Touring for a new book reinforces for me the fact that I
love books. I love writing 'em, selling 'em, meeting the
people who read 'em, and the people who sell them. Last
night I had the priviledge of signing at The Book Exchange
in Marietta. Book Exchange owner Cathy Blanco has to be one
of the hardest-working booksellers I know. Her shop is
small, and true to the name, they sell used--as well as
new--books. Now, some writers absolutely
hate the
idea of a used bookstore. Not me. I know from experience
that somebody who picks up a used copy of one of my books
for a buck or two will usually decide they really
need
to buy my new hardback as soon as it comes out. Or, maybe
they're a working mom or retiree who can only afford to feed
their habit by buying used books. I'm good with that. Cathy
has become well known with authors in the Atlanta area,
especially romance writers, because she and her staff really
know how to move books. For DEEP DISH, Cathy decided to
throw a wingding of a party. She charged five bucks a head,
took reservations and when the reservations started flooding
in, she went to work. She put her wooden bookcases on wheels
so she could move them to the sides of the shop to make room
for folding chairs for her customers to sit in. One of her
workers, Theresa, made a huge vat of chicken salad--with
grapes--mmmm! Somebody else made cheese straws. You can't
have a party in the South without chicken salad and cheese
straws. I think there's an ordinance. Then, because Cathy
always tries to have refreshments that tie in with the theme
of the book, she made two of the tomato soup chocolate cakes
that figure in the plot of DEEP DISH. She had fried pork
rinds--which also figure into the book, and Moonpies,
because the dog in the book is named Moonpie. She served
wine, and Diet Coke--because I drink a
lot of Diet
Coke when I'm working. And the people came. More than a
hundred of them, lined up outside the Book Exchange,
chatting with their girlfriends, co-workers, their sisters
and their mamas. Two of my college roommates, Nancy and
Sheryl came too, and I got to see the snapshots of Nancy's
daughter Stephanie's wedding, which I missed because I was
on tour. We laughed and sipped wine, took snapshots, scarfed
down the cake, and "visited." That's what we call it.
"Visiting." As in, "Lorraine and I drank about a gallon of
appletinies, and then we visited about what kind of shoes we
would wear to that hussy Veronica's wedding shower. And we
decided we would both wear our new lime green slingback
spikes, just to show Veronica we don't care that she didn't
ask us to be in her wedding." Now, "visiting" is different
from "fellowshipping." I think mostly Baptists do
fellowshipping. At our party last night, we had die-hard
Southerners and Yankees and Midwesterners, and everybody
visited and played nice. One woman confided in me that she
had discovered the difference between women from the North
and women from the South. "If you act ugly, a Yankee will
call you a bitch to your face," she told me. "But, now, a
Southerner, she'll just set her mouth, pat you on the arm
and murmur 'Bless your heart.' "