Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Smitten. Or, How the Mountain Went to Muhammad




That title about sums it up.  I met a literary hero of mine today, the man who wrote the best book out of the last couple hundred or so that I've read.  I am in deep smit, as a friend of mine says.  My colleagues, Joan and Emily, and I traveled with about 300 books to Boston today so that we could get them signed for our First Editions CLub (FEC).  Abraham Verghese wrote an amazing first novel (he's written two previous memoirs), but beg and plead as we did, we weren't able to schedule a reading at our store.  His book is a big to-do this season and every major store was clamoring for him.  Being off the beaten Boston-NYC-Washington DC path as we are, we didn't really stand a chance.  Well, if Muhammad can't come to the mountain, the mountain must find a way to go to Muhammad.  Hence packing up the car and makin
g the roadtrip today, meeting up with two sales reps from Random House, and getting Commonwealth Hotel's security team to help us maneuver two flatbeds' worth of books up to Verghese's hotel room.  The day was just about perfect as far as I'm concerned: a few hours of booktalk, a nice lunch, visiting a really nice bookstore for the first time (the Wellesley Booksmith), and, of course, going all fangirl over meeting Mr. Verghese.  He was as lovely as can be, gracious and engaging, soft-spokenly charming.  In a word, delightful.  He also happened to mention that somebody at Knopf had shown him my earlier blog post in which I gushed about his book, and he even joked that he had taken extra care shaving this morning before meeting his fan.  

You know how every once in a while you read a book that you want to tell everybody about?  Cutting for Stone is like that for me.  It's really everything that a great epic novel should be, with incredibly sharp observations on the human condition, realistic and complicated characters and their interpersonal relationships, all set against the wider background of important world events, with nuanced social commentary as a constant undercurrent.  I loved it.  And I have the feeling that it's a book I may turn to again & again.  But in the meantime, go down to your local independent bookstore or library to secure your own copy of Cutting for Stone.  I'm serious--the time you invest reading it (it ain't short, that's for sure!) will heap dividends upon you.  

p.s.  my apologies to Emily RM for duplicating so much of her post in mine, but it took me a  while to get home and get my thoughts sorted out and i wrote mine before realizing she 
had posted.  but really, anything regarding Verghese or his new novel is worth saying twice.  :)



This picture is of Mr. Verghese at his desk with Ann, our Random House sales rep, standing behind him. 


Here's a photo of us in Verghese's room, with hotel security coming through the door to help us get the 30 boxes of signed books back down the freight elevator.  L-R: me, Mr. Verghese, Emily RM, and Joan




~Emily C.

2 comments:

Ann Kingman said...

For me, the best part was that Dr. Verghese wanted photos with you guys, on his own camera. I thought that was so cool!

He might now officially be my favorite author ever.

The Odyssey Bookshop said...

No apologies necessary, Em! We both had a fantastic day and every right to blog about it.