| FOR the past couple of weeks and for the
next few I'll be spending Sundays in the car, doing a
book tour of the country for my new novel All You Need
Is Love.
All the bookshops are open on Sundays coming up to
Christmas so the timing is ideal. My husband Pat does
the driving . . . I'm well able to drive myself, by the
way, it's just that he pulls up outside and double parks
and I can run in and do my thing and leave again without
the hassle of parking. When you have a book out, the
bookshops really are the key to sales and it's amazing
the difference that a bit of personal contact can
make.
Unless your publisher has bought into the whole
'three for two' promotion thing, and your book is piled
up on the tables near the front of the shop, it's easy
to get sidelined. I find that if I visit, and make the
effort to meet the people who own and work in the
bookshops, I'm more likely to find myself promoted from
the bottom shelf with the spine facing out to one of the
shelves near the door at eye level, with the cover on
display.
And I've a better chance of staying in the 'Just
Published' section for longer. I don't move my books
around in the shops myself, but certain members of my
family have been known to do it surreptitiously. I find
I end up doing quite a bit of clothes shopping as well
as promoting the book, because there's usually a nice
boutique somewhere near the bookshop and I have to go in
for a look.
When I'm not 'on tour' I have a lie in on Sunday. I
do some book reviewing so I stay in bed reading, which
is half work and half pleasure, or else proofing my own
work. We have a family mixed grill mid-morning, before
my son David heads off to work in a local restaurant.
He's at college during the week. Pat takes our other
son, Mark, off to soccer training and I have a couple of
hours to myself to write, or update my website (www.
marymalone. ie), or work on an article if I have a
deadline looming. I work in the Central Statistics
Office in Cork four days a week so I write on my day off
and every evening. All You Need Is Love is my second
novel and I found it much harder to write than the
first. It's set around the area in which we live . . .
Bandon/Courtmacsherry . . . and it's about drug use
among teenagers and the effect that it has on their
families and on the community. The main character is a
young woman journalist who is investigating the problem
and becomes aware that someone in her own immediate
family is involved. I became very aware of the
prevalence of drugs in rural areas a few years ago and
started taking an interest in the reports of court cases
in the locality. I suppose I did a lot of earwigging
around the place too! It was a surprise to me to learn
that drugs like ecstasy and hash are much cheaper than
drink and easily obtained by teenagers. Part of the
reason I found it harder to write is that the subject
matter is not attractive but the people in my writing
group have been very supportive and in the end it took
me about a year from start to finish.
On Sunday afternoons if the boys are not playing
matches, we often collect my mother, who lives nearby
and is a widow, and head into Kinsale for lunch. We
usually go to either the Trident or Fishy Fishy. I love
Kinsale, I could wander around for hours. Mum spends the
rest of the afternoon with us and we drop her back home
at around half past nine before heading to one of our
locals . . . either Cornie's in Newcestown or Hickey's
in Aherla . . . for a quiet glass of Guinness. I might
get a free one now that I've given them a mention!
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