So many times I’ve sat and looked at the bundles of money I spend
pursuing my dream to be a successful author. Thus far, that success has eluded
me—at least the business-success. And every time I think that perhaps I should
dump all that money into my retirement or an investment and abandon this life
of storytelling, something happens to remind me that success isn’t about
royalties or fanfare or applause. Last week, I was hit with a couple years
worth of sobering proof that my writing is about so much more than material
things. Last week, I was hit with a day like I haven’t had in all the time I’ve
been writing.
Marlton, New Jersey—thank you.
Who knew how to measure success as an author? There’s no “Author’s Life
for Dummies” but there should be. Nobody told me I’d be my own publicist,
marketer, sales rep, and seller-in-chief. No one said I had to blog my brains
out and hunt down the next audience all by my lonesome. Where’s the army of
publicists and marketers and sales folks? What? I’m unknown and on my own?
Where was this in the brochure???? So if I’m doing all this and not making much
money, then how do I know it’s all worth while?
Easy—Marlton, New Jersey.
I say all the time that writing is not a team sport. And damn, it’s
not. But you know what? I wouldn’t have it any other way. I have a brilliant,
supportive agent who is in my corner and I often wonder why. I found an amazing
publicist who also supports me and is trying her every trick to boost my
presence in the markets. And I have a few fans—far fewer than I’d hoped at this
point, but they are there. And then there was Marlton. A small community east
of Philadephia in a beautiful part of New Jersey I never knew existed.
This past week I was invited to speak to more than 320 Middle Schoolers,
High Schoolers, and some faculty and followed it up with a great book signing
at the local Barnes and Noble. I arrived to Cherokee High School and was
greeted by the local police officer assigned to the school who knew me by name
and said, “I saw you on all the posters and newsletters.” Students stopped and
said hi, teachers waved and greeted me when I toured the building. Then, later
in the day, I walked up to the front doors of Marlton Middle School. Handmade
signs from the students hailed me. Signs and posters in the hallways welcomed
me. And as the students filed into the library for my talks, they knew my name.
Some waved, others were already asking questions.
For a guy without many fans, I was a celebrity in Marlton. And who
better to be fans than students? Who can you still reach with words and good
will and support? Who is worth urging on and encouraging? They were. They are.
All of them.
These past couple years, I’ve met dozens of folks and gained a few fans
along the slow, uphill slog to finding readers. But in Marlton, they were there
for the taking, ready for me and eager to hear about life as an author. And
afterward, as part of my day that set up by Janice Urban—Librarian
Extraordinare—I went to the local Barnes and Noble for a signing. Many of the
students arrived at the bookstore and other students from other schools were
there, too. It was an unbelievable day.
All in all, I sold a bunch of books and had a 14-hour day that was one
of the best I’ve had in a very, very long time. Why? No, not because of the
sales or because I came away with a dozen or more fans. It’s because of the
kids—the students—who were the best audience I’ve ever had. They asked great
questions, they were interested, and they churned in their seats to ask more
questions and tell me things about their favorite books. And in the end, I realized
that reaching these students was a purpose all by itself for a new author. If
you can get just a few to be readers and just a few more to be fans, then
success is within reach.
During the day, I remember being a high schooler wishing to be an
author. If I’d had the opportunity just one day to speak with just one author—one
struggling, new author—and hear what life was like and what writing was truly
about, well, that day would have been the best in my life. It never happened to
me. But in Marlton, I cannot tell you (you’d never believe me anyway) how many
students came up to speak with me after my talk and said just that—that talking
with me was a huge thing for them. Some wanted to be writers. All wanted to
just be readers and read everything they could. So many just wanted to hear
from someone—other than their teachers and parents—who cared enough to share a
little life with them.
Their wall posters and greetings said it all.
But you know the biggest personal thrill I received? It was at Barnes
and Noble when a half-dozen students came in with their parents to see me and
buy my books. Oh, it wasn’t because they bought my books. It was because they
cared enough about books and writing to travel across town and come talk to me
a little more after school. There were photographs and little chats,
handshakes, and some stories about where my stories come from. There were more
questions and them telling me of their favorite book—not mine but one day maybe—and
how much they loved the bookstore and how many books they bought. So many of
these kids told me that they cannot wait to go to the bookstore each week and
check out all the books.
Wait, what? Can’t wait to go to a bookstore and check out the books?
Hello, America, there is hope for our country yet. Forget the video games.
Forget the T.V. and forget the internet. Kids still cannot wait to get to a
bookstore and meet a struggling, unknown author like me.
And that, sports fans, is exactly what being an author is all about for
me. It’s the author’s life I craved and didn’t even know until last week—meeting
young readers who “can’t wait to get to the bookstore and check out the books.”
It’s their love of stories. It’s the kids. The students. The families and
teachers who believe that books are the key to our world—as I do.
And before I made the four hour drive home, I got oen last huge
surprise. During the school talks, I gave the students a little quiz: What was
the most important thing in the world they could all do—equally among
themselves of different ages, races, backgrounds, genders, and so on—to be
successful. Each group—four of them throughout the day all got it—read. And in Barnes and Noble, late in
the evening as I was about to leave, one student from Marlton Middle School
came up to me with Dad and told me she was in one of my talks. She turned to
her dad and said, “And being a reader will make me successful. I love to read.”
Thank you Marlton Middle School. Thank you Cherokee High School. Thank
you Janice Urban. Thank you Lisa Bakanas and Lisa Kapenstein. The fate of our
world is with those students. And so far, they’re passing with flying colors.
We’ll again chat next month …
Tj O’CONNOR IS THE GOLD MEDAL WINNER OF
THE 2015 INDEPENDENT PUBLISHERS BOOK AWARDS (IPPY) FOR MYSTERIES. He is the
author of Dying to Know, Dying for the
Past, and Dying to Tell, available
in bookstores and e-books from Midnight Ink. He is currently working on a
traditional mystery and a new thriller. Tj is an international security
consultant specializing in anti-terrorism, investigations, and threat
analysis—life experiences that drive his novels. With his former life as a
government agent and years as a consultant, he has lived and worked around the
world in places like Greece, Turkey, Italy, Germany, the United Kingdom, and
throughout the Americas—among others. He was raised in New York's Hudson Valley
and lives with his wife and Lab companions in Virginia where they raised five
children. Dying to Know is also the 2015 Bronze Medal winner of the Reader’s Favorite Book Review Awards, a
finalist for the Silver Falchion Best
Books of 2014, and a finalist for the Foreword
Review’s 2014 INDIEFAB Book of the Year Award.
Learn about Tj’s world at:
1 comment:
Yay, Marlton! That sounds heavenly!
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