Inspired by the adventures of
these guys, I hit the open road this afternoon to do some drop-in signings at bookstores in the Philly suburbs. Pessimist that I am, I expected to find zero (at worst) to two (at best) copies of my book at any given location. I expected that sales people would take one look at me and call for security, who would tune me up with brass knucks before depositing me in a dumpster behind the store. I expected small children to gather around me, laugh, poke me with sharp sticks.
What can I say? I write noir. This is what
noirists expect from life.
So imagine my surprise to find
at least two copies of my book in every store I visited today, and in some cases, many, many more. The official tally:
Number of stores visited: 7.
Number of books signed: 58.
Value of having your ego spared: priceless.
I started at 1 p.m. After elbowing my way past hungover groomsmen at the tuxedo rental place, I hit Route 1 South, took City Line Avenue to Route 30, turned left, headed for the Borders in Wynnewood, PA. During the drive, I developed a sudden and violent case of the hiccups. No idea what caused it; I suspect it was nerves. The only hiccup cure that works for me holding my breath until I'm ready to pass out. By the third or fourth time, the hiccups usually cease. However, it's generally not a good idea to deprive your brain of oxygen while operating a motor vehicle. So I tried the "holding my breath, junior" version, which meant slow and shallow breaths. Didn't work. I could see it now:
"Hi, my name is Duane HIC Swierczynski and I wrote HIC this novel and I was hoping I could HIC sign the copies you HIC have in HIC stock HIC... motherfucker!"God took pity on me; as I pulled into the parking lot, the hiccups were gone.
Inside, I found five copies of
The Wheelman: two in the mystery/thrillers section, and three out on the New Fiction display tables, which was cool. It was a shaky beginning. I forgot to ask the manager her name, and forgot to stick my little postcards in the books after signing them. And I think the manager forgot to put the "Autographed Copy" stickers on the book. But I was still working up my nerve, and still afraid the hiccups would return, so I left without saying anything.
Further up Route 30 is the Bryn Mawr Banes & Noble, where many fine mystery writers (Jim Born, John Connolly, Lee Child, among others) come to read when they're anywhere near Philadelphia. That's thanks to Kathy Siciliano, a manager who's a big mystery fan and past Bouchercon attendee. Kathy wasn't in the store today, but manager Celia was, and she happily brought out 14 copies of the book for me to sign. This time I remembered the postcards. I also (duh) remembered to ask Celia for her name. We had a nice chat, and I learned that the Bryn Mawr B&N; customers bought a lot of hardcover mysteries. I always knew I liked Bryn Mawr B&N; customers best.
Up the road a piece, the Borders in Bryn Mawr had four copies, tucked away in the mystery/thrillers section, and manager Greg was cool enough to a.) let me sign them, and b.) give me a great shortcut to my next destination, which was...
The King of Prussia Mall. Or maybe they call it the Mall at King of Prussia. All I know is it's a monster, and I parked at the end of the mall opposite Borders. And it was lonnnnnnnnnnnnnnng walk, let me tell ya. I crawled in, met manager Amanda, and signed four copies they had hanging out on the new fiction shelf.
Next, I hopped on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, which the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation seems to insist on rebuilding every two years. Took the 309 North exit, which is also in the process of being completely rebuilt, and made my way to the Borders in North Wales, Pennsylvania. Only two copies here, but I met store employee Jamie, who handles the new fiction tables. "You're in luck," he said. "A spot just opened up." So those signed babies ended up on the display table right in the front of the store. With postcards sticking out of them.
The biggest surprise, however, was when I stopped at the B&N; at Montgomery Square, which had stocked 19 copies. As I signed, I talked with manager Kathleen and employee Justin about
Sin City,
Reservoir Dogs (Kathleen thought
Dogs was too bloody; I told her she may not exactly enjoy
The Wheelman) and other local authors who have popped by the store in the past, including Sean "
Green Grass Grace" McBride. Despite the violent content of my book, Kathleen invited me to do an in-store signing in early December, during the holiday shopping season. I promised her I'd refrain from hacking off the ears of the patrons with a straight razor.
The sun was setting (friggin' Daylight Savings Time), and I was tired of driving, but I pulled it out for one last visit: the B&N; in Jenkintown. This was my second trip here. Two weeks ago, I dropped by to sign the nine copies they had in stock. I wondered: had any sold? Or were they being used to prop up the Sudoku paperbacks?
Turned out, only four remained, and in the meantime, the store had ordered 10 additional copies. Had a cool chat with manager Mike, another hardboiled mystery fan -- in fact, almost every manager I encountered told me they themselves were mystery fans, or that their customers bought a lot of mysteries.
Made it home by 5:30. I did a quick tally, and realized that I'd signed 135 books this weekend (58 today, 45 copies for M is For Mystery Bookstore in San Francisco and 32 for The Poisoned Pen in Arizona, both of which have named
The Wheelman as a monthly pick). All that, despite my hand being torn and broken from assembling that stupid IKEA thing.
It was a good day. But I couldn't see myself doing this every day for an extended period of time. What if the hiccups come back?