Maybe This Time: Chapter 2-Scene 1: Andie vs Mrs. Crumb

Aug252010

The first chapter to Maybe This Time is up on the website, but since I want to go that extra mile for the Argh People (that would be you), I’m posting the three scenes from the second chapter here for the next three days.

Chapter Two

“You’re late,” a voice snapped from behind Andie, and she turned and saw a plump, overly powdered, elderly woman, her pale, watery, protruding eyes hostile under her improbably red-orange updo, her red cupid’s-bow mouth obviously painted on with a brush.

“Yes,” Andie said, putting her suitcase down on the floor. “You must be Mrs. Crumb. I’m–”

“Andromeda Miller. Mr. Archer told me.” Mrs. Crumb nodded, her arms folded over the aggressively flowered apron that covered her equally aggressive bosom. “He tells me everything. He trusts me like I was his own mother.”

The enormity of the lies in that short speech left Andie stunned, not just at the thought of North telling the old lady everything—North didn’t tell anybody everything—but also at him somehow collating Lydia and Mrs. Crumb.

“I know what’s best, so you do as I say, and we’ll all get along fine.” She smiled at Andie, but her eyes were cold. “That’s Carter,” she went on, jerking her head toward the boy without looking at him, “and that’s Alice, and they’re your students. Everything else, I take care of.” She transferred her reptile smile to the little girl. “I’m the one who stays with the little lambs. They know I’m the one they can count on.”

The girl ignored her, but the boy looked back at her, his eyes like stone.

If that kid is a lamb, the wolves are toast, Andie thought.

“So now that you understand how things work,” Mrs. Crumb went on, “I’ll take you to your room.” She took a step closer and Andie caught a whiff of peppermint and booze. “But don’t you get any ideas about me working for you.”

Andie looked at her, exasperated. She might just be feeling threatened—

Mrs. Crumb made a short nod toward Andie’s suitcase. “You’ll have to carry that, too. I’m not your servant. And I’ll be needing some help around the house, too, so don’t think you’re too good to pick up a broom.” She sniffed. “I know your kind.”

“I’m afraid there’s been a mistake,” Andie said, stepping on her temper. “I’m not a nanny. And for the next month, I’m the one in charge.”

“Oh?” Mrs. Crumb smiled again, false pity in the tilt of her head. “Mr. Archer put somebody he doesn’t even know over me?” She chuckled without humor. “I don’t think so. You’ll do as I say or I’ll tell Mr. Archer. And then we’ll just see what happens.”

The little girl continued scooping orange whatever, but the boy was watching now.

“Miller is my professional name,” Andie said. “My married name is Archer.”

Mrs. Crumb’s smile froze in place.

Andie shoved her ringless left hand in her coat pocket. “Mrs. North Archer. My husband sent me here for a month to fix whatever’s wrong.” She walked over to the table and looked into the bowls, since meeting Mrs. Crumb’s eyes after that lie was not easy. “After we make our assessment, we’ll decide on the children’s future.”

“Your husband?” Mrs. Crumb said, sounding torn between outrage and fear.

Andie pointed to the kids’ bowls. “Mrs. Crumb, what are the lambs having for dinner?”

“Macaroni and cheese.” Mrs. Crumb put her chin up. “That’s good for them.”

“And . . .?”

“And what?”

“Where are the vegetables? Fruit? Protein? Grains? Dairy? You have fat, starch, and yellow dye number two covered, now let’s try fiber and vitamins.”

“I don’t need to listen to this,” Mrs. Crumb said, her smile gone now.

“Actually, you do.” Andie went over to the cupboard and opened it to see boxes of mac and cheese and jars of pasta in some kind of toxic orange sauce. “Oh, my God.”

“You fancy city people,” Mrs. Crumb said as Andie opened the refrigerator.

There was a jar of jam, a loaf of white bread, a gallon jug of milk that was almost empty, and two squares of American cheese.

She turned back to the table. “You’re going to have to do better than this.”

“That’s what they eat,” Mrs. Crumb said. “That’s kid food.”

The children were both watching her now, the little girl scooping more mac and cheese, the boy with his head ducked low, two pairs of Archer blue eyes boring into her over Archer cheekbones. They were thin, pale, and hostile, but nothing about either one of them said “victim.”

Andie smiled at the little girl. “So you’re Alice.”

The little girl put on the headphones to her Walkman and turned up the volume.

Andie transferred her smile to the boy. “And you must be Carter.”

He ignored her.

“Yeah, I’m thrilled to be here, too,” Andie said. “But since we’re stuck with each other—”

“Now you listen here,” Mrs. Crumb blustered. “You can’t come in here and change things all around. I don’t believe you’re married to Mr. Archer.” She lifted her chin again. “You are not a lady.”

“And you are not a cook.” Andie turned her attention back to Carter. “Things will get better,” she told him.

He ignored her and ate more mac and cheese.

Andie took a deep breath. “Okay, look, it’s my job to make you safe and healthy and I’m going to do that. For the next month, you’ll have decent meals—”

“Well, I never,” Mrs. Crumb said.

“—and I’ll see to your education and maybe we can get you both back to school in your regular grade levels, and when I leave, there’ll be good people taking care of you, I promise.”

Carter stared at her with his flat eyes, unimpressed.

“Not military school. We’ll put you in public school. In Columbus. There are very good schools there.” She looked at Alice.

Alice kept eating, her headphones blocking all other sound.

“She won’t go,” Mrs. Crumb said, her voice fat with satisfaction. “You don’t understand—”

“Mrs. Crumb, do you want to remain employed?” Andie said. “Because right now, it’s not looking good for you.”

The housekeeper glared at her, and Andie stared back, unimpressed.

After a moment, Mrs. Crumb pursed her painted lips and sat down across the table from where Andie stood, forcing a smile. “We got off to a bad start.”

“Yes,” Andie said, waiting to see what her next move was.

“There are things about this house you don’t know,” Mrs. Crumb said, leaning forward, and Carter stopped eating to watch her. “It’s a big house, there’s history in this house. I been here all my life, since I was sixteen, I know this house. You need me.”

Carter went back to his mac and cheese and Andie thought, That’s not what he was expecting. “The history of the house isn’t important to me. The kids are.”

“It ain’t just the history,” Mrs. Crumb said, her eyes dark. “There’s things here you can’t understand.”

“Ghosts?” How dumb do you think I am? “I don’t believe in ghosts. I do believe in nutrition and basic curriculum skills, so that’s what I’ll be concentrating on.”

Mrs. Crumb dropped her voice. “Some things you can’t believe are real.”

“Like this stuff you’re feeding the children.” Andie looked at the orange smears left in Alice’s bowl as she polished off the last of her pasta. “I’ve never seen macaroni and cheese that color before. Does it glow in the dark?”

Mrs. Crumb got up and took the children’s bowls. “We should get along, you and me. You’re going to need me.”

Andie looked at the old woman’s cold little eyes. Jesus, I hope not. “I’d like to see my bedroom, please.”

“I’ll show you everything,” Mrs. Crumb said, her defiance back. “I’ll just show you.”

“Just my bedroom,” Andie said, but Mrs. Crumb had already headed for a door in the far wall, so she smiled one last time at the kids, picked up her suitcase, and followed the housekeeper.

It was going to be a long month.

Filed in Writing

53 Comments to 'Maybe This Time: Chapter 2-Scene 1: Andie vs Mrs. Crumb'

On August 25, 2010 at 1:27 am followingtheroad said...

Can’t. Wait.

I wish it was tomorrow so I could read more.

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On August 25, 2010 at 1:36 am Carol Anne said...

Thank you, but, I am not reading anything until I have the book in my hot hands. Well, I did peek at a bit of dialogue both days. Like chocolate or chips, can’t stop until it’s all gone. Impatiently waiting for postman. Should be finished early the next morning, when it is still dark and every light in the house is turned on.

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On August 25, 2010 at 3:19 am Cat said...

That’s what I told myself, too. Then I took a peak. A peak turned into a taste. A taste turned into licking the whole page clean.

Now I’m sad because I want more…

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On August 25, 2010 at 6:57 am doris in munich said...

Thank you for sinking the hook even deeper :-)

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On August 25, 2010 at 7:30 am LilyC said...

Thank you from the bottom of my British heart which is going to have to wait bloody ages to read the rest of this. :(

Can’t believe you don’t have a Brit publisher. It must be time to emigrate.

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On August 25, 2010 at 8:09 am Betty Fokker said...

This is going to sound like a complete suck-up, but I really really love your writing and I am jazzed to be getting the book soon! (but not soon enough)

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On August 25, 2010 at 9:12 am Ingrid said...

LilyC, have you thought of ordering from one of the European Internet bookshops?
You might try the German Amazon, they’re already offering it:
http://www.amazon.de/Maybe-This-Time-Jennifer-Crusie/dp/0312303785/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books-intl-de&qid=1282741356&sr=1-1

Then there’s the Belgian Proxis. Their site is in French, Dutch or English, in case your German is not that good, but they tend not to offer books before they are out these days.

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On August 25, 2010 at 3:54 pm LilyC said...

Thanks, Ingrid – I’ll order it from US Amazon, it will just take ages to cross the Atlantic. Meep.

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On August 25, 2010 at 9:22 am Lola said...

If you were going for creepy, you got it right. ;)

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On August 25, 2010 at 10:12 am Ginny said...

I am so very glad that I shook out the money pig and pre-ordered the book. I may be taking next Tuesday off for “mental health” reasons. :-)

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On August 25, 2010 at 12:07 pm Theresa said...

LilyC – Try http://www.bookdepository.co.uk/. I’ve pre-ordered there and it says that it will be available in 6 days.

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On August 25, 2010 at 3:59 pm LilyC said...

Wow! Thanks, Theresa, what a wonderful website! I like these people…

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On August 25, 2010 at 12:11 pm Melissa said...

LOVE love love it. Andie bitch-smacking that housekeeper around right off the bat is exactly what I expect from my Crusie and here it is right in chapter two. After blow job references in chapter one my little heart is soaring and might possibly break if B&N doesn’t ship my pre-order as fast as humanly possible. I will now go be a squeeing fan girl somewhere else.
P.S. – that may possibly be the most restrained comment from Fokker I’ve ever seen!

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On August 25, 2010 at 1:08 pm Betty Fokker said...

I’m afraid of scaring Jenny off before the book signing by being too much a fangirl. If she knows, she might balk and the I wouldn’t be able to slip any tongue into the hello kiss.

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On August 25, 2010 at 2:22 pm Melissa said...

ROTFLMB(Bettie)AO. Oh Fokker you f*ing kill me. You will represent the Betties well I’m sure!

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On August 25, 2010 at 12:23 pm Tara said...

Thank you! I love how the first scene has shades of the opening of His Girl Friday, though North is certainly less glib….he reminded me a little of Linc in The Cinderella Deal. And the evil Mrs. Garrett is gonna be a tough one…

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On August 25, 2010 at 12:25 pm Diane L. said...

Fabulous. Thank you.

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On August 25, 2010 at 12:28 pm CrankyOtter said...

I’ve never before thought of mac-n-cheese as gruel, but there it is.

Oh, and in the first chapter, I like how you finally explained North’s limited interaction with the kids. Way more believeable than the first/middle draft. Even made him look good.

Is it friday yet?

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On August 25, 2010 at 12:30 pm CrankyOtter said...

Rather, tuesday. One week to go.

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On August 25, 2010 at 12:35 pm June said...

At first I thought, “How sweet and generous of Jenny to give us more MTT”. Now I feel a little like an addict counting out money for my next fix. Of course, I’ve already pre-ordered my fix, so I guess that point is moot. I have a fairly strict rule with myself about buying hardcover books. But I have decided that digital books don’t count. (That makes sense, right?) So Kindle version now and paperback later for my collection.

I. Can’t. Wait!

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On August 25, 2010 at 1:11 pm Louis said...

Thank you , Ms Jenny.

Will tomorrow never come.

Waiting.

Waiting.

It goes so slow.

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On August 25, 2010 at 1:28 pm Jenny said...

Thank you, thank you.
Actually the next two scenes are kind of boring. I should always post books scene by scene so I know what to fix . . .

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On August 25, 2010 at 2:08 pm Jackie said...

I guess that explains Dickens…. Since there wasn’t enough time to fix things between install ments.

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On August 25, 2010 at 2:16 pm McB said...

Love it!

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On August 25, 2010 at 2:19 pm Kelly said...

Thanks for providing “fixes” to your faithful addicts. ;)

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On August 25, 2010 at 2:28 pm Electric Landlady said...

I do not wish to gloat, but… Amazon.ca and the gods were kind and I got my copy yesterday! And then I stayed up until 1 in the morning to finish it. I LOVED it. You all will too. ;)

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On August 25, 2010 at 3:19 pm Jenny said...

Thank you, E.L.!
And Amazon Canada just broke the laydown date. Oh, well. Early reader reviews! YAY!

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On August 25, 2010 at 9:21 pm Meredith B. said...

Ooo, they broke a laydown date! Was it an Embargoed sale date, or just a casual laydown date? (This is about as dramatic as the bookseller gossip mill gets. :-) We’re relatively peaceful sorts in this business.)

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On August 25, 2010 at 9:29 pm Meredith B. said...

Update: I just checked the Macmillan S.O.S. sheet and I don’t see it on the list. Huh. I’ll have to wait until I get back to work tomorrow afternoon to see if we have it listed as an embargoed sale date in the B&N database.

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On August 25, 2010 at 9:57 pm Jenny said...

You know, I didn’t ask this year, but all the others have had a strict street date.
Of course, unless you’re J.K.Rowling, it’s almost impossible to enforce. I don’t even report the violations any more.

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On August 25, 2010 at 11:37 pm Merry said...

Is it so evil to ask for a little early gratification? Please?

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On August 25, 2010 at 10:59 pm Meredith B. said...

It’s even impossible for Rowling to enforce. Really. The embargo got broken on Beedle the Bard. It just wasn’t as big a deal as if it had been a book in the actual series, and some special editions had been auctioned previously as well– and so it didn’t make the news.

But I kind of hope you won’t stop reporting it when people break your S.O.S. dates. I mean, unless it’s a big inconvenience to you. Because it’s a really important standard for the bookselling industry, and it’s one that is getting less respect as businesses who don’t know or care about the bookselling culture and industry start retailing books. If the author and publisher who graciously permit us to sell their books request that the retailers not sell a book until a Strict-on-Sale date, then the very least the retailer can do is to honor that request. And anybody who thinks they are above that in some way and should be exempted should, in my opinion, be graciously exempted from the bookselling business altogether.

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On August 25, 2010 at 11:38 pm Merry said...

Meredith, Jenny, could you explain why it’s wrong to sell a book before a specified date? I could understand if it were a food item that couldn’t be sold after an expiration date, but why is it evil to be early?

Not trying to be trying your patience, just not clear on the concept. So, nothing new there.

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On August 26, 2010 at 12:40 am Jenny said...

Sure. It’s a good question.
Remember back there in the Six Myths About Publishing post I did where I said bestseller lists are about velocity, not a measurement of the success of the book. That’s true; what matters most in the long run is how many books you sell; that’s why PW doesn’t do a bestseller list round up at the end of the year, it does a books-that-sold-the-most round-up. (Actually, what it does (or used to, I stopped reading PW a while back because it made me crazy, is publish something called The Red and the Black, the best and worst selling books for the year. And people wonder why everybody in publishing is on Xanax.)
But the bestseller list can have an impact on sales in that people talk about the bestseller list, different bestseller lists get reprinted in different publications (Entertainment Weekly used the PW bestseller list, I think), and if you stay on there for awhile, the business notices. Also, out on the left coast where people in the film business do not tend to read for pleasure, they do read the books on the printed NYT list (well, they have assistants read them and do treatments that they read). And if somebody decides to option your book, that gets more buzz. Then if a miracle happens and somebody actually makes the movie, you get even more sales. So publishing cares about bestseller lists, not because they’re any indicator of whether a book is a success or not but because they can be a factor in whether a book is a success or not. If that makes sense.
So why put a strict on-sale date on a book? Because you want a lot of sales the first week, as many as possible, to put the book on the list. Once the book is on the list, you need it to stay on there for awhile for it to do any real good (and sometimes that doesn’t even help), but getting it on that first week is crucial. And if people are buying the book in dribs and drabs over a couple of weeks as it get released here and there at different times, the book is not going to make the list. But if it hits the stores the day they start counting sales for that week, and everybody rushes in and buys it that week, the book’s sales are going to be a lot stronger and your chances for the list go way up.
But this is actually not something for readers or, honestly, writers to worry about. Our contract with each other is not about bestsellers lists. It’s that the writer writes the best story she possibly can and the reader reads it with an open mind and accepts the promise that the writer makes for that story. In other words, I have to put that story down in blood, I have to be absolutely honest even if it reveals things about me that I don’t want known, I cannot be cool and distant on the page if I want readers to be absorbed in my story. And in return, readers who read the first scene of MTT and hear that there might be ghosts in the house need to either think, “Ghosts. Okay, I can get behind that if this turns out to be a ghost story,” or “I hate ghost stories” and put the book back on the shelf. That’s our contract. It has nothing to do with laydown dates or bestseller lists or any of that stuff. Bestseller lists are important for a couple of weeks, a month if you’re lucky. That contract with the reader lasts forever; twenty years from now if somebody takes MTT off the shelf in some library, that contract becomes new again. And that reader will neither know nor care that MTT did or did not make the list.
So anybody who bought the book early, thank you VERY much. The bookseller who put it out early is an idiot, but you are a wonderful person and I am incredibly grateful that you bought it and read it.

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On August 26, 2010 at 12:26 am Jenny said...

The problem is we need booksellers more than booksellers need us. So if the publishers says, “You violated the laydown, we won’t send you any more books,” that’s one less retail outlet selling the books. You hope that they realize that laydowns affect the bestsellers lists, and bestseller lists sell books, but the truth is, people don’t think that far ahead.
HQ authors run into the same problem with used bookstores. I’m a big fan of used bookstores, a lot of people find my work that way. But the bookclub editions of HQ titles go out at least a month in advance of the bookstore edition, and people naturally take them to the USBs when they’re done, and the USBs put them on sale and people naturally buy them there (early and cheap? who wouldn’t) and the bookstore sales fall and HQ cuts lines and authors because of poor sales. If USBs would agree not to sell titles until they’d been in stores for a month, they’d have more titles to sell. But there’s no way to get USBs to agree to that and no real way to enforce bookstores to honor laydown dates without hurting ourselves more than them.
Truthfully, this is not something that keeps me up nights. And no reader should feel bad because she bought it early, either; I’m very grateful for every single sale and check-out at the library. But yeah it’s frustrating when it clearly says the on-sale date on the box. I used to work at an indie and we were scrupulous about it. But everything changes and the book business definitely has.

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On August 26, 2010 at 1:19 pm Meredith B. said...

Yeah, that was supposed to be a reply to the post above. :-) Breaking the blog yet again!

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On August 26, 2010 at 10:57 am Electric Landlady said...

I honestly wasn’t expecting it to arrive this early — the original shipping date they gave me was August 31, which would be correct.

Oh well, maybe this is karmic payback for Wild Ride getting lost somewhere in a Canada Post sorting station (GRRRR — but they sent me a new shipment when I complained), and now we’re all even. Let’s see what happens with Trust Me On This!

(Also, it meant the 2 desperately needed dog-training books I ordered along with it came early too. So yay.)

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On August 25, 2010 at 4:09 pm Betty Fokker said...

Ack! I’ve been taunted! She has taunted me! I am trying to be so good and wait for the ninth, to support the bookstore hosting Jenny. The pain!

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On August 25, 2010 at 11:39 pm Merry said...

[adopts a truly awful French accent]
Go away or I shall taunt you a second time!

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On August 26, 2010 at 10:59 am Electric Landlady said...

*looks innocent*

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On August 25, 2010 at 3:25 pm robena grant said...

I’m hooked.
Can’t wait.
Must go write so I can read MTT the minute I get my hands on it.

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On August 25, 2010 at 5:46 pm skye said...

Sniff. When will a paperback version come out? Even trade paper. Sniff.

My library system doesn’t even have it on waiting list!!!! I, of course, informed my very good friend of this egregious error and have full confidence that not only will he ensure that someone buys the book but that I will be first in line for it. If he doesn’t, I have many ways to make him pay. :) (Unfortunately, my riding crop is packed away in Houston. Guess I’ll have to get creative.) (All in a non-sexual way, you pervs!)

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On August 25, 2010 at 9:02 pm Jenny said...

Mass market paperback is usually a year give or take a couple of months. I think the trade pb is out next summer maybe? Guessing here.

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On August 25, 2010 at 8:37 pm Sheena said...

Oh, now I can’t wait! Do you know when it’s being released in Australia, Jenny?

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On August 25, 2010 at 9:01 pm Jenny said...

I don’t think it is. I think that’s part of a British deal, usually, although I don’t why it would be.

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On August 25, 2010 at 11:19 pm Kris said...

Sheena- I am getting mine either through Readings and they will get it shipped over from the US for me, or http://www.bookdepository.co.uk also have them and it’s free shipping worldwide

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On August 26, 2010 at 1:19 am Merry said...

Jenny, thank you for the explanation re early book sales. I’m glad it doesn’t keep you up nights — at least, I would if you didn’t clearly stay up nights anyway. Rather, I should say I’m glad it doesn’t make you unduly stressed.

On the other hand, now I’m worrying if Amazon’s policy of sending free shipping items out a week late were not equally unhelpful in the opposite direction, if getting a book on the bestseller list the first week is helpful.

On the other other hand, with a book that’s already clearly so well loved, it’s going to do well regardless of any stray early distribution bookstores.

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On August 26, 2010 at 2:00 am Jenny said...

You know, really, don’t think about it. Life is good. If the worst thing that happens to me is that MTT doesn’t make some list, I am a lucky, lucky woman.
Well, actually, I’m already a lucky woman, and much of that is thanks to you all, so REALLY, don’t worry about it.

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On August 26, 2010 at 1:30 pm Meredith B. said...

Actually, you know what? Now that I think about it, I don’t know how pre-sales from dot-com get reported and incorporated into sales figures. For all I know, they may count as first week sales. Do you know, Jenny? But you’re right in that the main thing is, buying the book at all speaks love to the author. As well as the booksellers, if you buy it from them. So it’s really amazing the amount of love we speak on this blog. :-)

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On August 26, 2010 at 7:32 pm Jenny said...

This blog is amazing because of all of you. Believe me, I’m grateful for you guys every day.

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On August 26, 2010 at 11:02 am robena grant said...

For the Australian reader:
Check out: http://www.everafter.com.au
They’re an independent bookseller in Woollongong and they have MTT listed on their site. : )

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On August 26, 2010 at 4:04 pm Martha A said...

Great- my 20-something son has finally moved out and I have time off next week I planned to spend moving furniture and cleaning. Will I be doing that? No, I’ll be reading the book that already has me hooked. I can’t wait to see what happens!

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On August 29, 2010 at 8:29 pm mindy said...

very fun! can’t wait to read it :)

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