The Books for Snowy River – what happens when your book goes out of stock just before a writers festival

 


sex lies snowy river


This week I had the simultaneously delightful and alarming news that ‘Sex, Lies and Bonsai’ is temporarily out of stock. Delightful, because yay, I’ve sold out! Alarming because I am booked to do a session called ‘Sex, Lies and Bonsai’ at the Snowy Mountains Writers Festival next weekend. And a session like that with no books is a little like a pub with no beer.


 


I have been moved to capture the ensuing events in verse…


 


  The Books for Snowy River


(with apologies to Banjo Patterson)


 


There was dismay


 at HarperCollins for the word had passed around


That Sex, Lies and Bonsai had run out.


And an urgent order had come in – 50 books must soon be found


So all the sales team gathered at the shout.


 


All the tried and trusted sales reps from the stations near and far


Had mustered at the office, after a bite


For the team there love a challenge


And as all in publishing know, a re-print cannot happen overnight.


 


There was Anna who had bought the book and brought it to the land


No finer editor ever held a pen


For ne’er a text could throw her or a manuscript at hand


As a publisher she knows the art of zen.


 


Lisa’s off to Snowy River, up by Kosciusko’s side


And th e readers there are twice as keen and twice as tough


And an author’s books don’t linger in the bookshops overnight


No, a tale that holds its own is good enough.


The Snowy Mountains Festival is on one week today


And Sex, Lies and Bonsai’s on the bill


We mu st find some unsold copies or else perish in the chase


Because our writer’s heading for the hills.


 


So they went – they got one copy from the old Big W clump


Then they raced away across the city crush


And Anna gave her orders, ‘team, go at em from the jump’


No use to try for fancy buying – rush!


 


And they found them, some in clusters and some they were alone


They chased them down like bloodhounds on their tracks


But there were only 49 when they turned their heads for home


And in boxes and in handbags brought them back.


 


But one was there, a stripling, with sore and blistered feet


She wouldn’t rest until she found the final prize


She was hard and tough and wiry, just the sort who won’t say die


There was co urage in her quick impatient eye


And her bright gaze saw one loitering in a darkened bookshop aisle


And she snatched it up and held it to the sky


And she shouted to the heavens with the book above her head


We have not failed the festival, this book will now be read


 


So down by Kosciusko where the pine-clad ridges raise


Their torn and rugged battlements on high


Where the air is clear as crystal and the white stars fairly blaze


At midnight in the cold and frosty sky


In  the Thredbo Alpine Schuss Bar where the readers come to stay


Those yellow stripes are shining with the best


And the HarperCollins sales team are a household word today


And the author tells the story of their quest


 


You can catch me and the captured books at the Snowy Mountains Writers Festival over the Easter weekend.  Top of nine degrees in Thredbo today so bring the woolies!



 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 23, 2013 20:49
No comments have been added yet.