It's nice to be published. Another one of my short stories made the grade in an anthology by a new publishing company formed by four writers and academics during the pandemic, and it's a good-looking book, full of fiction, photography, poetry and art with strong links to Indiana. It pays in street cred and an author's copy, but hey, it's not like anyone else was running after my typewriter, waving cash. The fictional stereotype aside, writing isn't a job so much as it is something to do while starving (unless you have a day job, in which case you do the day job instead of writing).
The publishers have a launch party coming up, which promises to be a nice time with a little public (or at least peer) recognition for the contributors.
It's at very much the wrong time and place for me -- over an hour away, on a day when Tam has a paying work commitment to be elsewhere. So I'm going to have to miss it.
The event would have been difficult. I prefer to be a background lurker, a listener and not a talker. On most subjects, I couldn't carry my end of an in-person conversation even if I had a spare hat to carry it in. But it would have been useful, a chance to observe people interacting while claiming to work for the caterer or cleaning crew.*
Oh, well.
NOTE: Due to my employer's strict social media policy, I cannot share the title of the book. This blog only exists because I have been able to maintain reasonable anonymity.
______________________
* True fact: my work ID badge carries the title "Maintenance Technician," and if I forget and wear it outside the building, when people ask about my Exciting Media Job, I explain that I help clean the place up. It's, er, not untrue.
Update
1 year ago

5 comments:
Even after my promotion from Maintenance Technician to Assistant Chief Engineer, when people ask what I do, I tell them I work on everything from transmitters to toilets. I don't do it every day, but last year, I helped our building maintenance guy hang toilets and reinstall partitions after a restroom remodel.
Congratulations on the publishing.
Congrats! I once had a poem published; still waiting on the royalties decades later.
Congratulations, Roberta! I've never had a use for anyone who acted like a Prima Donna; thus, I loved your footnote. Carry on!
As a culture, we don't treat writers especially well -- but poets fare worst of all. It's shocking that even the best poets must have a day job.
Post a Comment