Usually there's a big push to finish writing the
newsletter at month's end. Generally I've waited until the last minute to
finish it lest a major event occurs (like Amazon's stock dropping 99% when
their delivery drone downs a 737) but the fact is that I need deadlines to ever
finish anything.
This month was different. I wasn't around to write the
newsletter. I skipped town for awhile and I don't enjoy typing on my laptop for
long periods.
So there is no newsletter, per se, this month.
All you get is this. No doctor's excuse and the dog didn't eat
the newsletter.
Just this story about how the world worked, how I believed it's
supposed to work, and why so many of you with a history in this industry are
coming to regard times past as the Golden Age of Publishing.
I know Thomas Wolfe wrote, “You can't go home again,” but also
acknowledged that “All that he knew was that the years flow by like water, and
that one day men come home again.”
This year, when we presented the idea of a family vacation to my
grown children after a decade or so hiatus, we let them choose the destination.
I was a little surprised by their choice:York, Maine, a place
we'd visited many times decades ago.
Years ago I traveled to York each August
to spend a week-end or so with some of the nicest people I've ever known,
eating, drinking and partying in Donald Weiser's backyard at the annual Weiser
Books clambake. From Friday after hours until Monday afternoon, I spent my
waking hours with these folks as they taught me the ins and outs of publishing
and I shared what I knew of the process of book production.
Some years my whole family accompanied me to York. We'd stay
along Long Sands in York, or
occasionally by the beach in Ogunquit. And while I relaxed and partied with the
Weiser staff on Saturday, my children spent their time on the beach, collecting
little sea creatures then returning them to the tide pools and boogie-boarding
in the shallow shore waters.
Boogie
boarding on Long Sands, mid 1990s
Telling the story of my relationship not only with Donald Weiser
and his wife Betty Lunsted but all of their friends and associates would be far
too expansive to relate here, but they were at once my customers, my friends,
and my mentors.
My good friend Barbara (Aurora Press) had suggested I contact
the Weisers back in the late1970s and while we were out East with our two year
old daughter I stopped by the big blue house to actually meet Donald, Betty,
Jay, Alden and a few others whose names elude me after these many years.
Jay Weiser,
Whitney and me, October 1983
Who knew printers and publishers could form such a tight bond? I
drove or flew first printings of their new titles to the Book Expo (then the ABA) because I
would produce them on such a short schedule they couldn't be shipped. I often
dined with them there, everyone exhausted from working the Expo all day, and
not only met Weiser employees but publishers and distributors from around the
world joined us. Each dinner was worth a semester of publishing graduate level
courses. I tend to be somewhat out-going but I preferred listening to their
discussions until Betty would bait me into offering a printer's perspective on
whatever the topic was.
I had the same sort of discussions in York when I arrived
on August Friday afternoons and they kindly included me in their TGIF
get-together at a local watering hole. Some of the crew had attended BEA, some
I hadn't seen in a year, and some were brand new rookies.
TGIF Weiser
style
Since it was difficult to bring a dish to pass when staying at
the local motel, I arrived at the Weiser's house hours before the partiers
arrived. Betty always asked me to trim the forsythia by the back stairs as its
branches had grown over the stairs in the year since I'd last cut it. And
chairs needed to be brought out from under the long porch, volleyball nets
needed to be raised and croquet wickets placed. There were horseshoes to find,
beer to ice and tablecloths to spread. I felt a part of the Weiser team on that
day.
One of the
early clam bakes. (Russ the lobster man's truck in the foreground.)
Over the years the event grew and grew, from a large picnic in
the backyard (moved inside to the porch when rainy) to a huge white tent with
roll-down sides to block the elements if necessary. I'm guessing the first
clambakes I attended had around twenty guests which swelled to over fifty in
later years.
Socializing
before the steamers are ready
After eating, the real socializing began. Again, publishers,
book store owners, book distributors and authors were in attendance and while
the volleyball game was playing, there were also many relaxed conversations
between people from different sectors of our industry.
There were
usually discussions between the publishers, editors, agents and store owners
and authors after lunch
And always a wiffle ball game filled the late afternoon hours.
Cans of beer sat at the outfielders' feet and many runners reached first base
with one in their hand.
Wiffle ball
with Donald playing a short stop “shift”
Finally the sun would set and the chill off the Atlantic pushed many
from the yard to the porch. Interactions on the porch were varied not just year
to year but hour by hour. Discussions about upcoming titles and analyzing new
trends could devolve into singing and dancing at a moments notice.
Evenings on
the porch swung between discussing the cosmos to abject silliness
It was often near midnight when I left,
overwhelmed that I had just spent an afternoon with some of the most wonderful
people I'd ever met.
I generally went to the office on Monday and tried to explain
copy preparation or the differences in papers, their availability and pricing.
Often we'd break for lunch, again with editors, designers, fellow publishers,
etc.
As close as I
ever came to a Power Lunch
Afterward it was time for me to head back west. The drive home
afforded me the opportunity to stop and visit many more of the publishers I
worked with, each of whom I considered a special friend.
Howard proves
he can pack books with his eyes closed
Unfortunately, this year, as in the past decade or so, there was
no Weiser Books to visit, no clambake. I did, however have a chance to get
together with friends from those wonderful times. I even ran into Howard by
shear luck, a longtime friend of Donald and jack of all trades around Weiser
Books.
There are publishers (and probably printers) who view the
printer (or publisher) as an adversary, reducing all interaction to negotiating
the best deal. I somehow think the internet has promoted that culture.
But I still believe that if you have a chance to work with your
printer, you may get some suggestions that will improve the quality of your
titles or even make your work a little easier.
Many people I work with in the industry believe (as I do) that
we were part of the Golden Age of Publishing.
There are many in the industry today who could care less.
That's why I write to you each month. I'm proud of my industry
friends, I respect their ability and integrity, and will gladly close up shop
if I have to solicit work from people who don't share this ethic.
(PS Sorry Bob and Barb in Ohio, Paul and
Amy in New York, Ehud in Vermont and Jean and
Spencer in New Hampshire that I didn't
stop by to say hello this trip. Maybe next time.)
The beat goes
on: Myles meets Long Sands
Wayne A. Johnson
GrubStreetPrinting.com
wayne@grubstreetprinting.com
Toll-free & fax: 877.711.1229
GrubStreetPrinting.com
wayne@grubstreetprinting.com
Toll-free & fax: 877.711.1229
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