Posts Tagged ‘TLS’

Two True Geniuses

Friday, June 25th, 2010

 

True genius shows itself early – think of Mozart. Well, I don’t want to be too boastful BUT I, too, belong to that select circle. Already at the no-2-launch-034tender age of two I knew what I wanted: to extend my waking hours. I used to get up at 4am every morning. Sadly, unlike Mozart, I didn’t have the support of my parents for this precocious talent.  

 

It is true that I no longer get up at 4am. Instead, however, I am on a mission to fight the 24-hour-day. And just in case you are thinking– oh dear, she’s cracked! No, SHE has not cracked. I am totally sane. And my mission is utterly logical, too.

 

This week, I have accomplished the following things: I had my first ever BBC radio interview, I attended a PR party, the TLS summer party, an evening with women writers and publishers. I’ve made good headway with organizing the next Peirene Salon in September, I replied to over 200 emails, paid a few bills and sent out some more reviews copies. I also had a two hour root canal treatment session at the dentist.  Oh yes, I also gave my kids a wee bit of attention, ran the household, and kissed my husband –only once and very briefly, as I really don’t have time for such things at present.

 

Because there is another list, of all the things I didn’t manage to do this week: I was meant to write the synopses for the book covers for  Peirene Title No 4-6. I haven’t. I was meant to think long and hard about the content of the now-very-soon-to-be-launched-monthly-Peirene-newsletter. I haven’t. I was meant to read through the finished translation of Maybe This Time, Peirene Title No 6. I haven’t. And that is just the tip of the iceberg.

 

In order to accomplish all my tasks I’d need more hours, or more days in the week. I am easy. If we extend the week to at least nine days, we can keep the 24-hour-day. Alternatively, let’s do 30-hour-days and we keep the seven day week. How about a vote on that?

 

I could of course just accept the day as it is, conserve my energies, have a good night’s sleep and a lovely weekend and then complete all the outstanding tasks next week with a clear head. But in that case I would have to give up my life-long defiance of the passing of time. In this area – like in so  many others – I find myself courageously refusing to admit defeat.

Sunbath of a Tortoise

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

 

Peirene is a nymph who is at heart a tortoise. I finally understood her real psychological make up. And – let me be quite frank – do not evenwebite-home-1431 dream of mocking her. Or have you never heard of the famous fable of the tortoise and the hare?

 

Big publishing houses like to scare small publishing houses. Especially at book conferences. After publication date, the book has a window of two months, six weeks, four weeks to make or break it. The window gets smaller with every conference I attend.

 

When Beside the Sea was published beginning of February, for the first three weeks it did well and I secretly hoped my nymph was becoming a big-time superstar diva. Then things went quiet, terribly and worryingly quiet. “Books have their own momentum,” a colleague, from a small but definitely successful publisher reassured me (one of his books has just been short listed for the Orange). I didn’t believe him and complained bitterly to anyone who cared to listen that only one woman, Lynne Hatwell from dovergreyreader had so far reviewed Beside the Sea. All the other reviewers, in the papers and online, were men.

 

And then this week not only one woman but three announced their reviews of Beside the Sea. Madeline Clements in the TLS,  Kim Forrester on her book blog “Reading Matters” and Jackie Bailey  from Farm Lane Books (who will publish her review next week). And that’s not all. As you might know I feel very strongly that Beside the Sea is not only a book that ought to be read, but is also a book that should be discussed. A friend of mine was courageous enough to put her opinion about Beside the Sea on my facebook page, unprompted. She finds the book disturbing and a great “semi public” discussion on the page developed between us.

 

After such an exciting week, I couldn’t resist to check the book’s sales ranking on Amazon. Over the last two months it’s been a sitting tenant at around 130,000. Yesterday, it was at 29,000 ( and a few). Today, I am afraid to say, it’s getting back to it’s usual heights at 95,526. The Amazon sales ranking system is of course a bit of a sham. All it takes for a book to shed a few thousand ranking points is to have two or three people buying it at the same time.

 

But I really shouldn’t belittle my nymph’s success. Haven’t I just figured out, she is a tortoise? She belongs to the kind that wins races slowly. Random House should look out.

 

On the other hand, there is no need for them to panic yet. At least not for today. Peirene clearly isn’t in a mood for a race. Instead she gave in to the temptation of the gorgeous summer day and decided to take a well deserved sun bathing break.