L. Frank Baum, writer of the classic Oz series, lived and worked in 
			Chicago from 1891 to 1914. Ernest Hemingway was born and raised in 
			Oak Park. Even our own darling, Abraham Lincoln, was known for his 
			great speeches, many of which were published. 
			Lincoln, located in the very middle of the state -- a small town 
			living in the shadow of capital Springfield and giant Chicago -- is home to 
			more than its share of successful writers. Langston Hughes wrote his 
			first poem in grade school in Lincoln. William Maxwell was a child 
			here and later wrote in "So Long, See You Tomorrow" about Lincoln as a place 
			where people didn't lock their doors and streets were always full of 
			children playing together. His old neighborhood is surprisingly 
			unchanged in many ways. The legacy continues with the recent release 
			of Lincoln author Erika Holst's "Wicked Springfield," a history of  
			"crime, corruption and scandal during the Lincoln era." It's entirely fitting, then, that Illinois recently hosted one of 
			the best writing conferences to be found, offering personalized 
			attention unheard of at other conferences. Limited to 36 attendees, SEAK's Advanced Fiction Writing seminar in Chicago is aimed at 
			writers who write as more than a hobby and are serious about their writing.  
			Taught by legal-thriller author Robert Dugoni and John Hough 
			Jr., author of four novels and three nonfiction works, the seminar is an 
			intense weekend that is more hands-on than most conferences. Dugoni 
			and Hough bring a wealth of information on the work and business of 
			writing, with Dugoni specializing in plot construction and writing 
			technique and Hough an expert on character creation and dialogue.
			 
			
			  
			Each participant received a 15-minute coaching session with Hough, who read their first chapter and made comments in the 
			margins prior to the sessions, then reviewed the critiques 
			one-on-one. The reviews took place in a quiet conference room with no 
			background noise and no other participants standing in line behind 
			the table, waiting for their turn. The pace was relaxed and 
			intimate, and Hough was clearly interested in the writer in front of 
			him, rather than rushing through the meeting to get to the next.  
			Dugoni spent hours in group instruction, packing a week's 
			worth of useful information into one weekend. Additionally, he had 
			also reviewed the group's submissions, and some workshops 
			specifically addressed what he saw in those works.  
			Dugoni made it a point not only to learn participants' names, but 
			to remember which one was writing a legal thriller, a young adult 
			crime fiction novel or a medical murder mystery.  
			
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  Advanced Fiction Writing is one of many continuing education seminars 
			put on by SEAK, an organization created by a former lawyer and 
			managing partner of Kistin, Babitsky, Latimer, & Beitman.  
			Steve Babitsky's passion for quality continuing education was 
			evident in his presence and participation in the seminar workshops. 
			Many of SEAK's programs focus on legal and medical issues, including 
			expert witness seminars and instructions on writing quality medical 
			evaluations. 
			Writing is another SEAK specialty, with some writing 
			seminars focused specifically on lawyers and doctors who use their 
			professional knowledge to produce informed creative works. SEAK's 
			next writing conference is planned for Oct. 22-24 in Hyannis, Mass., 
			and is specifically for physicians writing fiction. 
 			As if SEAK's programming weren't enough to propel the Advanced Fiction 
			Writing seminar to the top of any writer's "must-do" list, each 
			participant was invited to a personalized coaching session with literary 
			agent Sorche Fairbank, paired with her written feedback on his or her 
			own query letter and synopsis.  
			Fairbank is a smart, tough agent who asks pointed questions and 
			pushes the writer to examine every aspect of premise and plot for 
			plausibility, style and marketability.  
 			Personal attention on this level from any one of these three experts 
			is worth the price of admission alone. Serious writers in the 
			Midwest should consider skipping the airfare required to travel to 
			conferences in other locations around the country and the world and 
			instead invest in SEAK's Advanced Fiction Writing seminar to get the most out of 		their conference budget. The combination loaded into one weekend 
			located inside Illinois' borders is enough to ensure that our 
			literary history has only just begun.  
			[By CANDRA LANDERS] 
			
            
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