The scheduled interview at 6:30 was cancelled so my only commitment at that point in Austin
was to read at a Borders waaaaay out of town. The store was in a monstrous mall north of the city and was about 3 days old. Wires were crossed and my 'reading' turned into a 'signing' which was very bizarre. On a scale of 1 to 10 on the weirdness scale, this was about an eleven. They set me up at a table by the front door and told me to 'see if anyone wanted a book'. The whole ordeal was made weirder by the fact that there were no customers. I sat for an hour and maybe 10 people walked into the new store. Most wouldn't even acknowledge that I was sitting there and those that did thought that I was security and that I wanted to inspect their bags. My escort attempted to draw people in by pretending to want a book signed but the ruse never worked. ONE customer asked for a signed book. I read a passage from the book aloud to my escort and left shortly thereafter. Austin was a bust.Cheese tots at Dirty's and a burger at Casino El Camino were in order so we finished the day eating. I had a local beer fave Shiner Bock and left for the hotel to get some sleep. The plan was to get up at the insane hour of 3:30am to catch a flight to Houston. This should be fun.
1 comment:
Hey, maybe that's my copy you are signing in the photo! I picked up a copy just a few weeks ago off the shelf at that very Border's and happened to notice that it was signed. The signature is so elaborate (flag image + burger image + "= Happiness") that at first I thought it was part of the printed book. After reading this blog entry, I'm curious--do you always sign the books that way, or did you just have so much time on your hands at the deserted Border's appearance that you were able to get creative with the signatures?
Enjoyed the DVD. Hope there are sequels on the way.
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