I remember when my firstborn book was delivered amid the
mundane mayhem of domestic life. It was a Saturday afternoon and the
carpet-fitters, having just conspicuously botched an ill-fitting piece of
carpet around the fireplace, then decided they needed to completely remove the
front door of our house, just as the postman arrived with the long-anticipated parcel.
Of course, in the confusion, I wasn't able to savour that special moment when
an author's first book is published. Later in the day, I tried to take time out
to admire the look and feel of the finished product, but then life got in the way
again as my teenage son announced he had just had his bike stolen. A day that had
begun with the chaos of incompetent carpet-fitters ended with police officers'
boots on our new carpet as they took a statement.
My latest book arrived, thankfully, amid less drama. Publishing
nowadays is a very global affair so the book had already travelled halfway
round the globe before landing eventually at my house. Commissioned - and written - in England, with series editors based in Switzerland and Denmark, contracts
were drawn up in Switzerland, copy-editing took place in India before the book
was printed in the Netherlands and dispatched from the distribution department
in Germany.
I arrived home from work to be told a parcel had gone to the
next-door neighbour. As I collected the package I resisted the temptation to brag
to the neighbour that this wasn't any old order of books - it was my new
book. Instead, I thanked her and returned home quietly to admire the new
arrival. My wife had thoughtfully decorated the house with congratulations
banners and balloons and my son had kindly made a playlist of celebratory songs
to mark the event. Even if there was no book-signing or fancy launch party at
least, this time, I was able to cherish my new book without the distractions of
carpet-fitters or bicycle thieves.
Reference
Germano, W. (2005). From Dissertation to Book.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
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