Anna David Can't Be BOUGHT (Or Can She?)
Thursday, May 21, 2009
So we haven't done an author Q/A around here for a long time, and despite the fact that I am so very wise, sagacious and all-knowing, I think it's time to mix it up. :) (Er, yeah, sarcasm, in case that doesn't translate.) So today I'm super-excited to have a Q/A with Anna David, author of the newly released BOUGHT and the previously released PARTY GIRL, which I very much enjoyed.
It was about a thousand times more difficult. I don’t know what your experience was but my first book flowed out of me like the words had just been sitting in the front of my brain, ready to be downloaded onto the keyboard at the earliest opportunity. It was like, “This novel thing is easy! Why do people say it’s so hard?” And then I started writing this book. Because my first novel was based so much on my own experiences and this one was basically an entire figment of my imagination – with bits from an investigative feature I’d done on high-class prostitution for Details – I struggled and struggled and struggled to find the story. I ended up taking the manuscript back from HarperCollins after they’d bought it and explaining that I wanted to do a page one rewrite. The books is 272 pages, and I barely want to think about how many pages were thrown out. 200? 500? I have no idea.
2) Any lessons learned along the way to publication or between books #1 and
#2?
I guess I would have leveled my expectations more. I hope I’m doing that this time (sometimes I don’t know that I’m not doing that until it’s too late, if that makes sense). When my first book came out, it felt like such an accomplishment, and I guess I thought my entire life was going to change as a result. Instead, I learned that hundreds of thousands of books are released every year and few make an impact or an actual impression on the world. This time, I’m enjoying the process more. Yes, I’m killing myself promoting this book, but it’s fun to be interviewed about your book and try to get people excited about it and plan parties for it, and I’m taking the time to remember that this is the celebratory part. All that it’s-the-journey-and-not-the-destination stuff.
3) You were open about your first novel, which I loved, btw, somewhat mirroring your own life. Where did the inspiration come for
Bought?4) You have a huge platform and are a media name: how did you go about
building this platform for yourself? A lot of Ask Allison readers are still
at the beginning stages of platform building, any specific tips?
5) You are a Twitter queen. (@annadavid) We've had a lot of debate here on
the blog as to the benefits (or not) of Twitter - where do you come down?
How do you use it?
When I meet people who say, “Yeah, I want to get into Twitter but it would be so much work,” I feel grateful for the fact that I actually enjoy doing it. It doesn’t feel like work to me. And I have connected with some of the nicest fans on there – I’m talking about people who have gone all out helping me get the word out about
Bought, created Iphone applications for my blog, edited together video clips of my appearances on shows…I’m telling you, the nicest people in the world. I’ve also gotten help on any number of things – hiring web developers, handling computer issues, even making my DVD player work when it was acting up. But I think it’s too soon to say for certain what the long-term benefits of Twitter are.6) You used to do a slew of celebrity interviews. Any favorites? Any great stories (even if names are withheld?!)? :)
I’ll tell you my least favorite: when I covered the Oscars for
Premiere, I was really nervous. I couldn’t believe I was standing at the Governor’s Ball. I went up to interview this French actress who had been nominated, and I was such a bundle of nerves, she accused me of not really being a journalist. When I swore that I was and asked her how she prepared for the night, she spat out, “I did the Alexander Technique” but she said it in this indecipherable French accent and at the time, I didn’t know what the Alexander Technique was. I asked her to clarify and she told me to get a dictionary and look it up, and then swept off. It was so traumatic that I actually fictionalized this incident and used it in Bought.
Books


Reader Comments (5)
Once again Allison, thanks for bringing another great book/author to my attention. My list of books to read is growing!! I can't wait to read "Bought", and I now have someone new to follow on Twitter! And who doesn't love making new friends? ;0)
Take care,
A
http://bigdreamswritecity.blogspot.com
This sounds like a fascinating novel, I'm just wondering if the cover is a reflection of a dark story?
I'm so excited to see Anna has a book 2! To debs past and future.
Sounds like a fun and juicy book. I went over to Anna's site to read the excerpt. Enjoyed it. Went right out to the bookstore to buy it, but they didn't have it in stock in any of the Borders in this area, then I was told according to their computers the book wasn't even published yet. Huh?! So then I called Barnes & Noble. Again not in stock in any of their stores in the area. They could order it, but expect a two-week wait. So I'm forced into delayed gratification by going the Amazon.com route. Arrgh! But it got me wondering about poor distribution. Even with a great promo/marketing or PR push, bad distribution can ruin an author's potential sales. Everyone isn't as persistent as I am. What's the deal here? Allison, maybe you can touch on this topic for your blog. How and when books get in which stores, their placement etc. I've heard authors say if they don't make it in Walmart or Target they expect to take a huge hit in their total sales. And that Amazon.com makes up a tiny slice of their total sales. --Marie
I found a copy of it at Barnes and Noble last weekend.