Controversy @ Noon Panel – Traditional Publishing vs Self-Publishing Q&A
Recording will be available on Monday, December 23, 2024
12PM MDT
Recording available on WGA YouTube Channel
FREE
Expanding on our September Controversy @ Noon discussion, which focused on traditional publishing vs self-publishing, our December panel will address questions WGA members and fellow literary folks submitted on the topic. Panelists will also have the opportunity to share their views, insights, and experiences with self-publishing, traditional publishing, and/or hybrid publishing.
Submitting Questions: Our December panel will be pre-recorded, but in an effort to keep things interactive, we would love for you to send any topic-related questions you have to Ashley Mann at [email protected]. We will have our panelists answer your questions – and more – during their discussion. We will be accepting one question/submission per person, and we will attempt to cover as many questions as possible during the panel discussion. Questions should be submitted no later than November 22, 2024
Moderator: Barb Howard
Panelists: Naomi K. Lewis, Charlene Carr, and Jaima Fixsen
About The Panelists
Jaima Fixsen
Jaima Fixsen is a USA Today and International best-selling author living and writing in Edmonton. Her novel, The Girl In His Shadow (co-authored under the pen name Audrey Blake), was selected as Libby’s 2022 Big Library Read, and has been translated into eight languages.
Jaima studied Occupational Therapy at the University of Alberta, and her experiences learning anatomy and dissecting cadavers began her fascination with the history of medical science, which often figures in her stories. Her debut crime novel, The Specimen, released this year. Jaima still works in health care supporting children with disabilities and their families. She loves history, snow, reading, snow, mountains and snow. And Diet Coke.
Website: http://jaimafixsen.com/
Instagram: @byjaimafixsen
Barb Howard
Barb Howard has published five books and more than 50 short stories and essays in magazines, journals, and anthologies across Canada. She has been President of the Writers’ Guild of Alberta, Writer-in-Residence for the Calgary Public Library, editor of FreeFall Magazine, and a board member for Calgary Arts Development. Barb is currently a mentor in the Newcomer Arts Professional Program operated by the Immigrant Council for Arts Innovation.
Website: www.barbhoward.ca
Facebook: @barb.howard.50115
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/barb-howard-ab542120/
Charlene Carr
Charlene Carr studied literature at university, attaining both a BA and MA in English, including a study program at Oxford. She has independently published nine novels and her first agented novel, Hold My Girl, sold to HarperCollins Canada, Sourcebooks Landmark (US), Welbeck Publishing (UK) and Alma Littera (Lithuania). It was named one of the Best Books of 2023 by CBC Books, was an Amazon Editor’s Pick for Best Literature and Fiction, was shortlisted for both the Thomas Raddall Atlantic Fiction Award and the Dartmouth Book Award, and has been optioned for adaptation to the screen. Charlene received grants from Arts Nova Scotia and Canada Council for the Arts to write and revise her most recent novel, We Rip The World Apart, and is working on her next book. She lives in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia with her husband and young daughters.
Instagram: @charlenecarrauthor
Facebook: @charlenecarrwritinglife (Charlene Carr – Writing Life)
Naomi K. Lewis
Naomi K. Lewis writes fiction and nonfiction, and also works as an editor, currently at Freehand Books.
Instagram: @na.oh.mee
Facebook: Naomi K. Lewis
Website: https://www.naomiklewis.com/