Showing posts with label Changing Hands Bookstore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Changing Hands Bookstore. Show all posts

April 10, 2010

Lunch with Author Robert Goolrick

Okay, so I didn't actually have lunch with him. I sat in the audience and ate while he talked and it was so entertaining! YD and I went to Changing Hands Bookstore in Tempe yesterday for an author's luncheon. Robert Goolrick discussed and read from "A Reliable Wife," currently number five on The New York Times Best Seller List. Here's a one minute video clip of Goolrick talking about the premise of this novel (sorry the picture quality isn't great):



"A Reliable Wife" is actually the first book he wrote, but his second published. According to Goolrick, his agent had sent it around to various publishers without any luck. Then he wrote his memoir, "The End of the World As We Know It," and Algonquin bought it in a week. He revisited Reliable with Algonquin, who then published it. Due to the state of publishing today, he feels that it's easier to sell a memoir than a first novel by an unknown author.


Here are some of the comments he made as audience members asked him questions ...

  • It's a story about bad people who become better people.
  • Regarding desire and sex as you age: When you're 30, you think by the time you're 40, it's all over. Then  you wake up at 45 and realize it's not over at all.
  • When an author is reading his work to people, it allows him to show the pace in which he meant it to be read.


  • He was an English major in college. Born in Virginia and raised in an old southern family ... drinking bourbon and telling anecdotes.
  • He writes the way he talks and believes storytelling should be as if you were having a conversation over dinner with someone.
  • His grandmother loved Charles Dickens and Jane Austen and he first read their books so he would have something to talk about with her. Then he came to love them as well, and learned from them.


  • On writing a novel: After a few months of torture, it clicks. Took him approximately 8 months to write Reliable. In the beginning, he worked in short spurts. He recommends going to bed while you still have something to say so that you have a diving point in the morning.
  • The story line in Reliable was based on a mythological story that ended badly for all (Phaedra, Theseus and Hyppolitus). Goolrick wrote hoping for a greater sense of redemption for his characters, "but you can't save everyone!"


  • Regarding the title, "A Reliable Wife": This book has been translated into French, but they had a difficult time with the title and ended up calling it "A Simple, Honest Wife," which he thought was funny because the French think the concept of a simple, honest wife is inconceivable.
  • He praised independent bookstores like Changing Hands for supporting new authors.

As he signed my book, I thanked him for coming to Arizona from New York and told him that I enjoyed his talk very much. He smiled sweetly and said, "And you got a sandwich, too!" ;-)


Since I haven't actually read the book yet, I'll have to post about it later. However, the book jacket description reads ...

He placed a notice in a Chicago paper, an advertisement for a "reliable wife." She responded, saying that she was "a simple, honest woman." She was, of course, anything but honest, and the only simple thing about her was her single-minded determination to marry this man and then kill him, slowly and carefully, leaving herself a wealthy widow. What Catherine Land did not realize was that the enigmatic and lonely Ralph Truitt had a plan of his own.

Doesn't that sound exciting?

http://robertgoolrick.com/


November 6, 2009

Pioneer Woman Cookbook Signing

I escaped the house-in-progress last night and went to the "Pioneer Woman Cooks" cookbook signing with my youngest daughter. We arrived at the Changing Hands Bookstore in Tempe just as it was about to begin at 7:00 instead of hours early, which we now know to do next time. We stood in line to buy our books and were assigned a letter code -- Group N -- for the actual signing. We were quite a ways from the action and the author, Ree Drummond, behind stacks of bookshelves so we couldn't really see anything while she spoke. Audience members asked her questions and she gave charming, funny answers. A child asked her if she had elephants. She said, "You know, until this very moment, I didn't realize that's what was missing from my life. We have horses and cows, but no elephants."
Once she sat down to begin signing, they announced that people with the letter A and anybody with children should get in line. At least an hour went by before they got to Group B. My daughter, who is currently working two jobs so believe me it was amazing that she even had last night off, was fading fast.

Ree Drummond, signing her cook book

Missy
Ree's sister-in-law, Missy, and mother-in-law, Nan, were wandering through the crowd, chatting, signing their photos in the book, taking pictures with people. They were gracious and provided a nice distraction from the wait -- for a while.
We were fortunate to have found a couple of chairs to park ourselves in and spent some time going through the cookbook. I will say this is one of the prettiest cookbooks -- lots and lots of gorgeous pictures of more than just food. There are many pictures of ranch life and animals and kids, family and friends. I know it's hard work, but it sure looks lovely in the photos and Ree is an amazing photographer.
Nan
I have already chosen a handful of recipes that I'm going to be trying out soon like the scones and chicken fried steak and jalapeño poppers and meatballs. My in-laws are coming for a 2-week visit around Thanksgiving so I'll have a captive audience to cook for. And I'm throwing a baby shower for a friend in December, so I'll be trying out recipes to serve for that as well. Missy said that when they hold their annual 4th of July get together, they make over 300 jalapeño poppers. Lots of food gets consumed on that ranch.
We lasted until 10:15 when they had made it to Group G and figured it would be at least midnight before they got close to our Group N. We ended up leaving our books to be signed and will pick them up today. The big bummer is that we didn't actually get to meet Ree or have a picture taken with her. But I am truly excited about this gorgeous cookbook and wish her and her family the best of luck on the book tour and in the future. She mentioned that she would be writing another book on her love story with her marlboro man rancher hubby. Sounds scrumptious!
Visit her wonderful website at http://thepioneerwoman.com/