183 lines
8.5 KiB
Groff
183 lines
8.5 KiB
Groff
B O O K 'E M
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Volume one Number 1
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Author: Caroline Kent e-mail: caro@freenet.fsu.edu
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Copyright (c) 1995 by Caroline Kent. All Rights Reserved.
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"Hi everyone! Welcome to the premiere issue of "Book 'Em,"
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an informal e-zine that is written especially for bookstore
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lovers. I have been a bookseller for almost four years and I'd
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like to share some of my thoughts and experiences with you."
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(I glance at my watch)
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"If I don't hurry, I'm going to be late for work. Why don't
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you come along with me to "Book 'Em" and we'll chat some more?"
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(I drive to the store with a caravan of cars following me.
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Upon arriving, I lead everyone through the front door. A large
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stack of boxes is being unloaded from a truck)
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"A lot of you probably think that a bookstore is a quiet,
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dull place where the most exciting event of the year is the
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delivery of the newest release by John Grisham . . ."
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(I slit open one of the boxes and peek inside)
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"Oh, it's here! `The Rainmaker' is here!"
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(I dance around the store and do cartwheels in the aisles.
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Breathlessly, I return to the box, take out a copy, and start to
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read. Someone clears their throat and I look up)
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"Oh, forgive me . . . I just had to read the first
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page . . . for selling purposes, you know."
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(I take the book and place it in the front window and return
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to my guests)
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"Now, what were we discussing . . . oh yes, excitement in a
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bookstore . . ."
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(I am interrupted by a crash from the spot where I had just
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placed the book)
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"Uh, excuse me for just a moment . . ."
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(I go over to the window where two old ladies are in a
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tug-of-war over "The Rainmaker")
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"May I help you?" I ask, trying in vain to keep the two
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battling biddies apart.
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"I spotted it first, it's mine," biddy number one screams
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as she tries to pull the book out of biddy number two's hands.
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"She may have spotted it first, but I got to it before her,"
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yells biddy number two. She yanks the book out of the other
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biddy's hands and tumbles backward onto the floor.
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"I got it, it's mine," she cackles with glee, clutching the
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war-torn book to her heaving bosom.
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"Ladies, ladies," I manage at last. "There are plenty of
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copies for both of you."
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"She can have that one," biddy number one announces,
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straightening her rumpled print dress. "I don't want my John
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dirtied by her grimy fingers." With a yank to her support
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stockings, she strolls off, oblivious to her competitor
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who is kissing the back cover photo of John Grisham . . .
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(Dusting myself off, I return to my guests)
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"Now, let me see if I can think of something exciting . . .
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hmm . . . well, on occasion we do get to rub elbows with
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celebrities. Did I tell you that John Grisham graced our store
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with his presence?"
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(There are a few oohs and aahs)
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"Actually, we only saw his car . . ."
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(There are a few ohs)
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"Here's the story . . ."
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A Time To Read
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When I came across John Grisham's e-mail address in the
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book, "E-Mail Addresses Of The Rich And Famous," I sent a letter
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of admiration and extended an invitation to visit the store at
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his convenience. I received a polite reply informing me that
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the person I had written to was not THE AUTHOR, John Grisham. I
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read between the lines and realized he was telling me that he WAS
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John Grisham but wanted to keep his e-mail address a secret to
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protect himself from fanatics, harassers, and other such
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admirers. The name John Grisham was just a cover. Clever . . .
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I forgot all about the letter until one day when I noticed a
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Mercedes Benz parked across the street with the license plate
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GRISHAM. My heart began to beat in anticipation of HIS arrival.
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I checked the stock level of each Grisham book, hoping we'd have
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enough to supply the millions of salivating fans who would line
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the streets for miles to obtain an autographed copy of their
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favorite title. I discovered that our inventory consisted of two
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copies of "A Time To Kill," three copies of "The Firm," three
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copies of "The Client," and a whopping six copies of "The
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Chamber." That should hold us for about . . . five seconds.
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However, articles of clothing and body parts could be suggested
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as alternative autographing material.
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Sweating profusely, knowing HE would emerge from the car at
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any second, I debated whether I should alert the local
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authorities. Mass hysteria was liable to break out once the word
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spread of his arrival. As I was dialing the police, the Mercedes
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pulled into the street and drove off in a cloud of literary dust.
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Disappointed, I tried to console myself with the thought that
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perhaps his brief but memorable visit would be noted in a chapter
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of his next book . . . "A Time To Read."
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(So close yet so far, I think dreamily. Suddenly, I realize
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that my guests are still here and come back down to earth)
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"Well, John Grisham may not have actually been IN the store
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but O.J. . . ."
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(My words are cut short by exclamations of "You're kidding!"
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and sarcastic remarks such as "What did he buy, a book on
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knives!")
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"EXCUSE ME!"
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(The commotion dies down)
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"Thank you."
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(I continue)
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"O.J. Simpson didn't actually visit but a lovely lady who
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is a very good friend of a man who was in love with O.J.'s
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brother's wife did and we got to see a picture of her friend
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holding a picture of O.J. and Nicole. I nearly fainted from the
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thrill of it . . ."
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(I pick up a copy of "I Want To Tell You" and brush my
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fingers across O.J.'s face. Someone coughs and I replace the book
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on the shelf)
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"Many of our books deal with current events, such as the
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O.J. Simpson trial, so it's important that I keep up-to-date on
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what's going on in the outside world. You may think that
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booksellers live in their own little world of fictitious
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characters battling evil forces in faraway lands but not me, no
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siree. Why, just the other day when a customer purchased a copy
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of Barbara Bush's biography, I told her what a fine job her
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husband was DOING as president!"
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(I smile proudly)
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"Here are some more examples of why "ESPN" is my middle
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name . . ."
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While I Was Sleeping
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Customers assume that bookstore employees know the name and
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author of every book that was published since the stone age. We
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are also expected to keep up-to-date on who is writing what and
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the exact month, day, and minute it will be out on the shelves.
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And of course, we are presumed to be in-the-know on all the
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nonfiction titles, authors, and subjects that are hot, hip and in
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demand . . . NOT!
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As most laboring Americans will attest, work tends to leave
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little time for the real world. For me, headline news is often an
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announcement that there are fifty boxes to unpack rather than who
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got shot, flooded, or elected President. America could be seized
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by aliens and I'd never know it unless one of them came in the
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store and bought a book. So, sometimes you just have to fake
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your knowledgeability . . .
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"Do you have Faye Resnick's book?" a man asked me last
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November.
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I stood there for a moment, trying to place the name. I
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knew that I had heard it somewhere as it sounded very familiar.
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"Is that a local author?" I asked. I almost crawled beneath
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a shelf when the man replied:
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"She's the author of the Nicole Brown Simpson book."
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I vowed never to let myself be embarrassed like that again . . .
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"Do you have the book, `Sins Of The Mother'?" asked a
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couple, two months later.
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I pondered the title for a second, hoping that something
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would click in my mind. Finally, I opened my mouth and said:
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"That's fiction, right?"
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"It's the book by Susan Smith, the South Carolina mother who
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drowned her two little boys," the woman replied. I excused myself
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and hid in the bathroom until they left.
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If I this ever happens again, I just tell everyone that I've
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been conducting research on plant growth in Antarctica . . .
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(I peek my head outside the bathroom door)
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"Is it safe to come out?"
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(Someone nods and I emerge and pick up a stack of books)
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"Well, folks, I'd love to gab some more but my boss wants me
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to build a prison cell out of `The Chamber.'" I've really
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enjoyed sharing a little of my "book life" with you. Why don't
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you come back next month and I'll tell you another fascinating
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story or two.
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To remember the name of this e-zine, just think of any
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police officer on television and the words that he or she says as
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they handcuff the bad guy . . . Book 'Em."
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