wednes: (Default)
wednes ([personal profile] wednes) wrote2008-06-28 07:00 pm
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Grandma's and Business Cards:

Talked to H's Grandmother today. She's a nice lady. She wants to buy a copy of my book so she can read it as she likes to read every night before bed. I've been stalling on this issue for a while now. Part of me really does not want H's family to read my book what with their strong Christian leanings and all. I just think it might freak them out and that they really ought to wait for a safer novel, like Cat's Apprentice. I didn't know how to articulate that to her, so I just told her how to order it. Here's hoping that I don't alienate H's family any more than my pagan wedding did. LOL

Finally squared everything away with Withersin for my review. I hope they like it, since I'm sending them a real copy. Sending out these copies gets pretty expensive since I have to buy all but the first five, plus another $2 apeice or however much. This one is getting FedEx'd, so that's about $6 but should reach them in 2 days while my book is still fresh in their minds. Yay!



It occurs to me that I've never posted my business card, which is pretty swell.
H designed it for me, just as he designs all my cool book related visual stuff. He did 6 or so designs for me to choose from and this was my fave.

[identity profile] maxverbosity.livejournal.com 2008-06-29 12:23 pm (UTC)(link)
To me, a critical reader is able to see that book and author are not necessarily the same thing. There are books with potentially disturbing characters which have been written by non-disturbing people - a good example might be "The Day Of The Locust" by Nathaniel West. West was a satirist who wrote a vivid, unsettling story about broken Hollywood dreams.

I often fear that people who read my stuff will see me as an egocentric, raving liberal, which I am to a certain point, but there is a side of me not germain to my writing, that will not appear in my writing, therefore people would need to know me to get the picture. I take comfort in the notion that those who know me see more than what is in the essays and rants.

[identity profile] wednes.livejournal.com 2008-06-29 04:35 pm (UTC)(link)
That's true. People are certainly more than the sum of what they write. Then again, there are people like say, Salinger who are every bit as nutty as the things they write about.

It's all a rich tapestry, I guess. :-]