I woke up on the morning of my signing feeling deranged with nerves, missing the shuttle when my shaking hands resulted in a dramatic mascara wand mishap and I had to wash my makeup off and start from scratch.
Here I am, averting my eyes so that you will not see the CRAZY! in them:

It helped that it was a beautiful, if blisteringly hot, day, and that I had a view of the Chrysler Building from my hotel room window. So much prettier than the Empire State Building. Height isn’t everything, you know.


It also helped that in the cab on the way to the convention center my phone buzzed, and I got the following photograph via text from my mother-in-law:

This baby has only a bucket to shield her from the elements. A naked baby doll and piece of discarded Tupperware are her sole companions. For only three cents a day, you could at least buy her a bigger bucket. Won’t you please help?
Javits Center is huge. HUGE. This shouldn’t have been a surprise, but when I entered to find myself in what appeared to be a multi-level warehouse the size of two train stations, with banks of escalators before me carrying bookbag-laden people from floor to floor, I was rendered motionless, and tried to look nonchalant while I waited for my publicist to fetch me. My publicist, Nicole, is a tiny and formidably accomplished seventeen-year-old. Oh, ok, she is older than that—eighteen, maybe. I kid, but she doesn’t seem old enough to account for her job experience and easy, confident competence. I’m a little intimidated by her, honestly. She is one of those put-together people who instantly make me feel I am about to trip over something or possibly accidentally set my handbag on fire.
I was fetched, and given my badge.

You will notice it says “AUTHOR.” (Do you think real author-authors get to a point where they can see themselves referred to as “AUTHOR” without an internal giggle of disbelief? I doubt it.)
I also took a copy of the special “Show Daily” edition of Publisher’s Weekly, a giant glossy thing that looks like this:

…and which I opened to find a full page ad taken out by Perseus (my publisher, or rather Ur-publisher) to promote their author events. Like mine.

See me? Above EMPIRE OF ILLUSION and next to ALEX AND THE IRONIC GENTLEMAN? Also, please note that the sort of border at the top of the page made up of tiny little book covers has mine in it. This was all very exciting.
Even more exciting was what I saw when the escalator spit us out upstairs onto the convention floor and into the gigantic Perseus area in the center: a long wall of light-up marquee sort of things, like they have for movies.

Holy SHIT, you guys:

From about this point on, I was just a floating, disbelieving, grinning presence. I bobbed on over to the booth, sat at a table, and began signing my name to things. I did this for a couple of hours, and it was wonderful. Some notes:
• They gave me a Sharpie to sign with, which is apparently Standard Signing Equipment, but made me feel a little rude, as if I were defacing the books with graffiti—tagging them, if you will. It felt scandalous to write in someone else’s copy like that. (Of course, I am also the person who gasped and then fiercely scolded a friend when I entered a room to see her book splayed gruesomely on its SPINE.) (I could hear its feeble screams!)
• I signed willy-nilly, on whichever of the first non-text-y pages I happened to open up to, until one woman made me do hers over and informed me that the PROPER place to sign is the title page, NOT the half-title. Remember this, all of you.
• I never did think of anything clever to write. I mostly stuck with “For X” and my name, and added my profuse thanks verbally. (Indeed, I felt misty with gratitude the whole time.)
• Apparently, not every author asks how a name is spelled before signing, which surprised me to hear. I got a lot of “Oh! Thank you for asking!” and a wide variety of spellings. I asked because how annoying would it be, if you are a Cathy, to have a book signed to Kathy instead? My inscriptions may not be clever, but at least they are correct. Maybe that will be my thing?
• If I saw that the person I was signing for was a librarian, I sometimes wrote “Thank you for being a librarian!” before my name. I think I may have frightened a few librarians with my enthusiasm for their profession. (“Oh!” I kept crying gleefully, “You’re a LIBRARIAN!”) In case they are reading now, allow me to explain: When I was in elementary school, I had a particularly wonderful librarian, Mrs. Freuhling, who encouraged my writing—and advocated leniency during the meeting with the principal after I was discovered to be sneaking books home without checking them out. (There was a rule in place that you could check out only as many books per week as the grade you were in, which was not enough to keep me supplied with reading material. I was sneaking the books back INTO the library when I’d finished, but it was slow going, and after I was caught everyone was shocked by the quantity I’d accumulated.) Most importantly, Mrs. Freuhling convinced the staff of the daycare center in which I was confined after school to let me stay down the hall with her, shelving books and learning about the Dewey Decimal System. I spent many happy afternoons filing cards in the catalogues, pushing carts amongst the shelves, and stamping things carefully with the date, and I will always have a bit of cardiac real estate reserved for librarians. My dream job, before the Internet came along and ruined it, was to man the kind of reference desk where a person could wander in (or phone) with some obscure question about, say, renaissance undergarments, and I would find the answer for them. (And while I love computers, I will never forgive them for taking away my precious, precious card catalogues.)
• I felt bad for the pregnant women who picked up a copy of my book, or the people who had me sign theirs to someone they knew who was expecting. (“Maybe for AFTER the baby’s born,” I suggested.)
• Often someone would come up to me and launch into a sales pitch or question, not realizing (despite the stack of books and poised Official Signing Sharpie) that I was only an author and thus of no use to them.
• Sometimes someone would stop, pick up the book, read the back, (“It’s free!” I’d say helpfully) and then put it down and walk away.
• A shocking number of delivery men came by with menus from their restaurants (mostly Chinese, a few Thai). I take it they were making the rounds. How did they get in, I wonder?
• I began the day explaining to everyone who took a copy how ROUGH the ARC was, and how much BETTER the final version is, and how MANY EDITS AND FIXINGS I have made since the galleys were printed, but stopped when it became clear that this was frowned upon by my petite publicity powerhouse, who was also much better than I at summing up the book in a few sentences without stammering or saying disturbing things like “It’s about my daughter’s premature birth and time in the hospital—but it’s funny!” and since she was right THERE I mostly let her field the questions. It is clear that I need to work on being able to discuss my book myself. It shouldn’t be so hard. I did write the damn thing, after all.
• I felt so unfettered and celebratory, more so than I had since turning in the manuscript. I met the most delightful people, too—the sales reps were lovely! And the publisher is this very tall, kind man who said the nicest things about my book. I was struck, again, by how uncommonly lucky I have been. In the cab back to the hotel I kept marveling that any of it was real.

Me, Nicole (my aforementioned publicist), and my editor Jen. Photo blatantly stolen from Running Press’ Facebook page


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Congratulations on being a Real Writer (no more strings)! Blatantly, yummily awesome.
Your outfit is very cute and flattering, and I’m sure that mitigates the crazy as well.
Congratulations!
Wow, you have great hair. Also, congratulations!
Congrats…. so happy for you!
You are the CUTEST THING EVER. And oh! am I so excited for you.
YAY, ALEXA.
Oh, YAY! My brother just sold his book, so I guess this will be him in another year+. So excited for you, so excited to read the book.
This is all so exciting, reading this post totally woke me up after passing out putting the kids to bed. That, my dear, is pretty exciting.
Holy Cow! You are famous! :-)
I am so excited for you. You deserve every bit of all this celebration in your honor! Yeah!
P.S. Those people who put your book down are idiots!
That is so, so awesome. You are my hero. Seriously.
You know, I only know you through this lovely little blog and your Twitter feed, but can I just tell you? I am as proud of you as can be. You took drama, trauma and what couldn’t be anything less that personal HELL and created something utterly wonderful from it. (Several somethings, in fact, not the least of which is that beautiful, bucketed child up there.) GO YOU!!!!
So fantastic. And your tweet about the rent broke my heart so I went and ordered your book on Amazon. From me to you, that 1.37 cent royalty coming your way!
(No snarkiness intended. Love love your writing!)
Great dress for a great day – congratulations!!
1) How cute is your dress? (Answer: Very!)
2) How cute is your little girl? (Answer: Extremely!)
3) Where should one autograph a book? (Answer: Anywhere you want to. It’s your book, goshdarnit. Anne Rice signed my book on the page immediately after the cover, and that page happened to be blank. So if Anne Rice is unaware of a “proper place” to sign a book, I think you can be excused too. ;) )
4) Only 2 more months til your book comes out! (I’ve had it in pre-order for some time now)
5) Congratulations!!!! :D
Congrats! Did you meet Kathie Lee Gifford, who spoke after you? Or rather… did Kathie Lee Gifford have the chance to meet you, the author?
I am SO pleased and SO proud! You are whetting my appetite forthis book admirably; I am directing increasingly withering glances at my letterbox, through which Amazon is signally failing to plonk my copy. UK publication date, smate!
Librarians are indeed the finest of beings, but I cannot concur with your view on book spines. I sit firmly alongside IB. A confirmed violator of spines since childhood, I borrow books from two wonderful blogger-friends who share your opinion in iron-hard terms. Consequently, the tip of my nose is virtually inserted into the space between the barely-open pages, and I struggle to read the print nearest the oh-so-delicate spine without an actual headtorch. I am exceedingly anxious that I may, in a moment’s inattention, thoughtlessly tear the poor tome’s hymen asunder.
When Amazon does finally deliver it, your work will be cherished carefully on my least toddler-accessible bookshelf against a much-hoped-for time when the author herself can scribble whatever she pleases on it!
OMG — GET TO HOUSTON NOW!
I can’t WAIT!
Oh, I hope you come to DC!
Congratulations–reading this entry feels like reading a wonderful dream come true.
And kudos to kind librarians everywhere. You brought to mind the kind ones in my middle school, who helped ease a rather trying period of my life.
That is SO cool! Book ordered, despite my desire to wait until a Kindle version is released.
Patti
IVF Mom
Alexa! I recently procured an ARC of your book…I can hardly wait to get home and start reading!!!
Love the pictures, love hearing about your new adventure as AUTHOR! ;-)
And yes, she needs a bigger bucket, dontcha think?
Congratulations!
Also, I totally agree about the whole card catalog thing. I love computers, but there are some things that just aren’t the same…sigh.
I am so proud of you!!!!
This post made my downright GIDDY with happiness and joy. I am so, so, so, so happy for you.
On my birthday I posted on facebook that as a gift my friends should all preorder copies of Halfbaked to donate to their local NICU. And some of them DID IT!!!!
I cannot WAAAAIT to read your book. I’d squee, but it seems unladylike of me.
Wow – that is just all kinds of awesome. That big illuminated thingie of your book! So extremely cool and exciting. Big huge round of applause to you for this accomplishment!!!!!
Absolutely thrilling! And I miss the reverent,musty silence that surrounded perusing the card catalog….
Does my heart GOOD. Has anybody busted you about writing the next book? heh heh heh.
You have a GREAT review of your book on Amazon. Way to go!!!!
Don’t feel TOO bad about not being able to sum up the book in a few sentences. That’s what publicists get paid for, so that’s why they’re good at it. Also, if you could have summed it up in a few sentences you wouldn’t have needed to write the book. :)
Congrats Alexa! It must be such an amazing thing to see your book in lights like that. I can’t wait to read it and have already pre-ordered it on Amazon.
“uncommonly lucky” ??? are you kidding me??? that’s such a female thing to say. you have worked your butt off for this young lady and don’t you forget it. you deserve every success and i can’t wait to get my copy.
and yes, seeing your book in lights – even if just a photo – absolutely fabulous.
Yay Alexa – Congratulations. I have already asked my local librarians to order a copy for the NEW book section!
And keep thanking librarians – they saved me from being bully bait during recess way back in elementary school by “working” for them and allowing me to read every book in the library. Love those people.
Congratulations!! I have enjoyed your blog immensely and will be ordering your book!
Also, your library thievery story is sooo cute!! What kind of rule is that – what, a first grader can only read ONE book at a time?? I’m with you, fight the power!! ;)
So, so cool. So very cool. All of it. Everything. Wow.
Thanks for taking us on this journey with you!!
Oh, I hope you DIDN’T have to meet Kathy Lee!!
Congratulations on your first, of many- I’m sure, book signing!
I am so excited to hear your tales of writing/publicizing your book! Can’t wait to read it! (my DH refuses to let me pre-order books after I accidentally ended up with 2 of something one time, so I will buy it when it hits shelves/Amazon)
Thanks for sharing your journey!
That is so cool!
I think that there are two kinds of people in this world: those that show their love of books my treating them with great care and those that show their love of books by “breaking them in”. I am a spine-breaker…my husband is more gentle with books than newborns. Makes for some interesting marital discussions…
And we are looking at elementary schools for our older son and one had a library with an actual working card catalog. I swooned just a little bit to see it.
Holy Toledo! You have reviews from Elizabeth McCracken and A.J. Jacobs on the Amazon site. This is absolute proof that you are completely and totally wonderful, as they are two of my favorite authors. They both love you, which is not surprising. You also got 5 (count ‘em — five!!!!) stars from your first customer review.
Is your book going to be available on Kindle? I canceled my pre-order when I was given a Kindle, as I want to buy it on Kindle, but if it’s not going to be available, I’ll re-pre-order it.
Thrilling! I wish it could be me; but if it can’t be me, I am so glad it is you! Cannot wait until my book arrives.
Congratulations, Alexa!
I recently read Elizabeth McCracken’s The Giant’s House; the central character is a librarian (as was the author). Your love of libraries and all that is in them is so well captured in this book. I think you’d like it (and it’s funny!)
Oh Alexa! I am over the moon excited for you. And I cannot, simply cannot wait to read your memoir.
Though I am not excited about how much I will probably cry.
So DAMN YOU for that.
Okay. I’m over it. I love you, still.
{Do I sound like a crazy person? I do, don’t I? Well, I’m tired. And I am sorry}
It’s been awhile since I’ve visited. We had a very crazy move 1100miles and have everything fall down on top of us month of May so I was otherwise engaged.
I wanted to comment because
a) Apparently I am a crazy person. I am scaring even myself at this moment
b) I am excited as HECK for you and thought I’d point that out and
c) Elena and Simone have many of the same toys. Though, Elena likes to make horse and egg soup as opposed to Simone’s Sheep/Cucumber concoction. And then, as she serves it I have to hear the teapot sing about always saying “Please and thank you!”
In summation:
I am NOT insane.
I am happy for you.
I can not wait to get your book.
And maybe I’ll bump into you in MPLS/St Paul during the brief stint I’ll be spending there (visiting home) in July.
Cheers,
A
one of my dreams is to own a card catalogue. A nice antique one made from dark wood. My dream as a child was to own a cassette tape store. Crushed, obviously, by technology.
So many things about this recap had me laughing out loud. They should give lessons on how to sign a book. The author seems to me to be the person who would have the hardest time discussing a book, because it took you every word to tell us what you had to say. How can you be expected to then tell us in a few quick sentences? And the pregnant woman thing? I’m 8 mos pregnant and keep thinking ‘when she’s a few months old.’ And I know what a happy ending the story has. Oh, and if I’m ever somewhere that the author sees me picking up a free copy of their book – I’ll be taking it home no matter what.
This is just one of the coolest posts EVER! I am grinning from ear to ear and just thrilled for you. I look forward to the day coming very soon when I’ll be able to tell people everywhere “I have one degree of separation from the famous author Alexa Stevenson! I know her from a Mind-Body class!!”
Hooray! Cute hair. This reference-desk manning librarian approves and can’t wait to get her hands on the book.
(Also, be jealous: just today I got to answer a question regarding the number of people held in U.S. insane asylums in 1880. Are you sure you picked the correct career?)
Congratulations! You look beautiful, the book looks beautiful! I can’t wait to read it!
This is awesome – I hope you are thrilled with yourself! You should be!
man, i wish my thesis cover was lit up on a marquee. NO ONE would care about that, but i can see why you’re so excited.
tres bien! you deserve all these great things. :)
This is all so, so wonderful. I’m thrilled for you and hope that the fun ride continues. You deserve it. :D
Also, love your story about your soft spot for librarians. That was touching. We should all be so lucky as to have someone fuel a passion at a tender age like that. And guess what…I think you’re managing to pay it forward to all of us. Can’t wait to read more.
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