Saving Jemima: Life
and Love with a Hard-luck Jay is coming out September 10, 2019. I have an
advance copy in hand. Every time I pick it up I feel grateful all over again to
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt for making such a beautiful book out of my stack of
writings, paintings and photographs. I just shake my head. How lucky can you
get, to work with the best natural history publisher on the planet to tell the
story of an orphaned blue jay? She was some jay, but still. Lucky, and blessed.
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Looks small here, but it's a healthy 6" x 9" x 1" Note jay-colored clothing on line. |
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For months, I’ve been trying to figure out what to do about
getting signed copies to my friends and you, my beloved blog community. I have
had a sense all along that Jemima is going to hit bigger than any of my
previous books; my agent tells me it is the most commercially appealing thing
I’ve done. You don’t have to have a special interest in birds to appreciate it.
You just have to like a good story that happens to feature a bird.
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My first book to feature both paintings and photographs! Woot! It's so EASY to illustrate a book with photos! But I don't do anything the easy way, so I did 20 paintings, too. |
I had the great privilege of reading it for HMHCo's audio book (can you hear the squeal?!) and that is
gonna kick butt. I loved recording it, even though parts of it were hard to get
through. Like doing about 8 hours of radio. All things considered, I knew that I was looking at signing and boxing a LOT of books this
time around.
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Each chapter head watercolor gets a full-page treatment. Design by Martha Kennedy, Chief of Design, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Co. Yes I am grinning ear to ear! |
I thought about what it’s been like to fulfill book orders from
my home. I've done it for my last three books. How keeping track of orders, inscribing, signing, boxing, addressing and
mailing books is pretty much all I do for months after a book hits. How lifting
the boxes and loading them into and out of my car messes up my back. I used to
drive each load 20 minutes to the nearest post office. Now, I'd have a 40 minute drive. Given what's happened in the last seven
months, I realized I wasn’t up for any of that. If I’ve learned anything, it’s
that my energy—that wonderful energy that I use to produce illustrated books
and (ahem) increasingly rare blogposts-- is indeed finite, and it can be
quickly drained away. I've had to critically assess how I spend that energy, because there's a lot less of it now. Swimming in a whirlpool will do that to you. My rationale that fulfilling orders for signed books is “part
of my work” looks thin to me now. It’s not. It’s something I’ve been doing,
doggedly, faithfully, but it’s a long way from being my true work. The truth is, it doesn't have to be done by me. The writing and illustrating and thinking does. And that's how I should be spending my time.

Meanwhile, my family is not the only one that's had a rough time since
December, 2018. Bird Watcher’s Digest has been turned upside down, losing its
Editor/Publisher and chief visionary when Bill passed away in March. Then Elsa,
Bill’s mother and BWD’s founder, who was still working at
85, died tragically just two months later. It was a staggering double blow. Everyone is still picking themselves up. Yet
out of the unimaginable chaos and loss, an answer to my small problem became clear to me.
I decided to direct my sales to Redstart Birding, the
magazine’s sales, optics and expertise branch, which Bill and Ben Lizdas created not long before Bill fell ill. I’ll design a
custom bookplate I can sign, and that will be included if you order a signed copy. Short of attending one of my talks, Redstart will be the only place you can get a signed copy of Saving Jemima.
And proceeds of sales from those who want signed copies will go not to an
online sales giant, but to the magazine that published my first article and painting
in 1986, and helped me build a wonderful audience for my writing and art. It seems like a win all
around. I'm grateful that my sweet friend, Redstart's stalwart Swiss Army knife Angela, is willing to take on all those orders, that packing and shipping. It won't be trivial.
I think you'll love the story of this feisty young blue jay, and how she worked her way into our hearts. How I wound up saving her at least twice, and she saved me right back. Old story, I know, but rescue stories are rarely one-way (ask Curtis Loew!), and each one is unique. And this rescue was a blue jay, the best and brightest bird I could hope for.
So if you'd like to help support Bird Watcher's Digest and have a beautiful signed bookplate in your copy, you can pre-order Saving Jemima at Redstart Birding. Hit this link: ORDER JEMIMA
The book will be released September 10, 2019. It's roaring up! I can't wait for you to have it in your hands, too!
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Monday, July 22, 2019
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