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Lessons From World Fantasy Convention

11/26/2025

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In the early months of 2025, my friend, and multiple award-winning writer-extraordinaire, Lee Murray ONZM, suggested that we attend the World Fantasy Convention in Brighton, UK. My first instinct was to say no because it’s fucking expensive to travel to the other side of the planet from Aotearoa New Zealand.
​
I’m so bloody happy that I changed my mind.

First, I got to travel with Lee, who shares my love of the weird and bizarre. We drove terrifying narrow roads, circled roundabouts searching for the exit, were kept company by ravens, wandered presque-lost across Bodmin Moor, laughed, ate all the cheese and revelled in ancient myths and legends brought to life in the curated landscapes of the south-west and south of England. She also held my hand throughout the Convention and introduced me to everyone—even people she was meeting for the first time herself. Being Lee’s friend meant that her friends, new and old, also became mine.

Second, after the disappointment of the 2020 WorldCon (CoNZealand), which thanks to Covid was virtual instead of local and in-person, it was incredible to experience a writers’ convention of a global rather than local scale.

I came away with new friends, personal contacts with several publishers, a deeper appreciation of the industry I’m part of, and some great book recommendations. Creative conversations in the bar, around tables, in the hallways and over food proved to be incredibly valuable. Both experienced and new writers were generous with their time and thoughts, and showed genuine interested in me and my writing projects. By the end of the fourth day, I was shattered but also reinvigorated with possibilities and ideas.

I spoke on two panels. The first was Feminism and Feminist Themes in Genre Fiction. I made the mistake of being too reliant on the page of notes I’d prepared, so panicked when they didn’t align with the first question I was asked. It threw me off. I was embarrassed and took a while to calm down and order my thoughts into something that made sense. I came away thinking I’d done a shit job. On the last day of the Con, I sat next to a horror writer who told me that the Feminism panel had been her favourite session. Redemption!

The second panel was Older People in Fantasy and Horror. By this stage, I was more relaxed and had managed to squash down much of my imposter syndrome. Also on the panel were, Juliet Marillier (Lifetime Achievement Award Recipient) and the UK’s master of horror, Ramsey Campbell. The room was packed. I only used my notes to refer to a few figures about the average age and sex of readers and for the rest of the panel talked from my experience of being older and writing older characters. I had fun, and given the audience response, they did to.

I don’t think I’ll ever be someone who speaks or sits on a panel without notes at hand, but what I learned was that I can trust myself. I have a wealth of lived experience in all manner of things and know stuff others don’t. I may not be able to give you a clear, concise and academic definition of what feminist genre fiction is—but I know how to write it.

I attended a heap of panels, some book launches and both the British (for which I was a judge) and the World Fantasy Awards (for which Lee was a judge) ceremonies. So there was lots of learning and clapping involved. My favourite of the panels I attended were Weird Fiction, Animals in Fantasy and Embodying the Non-Human. There’s a theme there!

It was a surprise to me that not everyone goes to Cons to attend panels, readings and book launches—some attendees spend the entire Con hanging in the public spaces—they go for the conversations, to make contacts, seeking opportunities for collaboration, and to develop relationships. Writing’s such a solitary pursuit, and yet success requires putting yourself out there. I’m not so good at that, but I forced myself to start conversations with strangers and talked about the Ghost Assassins of Bijou novellas to anyone who’d listen. I’d also taken a few copies of my short story collection, Letters From Elsewhere, with me and gave them to some lovely people.

The experience confirmed for me the extra challenges writers from Aotearoa face in being so physically distant from major markets. It’s so hard for us to raise our voices and be seen, when no one knows who we are. We can’t just catch a train or drive to next month’s Con to cement those relationships. Without substantial financial assistance or the Ghost Assassins of Bijou getting picked up and becoming a best-seller, it’s very unlikely I’ll attend another big international Con in the next few years so, for now, all I can do is rely on social media, my blogs and newsletters, and keep submitting my writing to keep my name in the forefront of people’s minds.
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Advice for New Writers

8/31/2024

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I know what it’s like. You have a book inside you. It’s burning to get out. So, you write it. Your family and your best friend love it. It’s the best story ever written. It’ll be a best-seller and made into a film. A famous actor will play the lead and become your new best friend. You’ll buy a mansion and travel first class. The world will be your oyster…

If only publishers and agents would stop ignoring your emails.
If only publishers and agents would stop rejecting your 185,000-word manuscript.
If only you could afford another $5,000, so the hybrid publisher, who approached you, can publicise it.
If only someone would buy your self-published book with the home-made cover.
 
Where did it all go wrong? You cry.

Probably at the very beginning!
Here’s some lessons I've learned during my writing practice - some the hard way, others through the generous advice of fellow authors.
  1. Join an organisation dedicated to writers. It might be a regional or national group, like Writers Victoria in Australia or New Zealand’s Society of Authors (NZSA). Or maybe a specialised group like SpecFicNZ, for writers of speculative fiction, or HWA, for those who write horror. If that’s too much, see if you can find a local group of writers who meet in person. All of these will provide various levels of support, advice and training to assist you on your writing journey.
  2. Take advantage of in-person and online workshops and seminars to learn about craft and the publishing world. These are also opportunities to make connections with like-minded authors.
  3. Find a critique group. Friends and family don’t want to hurt your feelings or crush your dreams. Other writers will give you honest feedback on all aspects of your writing (grammar, plot, characters, voice etc). This should be a two-way exchange; you help them, they help you. Everyone learns and grows.
  4. Pay for a professional editor. Unless you have mad editing skills, it’s almost impossible to pick up your own mistakes. If you can’t afford to pay, then at the very least, buy a great self-editing guide and work your way through it with rigour. My suggestions are: Mark My Words by Lee Murray and Angela Yuriko Smith, and; Self-Editing For Fiction Writers by Browne and King.
  5. Do your research. This applies to every aspect of your writing life. Research your genre - understand the tropes, expected length, style of cover. Research your market - who’s your audience (age, sex), what makes your story stand out from the crowd. Research agents and publishers who might be interested in your work - read their requirements carefully and follow them to the letter.
 
If you can’t find answers or still have questions, then ask for help from the contacts you’ve made. But and this is important, be respectful of their time. If they say no, be gracious and move on. It’s hard when you don’t know what you don’t know, and we all make mistakes. The trick is to know when to take a pause, set your ego aside and learn.
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Fox Spirit on a Distant Cloud - a review

7/8/2024

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‘in a former life, in another time
a fox girl departs from the land of jade
in a former life, in another time
 
to a distant cloud where fortunes are made
nine obedient wives, all refugees
a fox girl departs from the land of jade’

 
The opening lines of Lee Murray’s extraordinary prose poetry collection, ‘Fox Spirit on a Distant Cloud’, set the scene for the stories to come. A fox spirit finds herself displaced and alone in a ‘distant land of dark earth and drifting clouds’. In order to ascend to the celestial palace, she must first inhabit nine mortal lives.

Fitting a skull to her head the fox spirit enters the first life­—we follow along and share in her harrowing journey into the unspoken horror that was the lives of nine immigrant Chinese women in Aotearoa / New Zealand. Judged as curiosities, difficulties and not quite human, their only value is their capacity for reproduction—their worth measured in grains of rice.

Resurrected from the silence of death through the fox spirit, these women are given voice to tell their forgotten stories—stories of forced immigration, strangled hopes and dreams, subjugation, abuse, rape, and murder. Haiku interrupt these dark tales like a breath of forest air.

‘maple / in its container / rootbound’

Yes, ‘Fox Spirit on a Distant Cloud’, is imbued with horror but with her profound depth of understanding and an extraordinary command of language and form, Murray brings a beguiling beauty to these grim tales. In contrast to the harsh lives of her characters, Murray’s lyrical prose flows and swirls. Words and phrases circle, spiral and repeat like the beating of a heart. They draw you in and immerse you.


I loved this book from its gorgeous gold-leafed cover to the full stop at the end of the Author’s Note. I read it in a single sitting. Like the fox spirit, I experienced this world, one in which I usually sit so comfortably, through different eyes—fingers scratching for a silver coin / a skull hitting concrete / a rising cleaver. It left me uncomfortable, filled with sorrow and rage. This is not horror as I’ve known it before. It’s closer, more personal, subversive and transgressive.

What is most disturbing is knowing that not only are these stories grounded in reality—drawn from the pages of Aotearoa / New Zealand’s history—but that they persist today.

  • Two dead children found in a suitcase—their mother extradited back to New Zealand.
  • The body of a small woman found inside multiple plastic bags fished from the sea—she wore blue pajamas and remains unidentified.
  • A woman’s body abandoned in the boot of a car—not found for days.
  • A real-estate agent disappears and is presumed dead—her body still missing.

Until this horrific cycle is broken, for every fox spirit who completes her journey from this distant cloud to the celestial palace, another will find herself in this land of pounamu. Here, the new fox spirit will bear witness to nine more lives and ‘sing their spirits to the mountains’.
 
—Winner of the NZSA Laura Solomon Cuba Press Prize, Fox Spirit on a Distant Cloud, is available from Cuba Press 
https://thecubapress.nz/shop/fox-spirit-on-a-distant-cloud/
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