Turkey City Writer's Workshop is a peer-to-peer, professional science fiction writer's workshop in Texas. Founded in 1973 and still ongoing today, it was consciously modeled after the east coast Milford Writer's Workshop .[ 1] The workshop "was a cradle of cyberpunk"[ 2] where many of the practitioners of what would become cyberpunk first met.[ 3]
Founding members of the group included Lisa Tuttle , Howard Waldrop , Steven Utley , and Tom Reamy . The workshop was first held in Grand Prairie, Texas , but soon shifted to Austin when most of the writers involved moved there during the mid-1970s. Bruce Sterling was one of the youngest members of the workshop when he joined it in 1974.[ 4] [ 5] Harlan Ellison "discovered" Sterling at Turkey City and arranged for the publication of his first novel.[ 4] Other writers who have attended Turkey City include Ted Chiang , Paul Di Filippo , Cory Doctorow , Andy Duncan , George Alec Effinger , Mark Finn , Steven Gould , Eileen Gunn , Leigh Kennedy , John Kessel , Rick Klaw , Raph Koster , George R. R. Martin , Maureen McHugh , Paul O. Miles , Chris Nakashima-Brown , Chad Oliver , Lawrence Person , Jessica Reisman , Chris Roberson , Jayme Lynn Blaschke , Lewis Shiner , Lou Antonelli , John Shirley , Jeff VanderMeer ,[ 6] Don Webb , Martha Wells , and Connie Willis .[ 1]
The workshop also compiled "The Turkey City Lexicon", a collection of terms used when discussing recurring SF writing tropes.[ 2] [ 7] This guide for writers has been used and adapted by other writers workshops, both within and outside the science fiction genre.[ 8] [ 9]
References
^ a b The Turkey City Writer's Workshop Homepage Archived March 23, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
^ a b Sterling, Bruce ; Lewis Shiner. "Turkey City Lexicon: A Primer for SF Workshops" . SFWA. Retrieved October 8, 2010 .
^ Swanwick, Michael (August 1986), "A User's Guide to the Postmoderns", Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine : 24
^ a b Marvel, Bill (November 9, 1997). "Charting cyberspace with a wink and a wit" . Dallas Morning News . Retrieved October 7, 2010 .
^ Lambert et al. 2005. The Internet: A Historical Encyclopedia . New York: MTM Publishing. p 220.
^ http://primastoria.com/feature/interview-with-jeff-vandermeer Jeff VanderMeer interview, citing workshop inspiration for a novel.
^ Turkey City Lexicon (original)
^ Slug City Writers. "Tom Swifties and Other Writing Sins" . Bucks County Writers Workshop . Retrieved October 8, 2010 .
^ Duane, Diane ; Peter Morwood. Writers' Workshop Background (PDF) . p. 23.
External links
Teacher/Student workshops Peer-to-Peer Workshops