in extraordinary
events that challenge everything they believe about themselves and the world. She is the author of twelve
published novels, including the bestselling Hopewell Saga, Wildwood and Blood Orange. Her latest title,
Bone Lake (Madison Park Press), is about the struggle
to save a child from the neo-Nazi terrorists who raised her and now want her dead. Having crossed the Pacific Ocean three
times before she started school, and in her twenties lived in Europe and Central America, today Dru's happy to stay at home
in San Diego with her husband, the attorney and poet Art Campbell, two rescued dogs and three horses.
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