A novel lay-down date is when your book is supposed to hit the store shelves.  This doesn't always happen according to schedule, especially if it collides with a gift-giving holiday, but it generally works out.  It used to be a ritual, first couple of years I was published, to Go See My Book Land.  Now my release and writing schedules are so nuts that it's more like oh shit, I have a book out two or three weeks after the fact.
My latest one was my debut in a new genre, though, so I marked the calendar and made the pilgrimage over the weekend.  I went first to the teeny tiny historical fiction section where it should have been shelved.  No book.  Then I wandered over to the humongous inspirational section and started looking.  Still no book.  I double checked the Christian fiction and Biblical reference subsections, just to be sure.  Zip.  I even went over to romance and SF.  Nada.
I figured it didn't arrive due to a late shipment, sighed, and went up to the info desk to check when the order was due.
"We have copies," BAM clerk told me.  "In Fiction/Literature."
I was horrified.  "What?  Why?"
"Uh, because it's a literary novel."
"It is not a literary novel," I told her.  I was going to get into why, only I remembered that the book is a writer-for-hire gig, which I can't discuss.  I had to settle for telling her "That author doesn't write literary novels.  You couldn't pay her enough to write literary novels."      
She gave me the sure-lady smile.  "Would you like me to get a copy of it for you, ma'am?"
So now I'm a literary author.  You know what this means.  I'll have to stop smiling, immediately, and cultivate that haunted, knowing pout.  No more wearing X-Files tshirts and bunny slippers; only cords and turtlenecks in suitable colors like charcoal and algae and burnt parchment.  I'll have to have my hair chopped off into an intellectual wedge and wear a fanny pack.  For fun -- not that I'm really supposed to have any -- I'll have to sneak out at 1 am on a Thursday, sit in a cafe by a condemned building, drink anisette-flavored latte and sulk while some guy with an uneven goatee and stained khaki dockers reads from Fitzgerald and ad-libs where F. Scott got it wrong.
God, I'm so depressed.  See?  It's starting already.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.