The conference had about 420 people attend, which was great to see. Having co-founded the North American conferences along with Ann Chamberlin (and marketing coordinator Claire Morris) back in 2005, when we had half as many participants, I enjoy seeing how the conferences have grown and expanded since then. There were a plethora of panels to choose from, two wonderful keynote speakers in Dolen Perkins-Valdez and Jeff Shaara, a massive afternoon book signing, and cocktail parties that let me catch up with old friends and meet people I'd been in contact with only on social media or email. Based on the attendee list, there were many people I never saw; the hotel, the Gaylord, was enormous. My friend Alana White and I co-presented a session on research for historical novelists that was scheduled as a small group Koffee Klatch session, but we had almost 70 people show up and stay for the full hour, sitting or standing. Not bad at all!
Although I didn't end up taking detailed notes, some of my fellow #HNS2019 attendees fortunately did.
At A Writer of History, M. K. (Mary) Tod summarizes the panel The State of Historical Fiction, in which the conference's participating editors and agents discussed the current picture and future of the genre. Two takeaways: publishers are on the lookout for unique takes on WWII and diverse perspectives on historical times.
Mary also provides an overview of Tips on Writing a Series, with panelists Donna Russo Morin, Nancy Bilyeau, Patricia Bracewell, and Anne Easter Smith.
Novelist J. D. Davies attended the conference while visiting America for the first time.
Betty Bolte wrote about the top 5 lessons she learned from #hns2019.
The latest of Kate Quinn's conference recaps, which are always entertaining to read.
Highlights of the conference from debut novelist Kip Wilson, author of White Rose.
More highlights from the Secret Victorianist, aka novelist Finola Austin, whose upcoming novel Bronte's Mistress will be one to watch for.
Janna Noelle has some tips on getting the most out of a writers' conference such as HNS.
Liza Nash Taylor's experiences at the HNS conference and the Nantucket Book Festival. She spoke about women's fashion in history.
A newspaper writeup from the Prince George's Sentinel that focuses on the readers' festival.
And here's my book pile from the ALA exhibit hall. Some of these will be offered for review for the Historical Novels Review, while others I'll be keeping for readers' advisory or review purposes later this year.
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