For those who’d like to see them, last week’s EDIBLE BOOK CONTEST photos are here: Tales of the Lonesome Pine LLC
We are pre-empting the Monday Book (but I’ll run one Wednesday or Friday, depending on whether Jack gets me a blog from his Scottish tour this week) to bring you
THE AUTHOR HUMILIATION CONTEST!
It all started when a fellow writer online described her recent arrival at a Very Large Bookstore in a Big City to tout her Very Good New Book. Karen Spears Zacharias had the following conversation:
Asst. Manager: I had no idea you had an event here today.
Me: Wow. Really? It was in the newspaper and on television. We’ve been corresponding about this for months.
Asst. Manager: My boss didn’t tell me.
Me: Embarrassed. Humiliated. Diminished.
Asst. Manager: Snotty. Bugged. Annoyed.
Me: This book is local. It won the Weatherford.
Asst. Manager: What’s the Weatherford?
Me: Best in Appalachian Fiction.
Asst. Manager: I’ve never heard of that.
Her post sparked a veritable wordslide of other authors describing similar incidents, and an idea was born.
My 500th blog post will be next Monday. In honor of this earth-shaking occasion, Karen and I are announcing a contest: send us, in 500 words or less, your author humiliation moments. Are you an Author who arrived on the wrong day? Walked in to find your event cancelled? Discovered they were expecting someone else? Tell us about it, or any other mortifying circumstance.
Or take it from the other end. Are you a library, book festival, individual, or bookstore that has hosted an event that just would not get on track no matter what? Or a first class A88-hole? (Y’all know what an a88hole is, right? Similar to an a**hole, only worse.)
Jack and I have looked at book signings, author visits, and all that glamorous stuff from both sides now: as the people with the book AND the people with the bookstore. We’ve seen a whole lotta love and silliness from each, so don’t hold back. Tell us your story.
First prize winner in the author category gets a 5-day stay in my writing retreat cabin, in eastern Tennessee. (Sorry, you have to pay your own way there, but the place is free and we’ll even throw in a bottle of wine. Buy your own milk.) You pick your dates.
First prize winner in the author hosting category gets a signed copy of every entering author’s book. That’s the fee for entering, folks. When the winning host is announced, you are REQUIRED to mail, at your expense, a free copy of your autographed book. (Winners may donate their books to another address if they prefer.)
Second prize for both categories is an autographed copy of Karen’s and my book; third prize… how about a free kitten?
We’ll run the first place entries next Monday. The top ten after that will get blogged once a week, probably on Saturdays. And the MONDAY BOOK will return after this coming Monday.
The rules:
Entries are due by Sunday, June 29, at 11:55 pm EST.
Send entries to jbeck69087@aol.com, with tagline specifying author or host humiliation entry.
Entries exceeding 500 words (not including title) will be disqualified.
Don’t use real names in identifiable locations. We haven’t got enough money to be worth suing, but a88s tend to do that when reality invades the self-sphere. “A Barnes and Noble somewhere in America….” is fine. Make it part of the creativity to keep the names fun and clean.
Keep all entries family friendly. Some kids read this blog.
This is cheerful therapy. Don’t just vent; entertain.
Have fun doing so.
And remember, it’s okay to talk about the embarrassing moments. Many authors have put themselves into utter self-humiliation, and gone on to live happy lives.
Don’t post them here. Send entries to jbeck69087@aol.com. Thanks!
I will.I really look forward to reading the comments.
Sounds fun—in retrospect, now that the healing has begun. :] Yep – send entries to jbeck69087@aol.com.
I think we’ve touched a nerve, everyone! We all have these.
I do want everyone to know that I received a lovely note of apology from the store manager. She assured me that her employee had his Come-to-Jesus-Moment behind closed doors. I assured her that I knew it wasn’t a reflection on her but simply a matter of an employee who didn’t approach his job professionally. I do understand the pressures on everyone. And I know that there are unprofessionals on both sides of the bookstore aisles. Most, however, work hard and do a fabulous job. It’s a tough business for all of us but when it works, it is magic.
And when it doesn’t it’s writing fodder. Just no names, please! (And Karen, it’s lovely the manager reached out in that way. The world is full of good people. Some just have their bad day on your happy one.)
I just saw the rules. It’s 44 words over. Take out any you don’t like.
And I don’t want to compete, not interested in any prizes, just participating.
What about a bookstore customer/author signing moment. I have a great story to share:)
Yep, send it to jbeck69087@aol.com. Thanks!
ROTFL! I sent your comment to the contest email, Jill.
Thanks for the fun contest. Attached is my entry. Best regards, ERIC F. JAMES
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From: Wendy Welch, Little Bookstore of Big Stone Gap [mailto:comment-reply@wordpress.com] Sent: Monday, June 23, 2014 9:56 AM To: ericjames@ericjames.org Subject: [New post] AUTHOR HUMILIATION CONTEST ANNOUNCEMENT
wendywelch posted: “We are pre-empting the Monday Book (but I’ll run one Wednesday or Friday, depending on whether Jack gets me a blog from his Scottish tour this week) to bring you THE AUTHOR HUMILIATION CONTEST! It all started when a fellow writer online described h”
Eric, you have to send your entry to jbeck69087@aol.com
Thanks!