Okay, I’m going to be a bit less here for a while. For one thing, I think I’m fairly toasted from the election season. My blood pressure hasn’t been this consistently tasked since, I don’t know. And the aftermath has gone from bad to silly. Sure, I could probably comment on the silly (oh, the stupid—it hurts precious, it hurrrtsss), but why? Just seeing it should be enough and I don’t need to get angry all over again every day.
Look, guys (yeah, you old white farts who seem to think the only two things of value in this country are money and the military), Romney lost. He lost because people didn’t like him. Although, to be fair, a lot of people apparently did like him. Maybe. Maybe it was just that a lot of people don’t like Obama. But apparently not enough to vote for Romney. Anyway, you seem to be trying to find every other reason under the sun (or under a rock) to explain that so you don’t have to face the most likely reason—your policy positions don’t appeal, Romney didn’t have enough “charm” to overcome his deficiencies as a candidate, and a majority of people, in spite of a long campaign of disinformation, defamation, and distraction, think Obama should have another four years to see what he started through. Romney lost because voters preferred something else. It’s that simple. You want to change that for next time? Do something about the nonsense in your party, grow up, and stop fooling around with issues that piss people off. Then come back and talk to us.
Also, it is not the end of the world. It’s not even the end of the world as you know it. Obama is not the anti-christ, he’s not a socialist, he’s not going to end liberty (I actually saw that declaration often, that his re-election would be the end of our freedom, and I couldn’t help but wonder: what do you people think is going to happen? And ancillary to that is: just what can’t you do today that you could do five years ago, other than maybe afford the mortgage on your McMansion? Jeez, folks, get a grip!) In four years you’ll have another shot at trying out your vision, the election will happen, and people will vote. America will go on.
Anyway, that’s not what I wanted to talk to you about today. Ahem!
I have a new job. Newish, anyway. I’ve been doing some on-again off-again work for Left Bank Books this past year. They opened a downtown St. Louis location a few years back and it’s been taking a while for people to become aware of it. So I took walks around, meeting people, letting them know the good news, that they have a full service—independent—bookstore right in their midst. Now and then, I’d repeat, remind, find some new folks, and it seemed to have a small effect. Business picked up.
I’ve now joined them as part of their regular staff. Part time. I’m still trying to launch a literary career, after all, and I need time to, you know, be literary. But how cool is this, that I get to work in a bookstore now?
Peruse their webpage. These folks do a lot. Many, many author events, lots of programs, reading groups. Now, obviously, to do cool things requires cool people, and they have more than enough. The last few weeks I’ve been trained by some and they rate high on my cool people meter.
So if you wonder at my lack of comment here or you can’t get me on the phone as often as you might like, well, this is why. As we wait for the fuse to catch on the rocket of my best sellerdom (yeah, right), I’ll be there, wandering amid the shelves and offerings and drooling (dryly, dryly, can’t get the pages wet) and wondering why I won’t live long enough to read all the really great books.
Oh, yeah, I’m still writing stories. I have a little news on that front as well, but I’ll save it for later.
So have a good rest of the year, check back from time to time (I’m a little compulsive about this, I will be posting something), and maybe if any of you are in St. Louis, come on by Left Bank.
Welcome aboard, Mark! There is more than one way for a bookstore to support writers!