I saw a neighbor recently who didn't know I was a writer. So being the self-promoting hound that I am, I gave her a couple of books. She flipped it over to look at the back (where my photo is), and got a puzzled look on her face. She said, "Wow. I would never guess this was you."
I laughed a little.
Her frown got deeper. "Seriously. I would never. guess. this. is. you."
I said, "It's me. You've just never seen the Julia London Full Monte."
By this point, she was studying me.
I kept trying to explain my face away. I said, "I am usually out running or walking the dog when I see you."
She nodded. Then she started talking about the books and saved me any further embarrassment. For the record, she never made a face when she said it, or gave my any reason to think she thought one version was better than the other. But I know what I look like when I've been running, and let's just say I wouldn't be winning any beauty contests.
Anyway, I came home and looked at myself. and then the latest pub photo. This picture is what Julie Kenner sees when I go to her house. The neighbor sees my hair pulled back with a hat. And you guys see the coiffed, made-up version of me that I trot out from time to time. But I don't think I look THAT different. There are some authors out there who look waaaaaaaaayyyyy different than their pub photos. Like…twenty years older than their pub photo, if you know what I mean.
I am very proud of my very vain self for showing you the real me. Do you think I look that different? How do you photograph? More or less like your real self? Are you ever surprised by how you look in photos, or in real life?
Published on November 02, 2010 03:27
I recently got quite a shock from viewing my holiday photos from France, do the camera really add 10 pounds or do I look 10 pounds heavier with the added 10 of the camera? ;)