Sat 25 Apr 2009
I’m reading at Newtonville Books in Newton, MA
Posted by sandi under books, Kissing Games of the World, reading in public
[9] Comments
Lately I’ve been editing the final version of my new novel, which is going to be called The Stuff That Never Happened, and I’ve kind of lost touch with Kissing Games of the World.
It’s a little like tending to a new baby while your toddler plays in the sandbox and doesn’t need so much attention.
So how sweet, then, to get invited to come to Newtonville Books in Newton, Massachusetts (another state, even!) to read from the toddler-aged book and get reminded once again of how much I once loved those characters and all the trouble they got themselves into.
Even better, I get to see one of my new dearest friends, Holly Robinson Cookson, whose new book, The Gerbil Farmer’s Daughter, is coming out in just a few weeks. I wrote a blurb for her book, which is such a delightful memoir about growing up amid quirky, unpredictable adults and…well, their gerbils. And then she came through town the other day on her way to visit her editors in New York, and we ate lunch and talked about a million things…and now she’s going to come to my reading since she doesn’t live so very far from there.
It’s very good, as you might imagine, to have Actual People at readings. A writer’s worst fear is that not one member of the public will show up to be read to, and you will have to slink away in embarrassment for the trouble the bookstore people went to even just to write the sign with your name on it. You will vow never to trouble the public again with the illusion that you wrote a book. WAIT! No, no! I just remembered. That’s NOT the worst fear. The VERY WORST fear is that there will be ONE PERSON there to hear you read–one singular, baffled human being who is probably somehow related to the bookstore owner and who was BEGGED to come–and so with one audience member in the sea of chairs, you will actually have to DO the reading, and will not be permitted to crawl away and start trying to put the whole thing out of your mind, if you can.
So, anyway, all this is by way of saying that if you happen to be within striking distance of Newton, Massachusetts, on this Thursday (April 30), at oh, say, about 7 o’clock, and you would like to come to the VERY delightful bookstore there–well, I would be there, and I would jump up and down with joy.
AND, as an added bonus, you would get to meet my wonderful son Ben and his delightful wife Amy, who happen to live in the neighborhood and have agreed to saunter on by and clap very loudly. (You’ll know who they are because they will be the people in the back, whispering, “NO! No! PLEASE don’t read the sex parts!”)
Newtonville Books is located at 296 Walnut Street in Newtonville. The phone number is (617) 244-6619. Tell Jaime I said hello!











April 26th, 2009 at 1:17 am
If you read it, they will come! I’m sure it’ll be a great crowd. Don’t forget to report back!!
April 26th, 2009 at 1:28 pm
Sandi, I know you will have a splendid turnout! I wish I could go to this, but alas I DO need to focus on my bread and butter business, even though this is much more soul nourishing! I’ve marked 6/18 for your friend’s visit to RJs….enjoy the kids and grandkids!
April 27th, 2009 at 10:46 am
Wish I could be there. Truly. I once had one person show up at a library event. I knew him, he’s another writer, and he brought me coffee. So it wasn’t awful.
I did an event with Robert Vaughn (you know, the Man from UNCLE?) yesterday in Ridgefield. I think most people were there to see him (he’s written a memoir) and he was quite charming, but my books sold out and his didn’t, so I felt really good about that!
April 29th, 2009 at 3:13 pm
Hi again Sandi! How wonderful and I’m sure you’ll do a fabulous job. I wish I could be there, but as fate would have it I’m giving a (little) reading that day too. My biggest fear is tripping on my way to the podium.
Anyway, I will be rooting for you! Any chance you’ll come out to Denver and do a reading? We’re pretty nice here and would love to have you. Think about it.
April 30th, 2009 at 9:47 pm
Oh, how I wish I could have been there! I would have clapped ever so loudly !!
May 6th, 2009 at 10:39 pm
The Stuff That Never Happened…what a great title!
and back to the topic of your post, how did it go?
May 12th, 2009 at 11:20 am
There aren’t enough cheerleaders in the world for the likes of Sandi Shelton, whose generosity and humor readily spill over into the real world from her fabulous books, all of which I’ve read and given, at one time or another, to the women I care about most in my life, because I know these books are reliable for how GOOD they make you feel when you finish them, as if you’ve just been to the gym and NOT eaten that package of M&Ms on the way home. I approached Sandi through one of those friend-of-a-friend connections to ask her to blurb my book, since The Gerbil Farmer’s Daughter is my first book and my publisher convinced me that this is what a writer needs to do in order to have something, anything, please! on the book jacket. And Sandi not only said yes — something very few writers are willing to do for other, unknown writers these days — she also emailed me and held my hand through the entire roller coaster publishing process, which lasted so long in my case that I’ll probably need a walker just to make it up to the podium. Anyway, whoever reads her books will have some sense of this woman’s wit, spirit, and ridiculously accomplished skills as a storyteller. Her reading was great, by the way — funny, inspired and inspiring to listen to, and well worth the trip. I look forward to her next book!
May 14th, 2009 at 12:51 pm
Holly, What a great comment! I’m glad you were at the reading. Sandi is lovely, isn’t she? And I must tell you that any book called The Gerbil Farmer’s Daughter is a book I want to read.
May 29th, 2009 at 6:34 pm
Hey Lily,
My apologies for taking so long to write back to your comment. Maybe you’ll still see this!! At any rate, YES! Sandi is lovely. More importantly, she’s funny, smart, loyal, kind, and generous. We’re all SO lucky to know her! Any friend of hers is a friend of mine.