Why are there a hundred people in line to get signatures
from that guy? Who is he? Neil Gaiman you say? I haven’t heard anything about
him. That was in 2002, when I attended my first World Fantasy Convention
(WFC) in Minneapolis, Minnesota. I had no clue about most of the “famous”
fantasy and sci-fi writers. I felt like such an idiot.
I was just amazed there were a hundred people in line for
him, but no one at the table of Mr. Robert Jordan (at that moment). So very
odd. I’m now a huge Neil Gaiman fan, and WFC helped introduce me to dozens of great
writers and editors. It also taught me about the business. The panels were
professional, and filled with things a rookie like me needed to know. I learned
so much that first year and in subsequent years. I went seven years in a row,
2002-2009, and then another handful of times since then whenever the gathering took
place in the continental United States.
The reason I started attending WFC was my writing teachers:
Kij Johnson and Michael Stackpole, and others had encouraged me to attend—as
well as people in my writing group. They knew I was serious about getting
published and that was the place to find the contacts to make it all happen.
I didn’t have any friends who were attending, but then I saw
two writers who had been on panels at Gen Con, where I was first told to attend
WFC. Jean Rabe and Janet Deaver Pack took me in, and asked me to dinner. They
gave me great advice and I learned how kind they were. I made new and wonderful
friends who have endured for almost twenty years now. That’s the thing about
WFC, you’ll probably meet people who will become your writer friends for years.
At WFC I seriously bonded with one of my writer brothers,
Bradley Beaulieu. We started sharing a room when we attended each year and
became great friends, helping each other with our books and stories. I don’t
know where I’d be without Brad, but he has pushed me to become a better writer
so many times.
I gained such valuable friendships and contacts over the
years at WFC, and I got to meet legendary writers like George R.R. Martin, Neil
Gaiman, Stephen R. Donaldson, Denis McKiernan and so many more. I listened to
them on panels and then had drinks with them in the bar. Eventually, I joined
in on panels, did signings and readings there as well. It was surreal and
awesome.
My first time attending was intimidating, exciting, and most
of all enlightening. I learned how things were done in the writing world. I got
to know people, and ended up meeting an editor who eventually bought my fantasy
series. Most of my first short story sales came from WFC and led me to getting
several stories published with DAW Books. WFC launched my own editing career.

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Paul Genesse is the #1 Amazon Bestselling Author of Sakura: Intellectual
Property and the bestselling Iron Dragon Series. Learn more on his website.