25 October

Fight back. Create, create, create

by Jon Katz
Tell your story

My wish to the good people reading this is that they get to tell their story. I woke up at 3 amidst some awful nightmares and when I got out of bed, I went to the computer and worked on the edits for the grieving book. Then I took this photo. It is my way of fighting back. I hope that people get to tell their stories. I am thinking about teaching another story-telling workshop, this one at the Clifton Park, N.Y. (Halfmoon) Library this winter. I believe in stories. They have saved my life. In the blackest holes, I climb out to write, take a photo, tell a story.

Everybody has a story – a poem, painting, book, or photograph, and each one has a story. Tell it.

25 October

Book tour: What people tell me

by Jon Katz
Last Gasp

November, my least favorite month, is almost here. Got the laundry done and head out in the morning for the Hadley Experiment. It will be fun. Then to Framingham Barnes & Noble Thursday evening, 7 p.m.

What did people tell me on the book tour?

– Cost is a big factor in book purchases. Hardcover books can be expensive.

– Lots of e-book readers, but much passion for bookstores and for getting some books in print, saving them, giving them to friends and family.

-They don’t necessary want stories that are upbeat, but they don’t want to spent $25 to feel crummy.

– They are desperate to talk to writers, learn more about writing, interact more. It’s an expectation as well as an interest.

– Everybody is on Facebook, many on Twitter. They will come to events to see writers they like if they know in advance.

– Reading, like movies, is a balm and an escape. It is alive and well.

– People like to see photographs of light, color and animals. They want to read stories about dogs and other animals.

-They want to know how stories and ideas are crafted and marketed.

-They hate politics and politicians.

25 October

Book tour: Me, my former girlfriend, and self.

by Jon Katz
Keeping one's self

I woke up at 3, this morning, my head spinning with too many things, including a brush with some of the night terrors that occasionally come and sit beside me. So I came downstairs and will do some writing.

One more week on the book tour – S. Hadley tomorrow, the Public Library at 3, and then Odyssey Books at 7. I’m looking forward to it, “the Hadley Experiment.” I sometimes think that part of my madness is that I’m the only person who cares about things like reinventing the book tour. Other writers just do it and shut up about it. I have to reinvent the wheel. Sometimes I get sick of myself. But I feel strongly about it.

Book tours are an important measure of my life and growth, since I have done one a year for more than a decade. I can see my own evolution in the numbers, faces, tone and questions of the very loving and supportive people sitting across from me all over the country. What a gift that is. Another gift is to have Maria come along for some of the tour this year.

Both of us were nervous about her coming. Maria has struggled in her life with issues of identify and voice, and to come along as an adjunct to my book tour seemed fraught. It turned out to be an affirmation, not a submersion. She thought about it, and made sure to do her own work, her own art. She sketched, planned her “Rita” quilt, sold Family Farm notecards (signed Bedlam Farm holiday notecards are available at the Redux site) and helped me with driving, hauling luggage, caring for Izzy. I was overwhelmed by her presence.  As usual, we talked and talked, took the scenery, talked about the people we met, the questions they asked. Made us  even closer, if such a thing were possible.

The tour has been nothing but affirming for her. People who had purchased her quilts or potholders traveled to see her, talked about their art and hers, commented on her website and her work, had their own conversations. I thought she might be uncomfortable in the helter-skelter of a book tour, but she was at ease, gracious and curious. Self is an important thing. Many people – especially women, I think – struggle with questions of voice and identify. I told Maria that animal lovers tend to be loving people, for obvious reasons. And sensitive, also. Maria came back strong, excited, eager to get back to her own work, glad she came. Me too.

To love a dog or a cat, you have to experience love. I see it all the time.

As I am beginning to understand, the tour has also been affirming for me. Lots of great comments about the novel, interested in my future books, support for my photography, the blog and my continuing struggles to figure life out.

So today is a today of housekeeping. I have to explain to the Jury Commissioner why my juror dates are mixed up. Shop for Maria’s favorite dinner (sssh!). Get new shoes from L.L. Bean. Hit the road for the near-last leg of the book tour. I will be posting from the Ipad as usual and taking photos like made. The Hadley experiment is important. It’s about broadening the book tour. Talking to readers. Using technology to give writers more power and responsibility for the marketing of their books. We’ll see.

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