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Leslie

Teachers and YA librarians

If you are a teacher or a YA librarian, I’d love to participate in a Q&A with your class or teen reading group. Feel free to email me, leslie (at) lesliestella (dot) com, and we can discuss setting up an email interview. I’m happy to answer any questions about Permanent Record, writing in general, or publishing.

I also have 3 hardcover books left, so I’m glad to donate a copy to the first 3 people to contact me.

Cheese Shop

A friend pointed out to me today that trying to buy my book in Barnes & Noble reminded him of a Monty Python skit, where John Cleese tries his hardest to buy something from a cheese shop that doesn’t actually carry any kind of cheese.

Chicago Reader interview

Here’s a link to an interview I did with my old pal, Jerome Ludwig, at the Chicago Reader. The Reader has always been really supportive of me, and I’m grateful for that. Whenever I reach out to anyone at the Trib or the Sun-Times, I’m just screaming into the void…

Book signings are exercises in humility

Chicago-area folks: I’m doing an event tomorrow, April 21, in Glenview. I’ll be reading from Permanent Record, followed by a Q&A where I will be forced to answer your questions, even the embarrassing ones.

I remember once I did a reading for The Easy Hour at Barbara’s Bookstore at the old Wells St. location. The setting for The Easy Hour was the Bridgeport neighborhood of Chicago, and after I read an excerpt from the book, a man stood up and said, “How can you say there are Italians in Bridgeport? It’s Irish! Of course now there’s a lot of Polish people and…and…Hispanos…” His voice trailed off here, this master of race relations, reflecting on the melting pot of Chicago. This same guy later on asked, “Your book sounds like it’s a comedy. Do you find any redeeming value in comedy?” Sweating, I took a deep breath and said, “Next?”

At a reading I did for Unimaginable Zero Summer, this time at the old Borders that was on Michigan Ave. (sadly, my reminisces are peppered with phrases like, “the old bookstore that is no longer there”), I finished reading my excerpt and asked if there were questions. A lady asked about my influences in writing children’s books, whereby I had to explain that my book—from which I had just read—was not in fact a children’s book, but for adults.

At a reading I did at a Border’s in Madison, I sat at a table, waiting for people to show up. Customers walked by and asked me where the gardening books were. I directed them as best as I could and shared my tips on mulching roses. Three people eventually came. One of them was an elderly man who had been sent there by some friends of mine. He was their uncle and afterward we sat around and talked and he told me some incredible stories of when he served as a fighter pilot during World War II. I may have only sold 4 books (my husband felt sorry for me and bought one), but it was one of the best times I ever had at a signing.

I did an event once for my first book, Fat Bald Jeff, at the Printer’s Row Book Fair in Chicago. I was on a panel with a couple of really great writers, including John Searles. The woman who introduced us to the crowd, a harridan from NewCity Chicago who shall remain nameless, was the same person who interviewed me for her paper—an interview where 1) she arranged to call me at a certain time on a certain day, and then promptly forgot, making me wait around for hours until I finally called her, where she merely said, “Oh yeah, I forgot about this,” and 2) she lambasted my book. At Printers Row, she introduced John Searles and his book with well-deserved admiration, bordering on gushing, and then she turned to me and said, “And this is Leslie Stella, who seems to have written some sort of comedy.”

Someone recently asked me about “swag” I would have at this upcoming reading. What can I give away? I’m not good at this sort of marketing. I guess I can give away my business card, which doubles as a bookmark. I should have made cookies…

Anyway, there are more examples of the fun things people come up with at these events, but why not come and try to embarrass me yourself?

Sunday, April 21, 2:00 pm
Barbara’s Bookstore—The BookMarket
2651 Navy Blvd. in The Glen Town Center
Glenview, Illinois 60026
Reading and signing

Linus’s Blanket

How could you not like a blog with that title? This was a fun interview from Nicole at Linus’s Blanket. It’s almost like a DIY interview: Nicole offers up 20 questions, and her subject can pick as many of them to answer as he or she likes.

PageTurners

The blog PageTurners gave a great review to Permanent Record. They’ve also posted a Q&A we did and are doing a giveaway of the ARC. They have the prettiest artwork at the top of their page … I can’t stop staring at it.

Chasing the Crazies

This Q&A (in Amy Trueblood’s weekly feature “Writer Odyssey Wednesday”) was a great experience for me because 1) Amy latched on to what I view as the one outstanding asset that every writer needs to possess: perseverance, and 2) I got to talk about two people who championed my writing despite many obstacles: my tenacious and fiercely loyal agent, Lucy Childs, and my first agent and forever friend, Amye Brewer.

The Reading Geek

I recently did a Q&A with the lovely Traci at The Reading Geek. How can you not love a blog with that name?

Reading/signing

Chicago-area peeps: I will be doing a reading and signing at Barbara’s Bookstore—The BookMarket (2651 Navy Blvd. in The Glen Town Center, Glenview, Illinois) on Sunday, April 21, at 2:00 p.m.  Show up!