Category Archives: Publishing

Aromas Now and Then

The air of the city smelled like hot dogs yesterday as I made my way to Bryant Park in a spattering rain.

Luckily there was a tent set up for the Reading Room, an area of the park along 42nd Street where I took part in a panel with three other debut novelists: Cristina Alger, Karl Taro Greenfeld and Karen Walker Thompson. They were each of them charming and thoughtful, so I tried to live up to their example, and the event went well.

I wonder what the air of New York smelled like in August 1664? Waffles? Manure? Clover?

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Reading Room/Word for Word Event

Please join me and some other great new fiction writers at the

 Bryant Park Reading Room

Word for Word Author Event

Debut Novelists Panel:

Cristina Alger, Karl Taro Greenfeld, Karen Walker Thompson & Jean Zimmerman

Hosted by Catherine Chung

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

12:30pm – 1:45pm

Bryant Park Reading Room (behind the New York Public Library on 42nd Street)

The Darlings Cristina AlgerTriburbia: A Novel author Karl Taro GreenfeldThe Age of Miracles Karen Walker Thompson, and The Orphanmaster Jean Zimmerman tell all on what it’s like to be new writers on the author’s block. Hosted by Catherine ChungForgotten Country.

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Iconography/Orphanmaster

Watchung Booksellers in Montclair last night was cool, with a crack of thunder and streaks of lightning out the window just as I was reading a scary passage from the book.

A lot of people wanted to know where I did the research for The Orphanmaster. The easy answer is: The Iconography of Manhattan Island, the brilliant compendium of all maps, views and information about New York from long before it was called New York. Published in 1926 and still available in research libraries (and my home library, I’m happy to say), it is a Manhattan history lover’s dream. And did I mention that the huge tome’s creator was I.N. Phelps Stokes, subject along with his beautiful wife Edith Minturn of my recent book Love, Fiercely: A Gilded Age Romance. Theirs was a charmed, fabulously wealthy life that had impossible highs and ultimately spiraled down into difficulty and poverty, largely because of Stokes’ obsessive love affair with The Iconography. The fact remains that without The Iconography there would be no Orphanmaster. I obtained so much period detail from this masterful, 30-pound set of volumes.

An Original Set, circa 1926

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The Orphanmaster in New Jersey

New Jerseyites! Tomorrow at 7:00 pm I will be visiting Watchung Booksellers in Montclair for a talk and signing. Please join us, it’s an excellent bookstore, a nice place to visit on a summer evening to browse for those books you didn’t know you needed. And it’ll be fun to converse with you about The Orphanmaster, how I came to write a novel, how I do my research, how I get going in the morning and stuff like that.

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USA Today Visits Cabin World

USA Today goes to press today (online edition) with what I think is a pretty sharp profile of me as well as a portrait of Cabin World!

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Hello, Savage Girl

After a string of many unbirthdays I am finally having my birthday, a double-digit extravaganza which I am so far marking with house cleaning, phone interviews and pancakes at a local diner with Maud.

Really, the finest present I have received so far is yesterday’s news that Savage Girl has been accepted for publication by Viking.

Savage Girl begins in 1875 in Virginia City, Nevada, at the height of the silver boom. A teenaged girl is being exhibited as a sideshow attraction — promoters advertise her as a wild child raised by wolves. An extremely wealthy couple comes from New York City to inspect their mines; they adopt the girl and bring her back to Manhattan with the idea of raising her up as a debutante. Murder and mayhem follow.

The novel is narrated by Hugo Delegate,  a sensitive, brooding 22-year-old anatomy student and son of the wealthy mine owners, who  gets drawn into the hectic events surrounding the savage girl’s immersion in New York’s Gilded Age.

Everyone involved is so excited to see the public birth of Hugo and Savage Girls’ story.

Happy birthday.

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Chappaqua Talk

I’ll be giving a talk with slides about The Orphanmaster at the Chappaqua Library tonight at 7:30. Hillary and Bill are welcome!

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Connecticut Book Night

Fine breezy evening in Madison, Connecticut. Ions off the Long Island Sound buffering my face in the oh-so-genteel seaside bar.

Then a packed house at RJ Julia, one of the finest independent bookstores in the land. I received a lovely introduction by Roxanne, the shop’s owner, and the choice of any book in the store to take home as a gift. Perspicacious questions from the audience. A sore hand from signing, always a good thing.

Earlier in the day I found out I will be doing a show with Free American Radio, which goes out to 25 stations nationwide.

After my talk a bunch of us, including some of my bestest friends, went out to a completely classic clam shack and had fire-roasted clams and lobsters, maybe the tastiest shellfish I’ve ever consumed, as the sun went down and the night turned blue. The lobster came freely out of its shell as though it intended to be eaten.

When I got home I listened to a cd sent to me by a  lively dj in Boston, an interview we’d done recently, that was a gas to hear even if I did sound foolish more than once.

Oh yeah, and I got an offer on my beloved Savage Girl.

More on that subject later.

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The Orphanmaster in Summer

I’ve been too busy relaxing to post much in the past few days — too much novel reading, too much Hudson swimming, too much movie going and garden weeding to put words on the screen. The strawberries are in and need trimming!

The Orphanmaster is out and about. I’ll do a newspaper interview/photo shoot tomorrow and a book store event later in the week. For now, I’m hoping people are going in to stores and asking for the book, and once they get it that they like it and tell all their friends. And blog! I might take a little break, but I want the novel to race ahead.

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Bank Square Books

Bank Square Books in Mystic, Connecticut bills itself as a “locally owned and fiercely independent book store” and as soon as I arrived I understood the truth of this description. Mystic is undergoing upheaval as its main thoroughfare gets chopped up and repaved to accommodate sunken power lines. The place is a mess and the worst of it is that many of the local stores find themselves cut off from customers day after day during this the peak of the summer season. Nautical-themed polo shirts and scrimshaw knick knacks, off limits, unless you want to clamber over unpaved sidewalk areas to get inside a shop.

I visited Bank Square to present about The Orphanmaster and heard that, just the previous day, there had been literally no access to the store. A pit marked the front entrance and a pile of debris the back door. Still, as a testament to Americans’ — even vacationing Americans’ —  love of bound books, the place was thrumming with activity. In cases representing every genre, literary fiction, mysteries, history, biography, poetry, you name it, readers were handling books, perusing them, taking them over to the cash register and paying good money for them.

Given the publishing industry’s concerns about book buying, the national economy and the physical upheaval in Mystic, owners Annie and Patience at Bank Square are fierce indeed.

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The New York Times & New York City

My interview with Shelf Awareness: scroll down.

Gil and I made a cool automotive loop around hot Manhattan today to visit bookstores so I could sign stock.

First, outside The Corner Bookstore on Madison and 93rd Street, a Jeep plowed into our parked car, crunching it, and we had to wait for a plow. Then, with a rental, we resumed.

Some stores had over a dozen, some had one. A few managers said they were selling out and were about to get in more. A very interesting exercise, fueled by far  too much iced coffee. Along the way I devised a new signature, the same as always but punctuated by the witika sign.

Oh, and did I mention that The New York Times Book Review ran its glowing piece on The Orphanmaster today?

p.s. and if this pertains to my novel I don’t know how: I found a bullfrog trapped inside the front screen door this morning, about the size of my hand. It energetically hopped away when I cracked the door, so heavy I could almost hear it land. Oliver either didn’t know or didn’t care that a frog existed temporarily in cabin world.

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New York Times Book Review Praises The Orphanmaster

Marilyn Stasio of The New York Times Book Review praises The Orphanmaster in her Crime column!

She calls it “the ideal historical mystery for readers who value the history as much as the mystery.”

Pretty much what I always say to describe the book, history-mystery with some supernatural thrown in.

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Washington Talking Book, Talking About The Orphanmaster

This a very interesting place, the Washington Talking Book & Braille Library (WTBBL), in Seattle, and I had the pleasure of a conversation there with Ms. Addi Brooks. Here it is.

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CBS on The Orphanmaster

My interview with Jeff Glor of AuthorTalk appears on CBS.com today!

Check it out.

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The Orphanmaster Celebrates

A blast. It was just great at Barnes & Noble looking into that sea of curious faces, so nice, as I put up the pictures of maps and muffs. So very nice. I am going to eliminate nice from my vocabulary, it doesn’t do things justice. Either that or I am going to make more use of nice, as it describes most everything.

We partied afterward at The Dublin House on 79th Street, and raised an O’Douls — at least I did — to all the great (nice) people who have been supportive as The Orphanmaster came into being. I am grateful.

The bartender at the pub was not nice, he was grouchy, and he made me appreciate now nice grouchy can be sometimes.

Now on to a panoply of radio interviews (today), Connecticut and New York events, Arizona and then the great unwashed of the Midwest. Having weathered the distracting beauty of the West Coast, I am ready for this next chapter.

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