I may have told this book story here before, but since it happened exactly thirty years ago…
In the spring of 1994, I was informed that I had won the Arizona state award for Nothing but the Truth. Would I come to Phoenix (I think that’s where it was to happen) to accept the award and give a short speech? I was happy to say yes. The date was for early December 1994.
At the time I was living in Providence, Rhode Island.
Shortly after that call, I received another call. Somehow some folks in Colorado learned of this award event and asked if I’d be willing to do a few school visits in the Denver area following my trip to Arizona.
Having an East Coast mentality about geography, I said yes.
Sometime after that call came yet another call from the manager of a children’s bookstore in Denver (where I had never been). The caller knew about my Denver school visits and asked if I’d do a signing at the bookstore, some place called The Bookies.
Sure.
Once I had flight arrangements set, the bookstore manager would pick me up at Stapleton Airport, I’d do the signing, then I’d be taken to my school-designated hotel.
All good. Arrangements were made and the information was passed on to all the necessary parties.
Some six months later, on December 4, I arrived at the old Denver airport. No one was there to meet me. Such things happen. So I went out to the curb and waited. I waited for about an hour.
Not knowing what else to do, I called the bookstore and reached the manager. She apologized and explained she was new on the job. The old manager (the one who set up the visit) had left, and this new one hadn’t been told I was to be picked up. She would come right out to get me.
Another forty minutes passed before a battered Grand Cherokee pulled up. A skinny lady wearing a kilt popped out of the car. “Are you Avi?”
“I am.”
“Sorry about all this. I’m just two weeks into being the store manager and I had very little information about your visit. I’ll get you where you need to be.”
I got in and we started up. After a short while, she turned to me and said, “What were you going to be doing at the store?”
“A book signing.”
“Oh. I wasn’t told that, either. In fact, I don’t know anything about signings. My last job was at IBM. They didn’t have authors coming there.”
Indeed, it soon became apparent that nothing had been done to set up the signing, much less publicize it. The only kids that were in The Bookies that afternoon were the new manager’s two kids. That meant there was nothing for me to do in this essentially deserted store other than to talk to this new manager.
Happily (Linda was her name) was smart, interesting, and a very good conversationalist. I think we talked for two hours, at least. In fact, I was quite smitten with her.
The next day I made my first school visit. As it happened, some of Linda’s kids were students at the school. I noticed that she was there.
I kept thinking about her.
That next day, when I finished up at yet another school and was back at my hotel, I called the bookstore, reached Linda, and asked her to have dinner with me the next night.
She agreed.
We did have dinner and had a lot more talk. She brought me back to the hotel. We said good night, and I went to my room. She left.
As it happened, she decided she wanted to talk some more and went back to the hotel. At the check-in counter, she asked if she could speak to “Avi.”
“I have no guest with that name,” said the clerk “What’s his last name?”
Linda looked at him. “I have no idea.”
Resourceful, she grabbed the guest sign-in book, went down the list of names, found my last name, and called me. “Would you like to talk some more?”
So we did.
Was it love at first sight? Well, maybe second. Reader, the key point is that I married her.
The thirtieth anniversary of our first meeting is coming up.
Best book signing I ever did.
6 thoughts on “A Book Signing”
Thanks for (re)sharing as I haven’t heard the story before. And happy anniversary!
Beautiful essay about meeting your bride! Hope to meet you someday ❤️
Look forward to it!
Meant to be! Lovely photo. Happy 30th Anniversary.
I love this story! A “meet cute” as they say in romance writing. Happy 30th!
Congratulations on a VERY special time!