So, almost exactly two months ago I left for Amsterdam in the first of
21 cars, for the first of 22 airplanes, headed for the first of 19
hotels, and the first of innumerable media stops and events. And now
the touring season is over. Last night's event in Huntington kind of
represented them all...a great bookstore, a big enthusiastic crowd,
and a real mixture of readers, ranging from long-term Reacher fans who
bought Killing Floor in March of 1997, to a woman who discovered
Reacher just two months agoas I was leaving for Hollandand has
since read all thirteen books.
Touring is a familiar ritual for me now, but there are always new
things. New this year was a noticeable increase in passion...people
are really, really invested in Reacher, and I was asked many times,
"Is he here?" And not in a weird way...just the power of story,
really, whereby a character takes to life. And I met many people who
had come to a book event for the very first time.
Also new were the visits to military bases, which I enjoyed very
much. I think it's clear from the books that I like military folk a
lot, while not being starry-eyed about the job they are handed, and
the people I met this year confirmed my feelings big time. They sign
up for all kinds of reasons, and they're good people to start with,
and serving a larger cause makes them even better. I'm deeply
grateful to all my readers, and I remember every one I meet, but for
me the Reader of the Year this year has to be 1st Lieutenant Silena
Blanton, who is about to be promoted Captain, whereupon she will
command a company that stands ready to head out to sites where
chemical or nuclear weapons have been used or discovered. We're in
good hands. Reacher would like her a lot.
Gone Tomorrow has done very wellit hit #1 everywhere in the
civilized world (if you define the civilized world as anywhere Gone
Tomorrow hit #1) and so the tour had less of a "selling" feel than a
celebratory feel...every event felt like a party. I loved every one
of them, and I thank everyone who came out to see me. Behind the
scenes Gemma worked hard in Holland, and Patsy and Brad in the UK, and
Sharon and Susan in the US, and of course Maggie at Reacher Central.
Sharon in particular held true to her promise that she wouldn't have
her baby until Gone Tomorrow had hit the list...she named her
Penelope Jane, which I guess is better than Jackie Reacher. I suppose
the kid will never really know what her mom was doing in the weeks
before she was bornand if much later she's told, the name of some
long-forgotten author won't mean muchbut Sharon's dedication truly
represents the "it takes a village" reality of publishing. I write
the books, but you'd never see them without the efforts of a great
team. My peeps, folks. Gotta love 'em.
Now the year goes quiet...I have a couple of edits to do on next
year's book 61 Hours, and I'm appearing at ThrillerFest and Madison
Reads in New York and the Harrogate Festival in the UK during July,
and then...nothing, until September when I'll start on the 2011
book. So to all of you, many thanks for making the last two months
such fun, and I hope to see you all again next year.
Friday, June 12, 2009 Day 19 (US)
Book Revue, Huntington, L.I.
I know, I know, you're thinking "Her, again?" but don't worry, Lee will finish off this year's tour blog
as soon as he recovers from his cold. Can't fault his record13 novels and this is the first cold he's caught on
tour.
So, let's let Mr. Snuffles get better while I fill you in on this evening's event. The drive out to Long Island was
longer than you might imagine with bumper-to-bumper traffic a good deal of the way. But it was worth it. Book
Revue is a huge store with great staff who ran the signing line like clock work, smooth. Thanks, guys! We hope
to visit again next year!
Webmaven Maggie
Wednesday, June 10, 2009 Day 18 (US)
The horde at B&N Edina, MN
Maggie and I departed from Seattle at different times and in different directions, she back to the Brooklyn
mothership, me onward to Minneapolis. So I'm on the road and she's not, so it's me blogging again...
First stop was the Joe Soucheray radio show, which was a fun hour, then drop-in stock signings at the two
local genre stores. Then the evening event was at the Edina B&N, which was packed with welcoming and generous
Minnesota folks. I followed that with dinner with retired-but-not-forgotten bookselling legend Steve Stilwell.
Champagne was consumed...in fact champagne has been the signature drink of this whole tour.
Home tomorrow, and then a final event on Friday...more then.
Tuesday, June 9, 2009 Day 17 (US)
Seattle Public Library's Central Branch
Today started at noon with a sit and sign at Seattle Mystery Bookshop. The last double-header of the season, Lee and his brother
Andrew signed what looked like several hundred books; the store was packed. Having heard about SMB for almost two decades, I was really
pleased to see it first hand. Just a terrific variety of stock and loads of handy shelf-talkers and knowledgable staff to help
choose the perfect read for your mood. Highly recommended. After the books sold out, the ingenious crew managed to scrounge 50 more
Gone Tomorrow's which Lee signed after his evening event which was a Q&A in the theater at...
Seattle Public Librarywhat a great library. If all the bookstores in Seattle didn't convince you this was a book-lovin' town,
this library would. 10 stories of booksthe perfect play on words.
A last dinner with the RC gang followed by the murder of the last bottle of champagne and then we all straggled off to our respective
hotel rooms and homes. Tomorrow, half of us are headed to the airport and the rest back to work. Seattle is always a special stop
on Lee's book tour and traditions were upheld brilliantly again this year. Thanks, guys!
Webmaven Maggie
Monday, June 8, 2009 Day 16 (US)
Ft. Lewis' real CID
The locals warned it would be cloudy but Seattle was gorgeous and sunny. A leisurely
breakfast at 10am preceded some Michael Connelly stalking. Seattle Mystery Bookshop had a signing with
Mike at noon so we pressed our silly faces against the shop window and next thing you know, the whole clump (Lee,
me, RCs Rae, Janine, Kim, Mike Connelly and Jeff Ayers) were on our way to lunch. Who knew world famous, bestselling
writers were so easy to pick up?
All too soon, Lee's media escort Gail DiRe arrived for the hour+ trip to Fort Lewis for Lee's signing at the PX.
Great signing, run and attended by good people who couldn't have been nicer...they even provided some eye candy.
Bravo on making Captain, Silena!
The sky was so clear we actually saw the top of Mt. Rainier on the trip back to Seattle. We're speeding along
on the highway when Lee's phone rings. His brother Andrew is in a cab three miles ahead. Do these things
ever happen to you? They never happen to me unless I'm with Lee. Andrew's cabbie drops him off at the next exit and 30
seconds later, he's sitting in the back seat beside me. Think: Michael Phelps diving into the pool at
the exact moment his team-mate touches the wall. These boys are like synchronized swimmers, I tell ya.
Emboldened by our successful Connelly stalking, we rushed to Third Place Books for Jeffery Deaver's signing and then
dragged him out to dinner with the gang. He went peacefully (like he had a choice?) Well lubricated by fine wine, we then
rushed Jeff to the hotel for the now-annual Reacher Creature Seattle pajama party. A few hours of fine champagne,
rich chocolate and conversation that ranged from Led Zeppelin to centipedes and I knew why I'd come to Seattle...until I saw
Lee's smug grin as he explained that I couldn't go to sleep until I'd written the blog. Oh right, THAT'S why I'm in Seattle!
Webmaven Maggie
Sunday, June 7, 2009 Day 15 (US)
Bookselling, Costco Style
A quiet and pleasant morning spent with coffee and the New York Times, especially fun today. With a
minor quibble about hotels...obviously we're all accustomed to being asked to consider foregoing
automatic towel and sheet changes to save untold zillions of gallons of wateryou know, put the
towel back on the rack and the card on the pillow, and so on...but now the Hyatt wants you to call the
desk if you DO want a change. Doesn't bother me, because I move on every day, and otherwise the Hyatt
was excellentit has smoking rooms, in California, yetbut I wish they'd be honest and say
hey, we're trying to save a few bucks here, and maybe share the saving with the customerinstead of
charging him EIGHT DOLLARS for a poxy bottle of water.
Anyway, I spent a couple of hours at the Costco in Danville...lots of passing trade and some very helpful
staff.
Right now I'm at SFO waiting for the dreaded Alaska Airlines to fly me to Seattle. If I get there OK Maggie
will tell you all about itshe's blogging tomorrow, and Tuesday, I hope.
Saturday, June 6, 2009 Day 14, Part 3 (US)
Front row L: the real Frances Neagley; R: RC Sandy
The evening event was at Book Passage...I worried a little: a beautiful evening in the Bay Area, lots of cool
things to do...would anyone show up? Well, the place was packed, the people were great. Then I had dinner
afterward with Our Rae and Our Cornelia. Life is good.
Day 14, Part 2 (US)
The flight delay was caused by construction on two of SFO's three runways, so traffic was limited in and out.
I got there two hours late, which compressed the afternoon somewhat, but escort Naomi sped me around and we
got everything done, which was a signing at Ed Kaufman's store in San Mateo, and an interview with Alan Farley
of KALW-FM for NPR's Booktalk program. Now I am awaiting a pot of room service coffee before heading out across
the bridge for the evening event. Beautiful sunny day here in San Francisco.
Day 14, Part 1 (US)
San Diego Airport
Young Penny must be messing with Sharon's travel karma today because the flight up to San Francisco is seriously
late. I'm sitting here in the San Diego airport, reading, people watching, listening to a surprisingly good muzak
service coming out of the ceiling above me. The only negative is a smug 1984 voice telling me the terminal is
smoke free. Gonna be Lee free if he doesn't STFU, and soon.
Friday, June 5, 2009 Day 13 (US)
Mysterious Galaxy, San Diego
I learned a long time ago that flying from Los Angeles to San Diego is a drag, so Karen drove to a
Denny's halfway between the two cities where we had breakfast, and then San Diego escort Larry picked
me up and drove the rest of the way, via Camp Pendleton, where I signed books for Marines at the post exchange.
The evening event was with Andrew at a packed Mysterious Galaxy. Great store, great audience.
Thursday, June 4, 2009 Day 12 (US)
Okay doke is right!
Basically a light morning and a late start, except for a 7am phone interview, live into a San Francisco radio
station. "Hi, Lee," the guy said. "And where are you right now?"
"In bed," I said.
I did my 15 minutes and then rolled over and went back to sleep.
Then came an excellent pancake and a ride up to Thousand Oaks for my annual visit to Mysteries to Die For, a
sentimental favorite for me because 12 years ago I did my first-ever sit-down event there. Andrew was with me
and my daughter Ruth came too. She loves LA and often flies over to hang out.
The evening event was at the Glendale B&N, followed by dinner with Steve Fisher, my film agent.
Wednesday, June 3, 2009 Day 11, Part 2 (US)
Mystery Bookstore of LA...
After Mystery Books I checked into my hotel and ate the chocolate Linda gave me and then headed out to Northridge
for the Borders eventwhich was graced by RCs Rae and Betsy, among many others.
Then pizza and bed. Tomorrow I stay in LA, so...laundry time.
Day 11, Part 1 (US)
can really pack 'em in!
Slightly unusual travel this morning in that there were airport stock signings at both ends, in Kansas City and
LA. All bookstall folks were lovely, which was just as well, because it was way too early for fake politeness on
my part.
The airline was Southwest, which seemed OK.
The ever-terrific Karen Hebert picked me up in her pimped Priusshe's soooo Californiaand we went to
Westwood for the Mystery Bookstore's lunch event. Excellent sandwiches were eaten and good fun was had.
For more photos from Lee's tour, check out this website's Scrapbook.
Tuesday, June 2, 2009 Day 10 (US)
Lookin' good, Kansas City
Tuesday started a little prematurely...on Monday, to be precise. We took a last-minute decision to fly out the
night before, to make sure of getting to the Kansas City NPR station in time for the legendary Walt Bodine radio
show. Worked for meI missed the Yankees game, but I also missed the planned 4am start.
The radio was an hour of fun, and then I got a haircut and did a print interview before a quick dinner with the
delightful owners of Rainy Day Books. One of the nation's great independents, they even supplied a rainy day.
The event was a gasa good-natured crowd, good questions, and a lot of laughs.
Saturday, May 30, 2009 Day 9 (US)
View from the Cabaret Theatre stage
It was a beautiful day, sunny and breezyand we were in a stretch limoso even with only four hours
sleep, I had nothing to complain about. The drive from NYC to Uncasville took three hours. Lee quickly filled
me in on BEA (two women in his book signing queue fainted...but that's probably due less to his ineffable charm
than the Javit's questionable A/C). Before long we were pulling up at the Mohegan Sun casino.
I don't know about your casino experiences, but mine recall those sensory-overload experiments which can induce
seizure. Not so the Mohegan Sun. Oh yes, it's a casino all right, with slots and poker tables and all the bells
and whistles any fan of Vegas or Atlantic City could imagine. But it's also light and airy, colorful and sunlit.
I could have stayed to do some shopping...and hung out until June when Aerosmith and ZZ Top perform at the Mohegan
Arena (together?)
Lee's interview and Q&A took place in the Cabaret Theatre (think: Peggy Lee singing "Fever" to 250 fans seated in
an arc of really comfortable booths and upholstered chairs). Walt Kane, an investigative reporter and anchor for
News 12 NJ, was an excellent choice as moderator (thanks, Walt). He sure knows his Reacher novels. Typical of
Q&A sessions, no matter how long they last, they end too soon and we were running past the waterfall for the signing
table (yes, there's a waterfall with animatronic wolf...sadly, they won't fit into my NY apartment). The table was
set up in one of the wide avenues to accommodate the long line of people wanting books signed.
It was wonderful to see some familiar Reacher Creature faces (hi, Donna!) and especially good to finally meet
Al (who is still such a smart aleck that he must've been dangerous as a teenager). Thanks to everybody
for coming inside on such a glorious Spring day. It was a great day, in a great venue (you da best, Melissa) and
we'll no doubt be back...
The best news of all is that yesterday, Sharon gave birth to an adorable daughter. Bravo, Sharonsend photos!
Webmaven Maggie
Friday, May 29, 2009 Day 8 (US)
The book signing line at BEA
I got up at three in the morning.
I'm not even going to try to find an adjective or a modifier or a qualifier
for that sentence.
Flew back to New York and made it in time for my Book Expo America signing, and a radio
interview, and the Backspace Writers Conference party.
Now I'm going to bed.
Thursday, May 28, 2009 Day 7 (US)
Flew from Phoenix to Houston in the world's oldest 737. It looked like it had done ten million miles for Air
Zimbabwe. The interior panels were held on with bathroom caulkliterally. But the outside parts must have
been OK because we got there safe.
The Wall Street Journal list and the Publishers Weekly list came inboth #1 for Gone
Tomorrow. Note to deranged right-wingers: your post-NTL boycott worked *real* well, then.
Murder by the Book, Houston
It's still #4 in the UK too, after six weeks on sale.
The evening event was with Andrew at a completely packed Murder by the Book. Lovely people, fantastic reception,
and Jack Reacher the dog, too. Then dinner, with our very own Deanie, and Mr. Deanie, ie Ken.
Wednesday, May 27, 2009 Day 6 (US)
The signing line at the Scottsdale Public Library
A day of three halves...flying, phoning, and signing.
Even Sharon's incredible travel karma couldn't produce a direct flight to Phoenix, so I had to connect through
Dallas, and the time zones kept pushing the clock backward, so in some ways it felt like a long trip, and in
other ways it felt like no time at all.
Did some stock signing in the airport and a radio interview for a Tennessee station, and then it was the annual
Poisoned Pen event, this year held off-site at the library. Andrew was with me and we had a lot of fun.
The phoning was all about this being the second Wednesday after launch...list day. We already knew Gone
Tomorrow was #1 at B&N...and Borders...and on the Indie list...and on Bookscan...but what would The New
York Times say? Well, they said #1 too.
So, as always, sincere thanks to all concerned. Feels wonderful.
Tuesday, May 26, 2009 Day 5, Part 2 (US)
Quail Ridge Books
Took a (room service large pot) coffee break back at the hotel and then headed out to the evening event at the
Quail Ridge bookstore. It's a typically delightful indie with a delightful staff and a big crowd. My friend
and fellow writer Alex Sokoloff was there, and my
friend and fellow writer David Terrenoire joined me
for dinner afterward. I was a fan of his first book and remain a fan of his blog A Dark Planet.
He's the human embodiment of noir, is David.
Heading onward tomorrow, to Phoenix and the first gig with Andrew.
Day 5, Part 1 (US)
Lee & Sergeant Randy Drumheller, Ft Bragg, NC
A nine o'clock start for the relatively long drive down to Fort Bragg, which is a huge base the size of a large
town. I visited the North Post PX, one of two, and it's the size of a suburban department store. Met plenty of
uniformed Reacher Creatures, plus many loving spouses and parents planning to ship books to Iraq and Afghanistan.
Then we had a barbecue lunch in Raleigh and did a TV interview with genre fixture Stacey Cochran. And I finally
got a chance to exploit NC's ludicrously modest cigarette prices. The same C-note that gets me one carton in NYC
got me three here. It might be worth buying an extra suitcase. Or a steamer trunk. Or a semi trailer.
Monday, May 25, 2009 Day 4, Part 2 (US)
NC BBQ and a scenic view
La Guardia plus American Eagle means inevitable delays, but today they were modest and nobody's faultthere
were thunderstorms in the DC area, which hit NC just as I arrived, thereby nixing my plan to go out and get cheap
cigarettes. So I did the guy thinggot a barbecue sandwich from room service and watched ESPN all night.
Day 4, Part 1 (US)
Friday morning's car got me to the airport in Boston early enough to get the 9 o'clock flight instead of the
10 o'clock, so I got home an hour early, which was much appreciated, because I had things to do...the New York
Times is running a series of short thrillers on the Sunday Op-Ed page between June and August, and I had to
write one. 2000 words is what they asked for, so given my pedantic nature, exactly 2000 words is what they got.
The story is about the hour before Gone Tomorrow starts.
Saturday was quiet. Went to see Reacher Creature James Gandolfini in a play called God of Carnage, on
Broadway. Went to the Morgan Library Sunday to see their recent acquisitions.
Thursday, May 21, 2009 Day 3 (US)
The crowd at Borders Boylston
For some reason this felt like the quintessential tour day...a fairly but not excessively tragic early start,
a car to the airport, a flight to Boston, a pizza, then TV, then photographs, then radio, then an evening event
at Borders, then dinner with a friend.
Now I get the holiday weekend off, and I resume on Tuesday.
Wednesday, May 20, 2009 Day 2, Part 2 (US)
Jen & Scott Smith Naked Blue
Then came some video and print interviews done in a bar at Union Station and my hotel room...and then off to
Bethesda for the evening event. Lots of lovely people, lots of fun.
Last up was one of those terrific synchronicities I love so much in this job...in about 1996 I bought an album
called Rattlesnake Guitar, which was a tribute to Peter Green, the original Fleetwood Mac guitarist. One of my
favorite tracks was by a Baltimore duo called Naked Blue. About five years ago I got an e-mail from a couple
called Scott and Jen in Baltimore, saying they loved Reacher, and by the way would be in NY soon because they
were a band called Naked Blue, and would I like to drop by the gig and get a beer?
So we kept in touch and tonight we had dinner and I was a total fanboy all night.
Day 2, Part 1 (US)
So, Maggie covered for my dereliction of duty by filling you in about yesterday...I went to bed after the party
and got up again a few minutes later and flew to DC for the first day of the tour proper. I like DCit's
mostly a pretty town, full of pleasant, earnest people who read a lot.
First stop was a signing at a Marine Corps post exchange near the Pentagon, with large numbers of enthusiastic
fans in uniform...seems like Nothing to Lose offended only armchair warriors.
Tuesday, May 19, 2009 Day 1 (US)
The Terrible Quartet just doesn't have the same ring.
Sorry, guys. Lee has an early wake up call Wednesday morning so you're stuck with me for the scoop on
Tuesday's launch. The day began with a bang:
the LA
Times review of Gone Tomorrow. Lee had a gaggle of media interviews then went Reacher (i.e, he walked
a few miles), visiting NYC bookstores to sign stock. Jack Reacher may draw crowds too large for small bookstores
to handle, but Lee never will forget the indies who helped get the big guy started.
Back at Reacher Central, I was
updating the website,
twittering about the upcoming B&N event,
answering email and checking in on the Forum. Soon enough, it was time to leave for B&N. Their uptown event
space is pretty cool; it's on the top floor with a view across Broadway to Lincoln Center. The room was full
to capacity, Lee's Random House team lined the back wall and, of course, the Terrible Trio plus RC Greg were
there. Couldn't have a launch without 'em!
Lee doesn't read from his books at signing events, he figures A) hearing Reacher in a British accent is weird
and B) Q&A are a lot more fun. Questions were asked and answered for about an hour (if you've never been to
one of Lee's signings, the video for
Lee at Powell's Books: June 2008
will give you a great idea of what happens).
Lee took us all out for a beer and some really funky coconut shrimp afterwards. Of course there was guy food, too,
but those shrimp were frighteningly memorable. I haven't yet decided whether the food was a good memory or a bad
one, but the signing and seeing the Reacher Creatures? That was great! Thanks, guys!
Webmaven Maggie
Monday, May 18, 2009 Day 0 (US)
Mr. B.
So, after the Piccadilly event in London we had an end-of-tour dinner at Chez Gerard and then I flew back to New
York for the Edgar Awards banquet, which I had to host as president of the Mystery Writers of America. My agent
came over for it and we hung out for the weekend and then he went home and I went to Detroit to record some video
for the Borders web site. I got
up before 4 a.m. to make the flightnot my usual type of decision: normally I would have flown out the night
beforebut I had a dinner date with E.L. Doctorow, one of my favorite literary types, and I didn't want to
miss it.
Then a couple of days later I did the same video thing with Barnes & Noble, but that was here in New York. Then
I spoke at a lunch for the Westchester Libraries, and then I went to Chicago for my brother Andrew Grant's debut
launch event...a dream come true for him, and I didn't want to miss it.
Then came a weekend event organized by an independent bookstore in the Hamptons.
Plus many, many pre-launch interviews, mostly on the phone.
So, not exactly a restful between-tours spell, but it wasn't all work. Part of the time we were babysitting our
daughter's dog, Mr. B. He's a sweet little guya rescued rat terrier of undetermined age, probably 10 or
11. We don't currently have a dog of our own, so the grand-dog fills the hole very nicely. Mr. B even makes an
appearance in Gone Tomorrowactually, two appearances, I think.
Now I'm thinking about packing for the road. I hope to see you somewhere along the way.
Tuesday, April 28, 2009 Day 14 (UK)
Lee with two fav RCs: Dot and her daughter Briony. (See the crowd here.)
Woke up in Dublin exactly 24 hours after last waking up in London and headed out to the airport for the early
flight back...but we waited on the tarmac for 90 minutes because fog at Heathrow was causing delays. But we
got there eventually and stayed in the airport for stock signings in Terminal 5 and Terminal 3. Had an egg
sandwich for lunch and then headed to the BBC for some radio, and then to Waterstone's in Piccadilly for the
last event of the tour. A little tired, but always a bittersweet feelingit has been a lot of fun, and
the book is still a massive number one in its second week. Many thanks to all who came out to see me, many
thanks to Brad and Patsy for making the whole thing as great as it was, and to Maggie for holding the fort at
home.
Next up is the Edgars banquet on Thursday in New York, and then some miscellaneous stuff prior to the US tour,
which begins May 19. Back at ya then. Thanks.
Monday, April 27, 2009 Day 13 (UK)
The indefatigable Declan Heeney
Took an early flight from London to Dublin and was met by Declan
Heeney, my book PR guy in Ireland. Last time I saw him was three
years ago. He had five kids then. Now he has seven. He says he has
finally figured out what's causing it. But clearly he had time for
other things too, because the last three books have all gone to #1 here.
He arranged print and radio interviews with all the significant papers
and stations both south and north. I just finished the last of the
photography. Now comes dinner with Transworld Ireland and a few trade
and media folk. Then I'm going to bed, because it's another early
start in the morning. Sogoodnight in advance.
Sunday, April 26, 2009 Day 12, Part 2 (UK)
What some people do while others are eating eggs & bacon for breakfast.
Not much to report...a quiet day. Talked to a few people, strolled, and eventually cabbed over to my editor's
house in Hammersmith for afternoon tea.
Normal service will be resumed tomorrow...early start to Dublin.
Day 12, Part 1 (UK)
No formal events today, just a few informal things, a lovely sunny morning, so I went out for a walk...and
found London in chaos because of the marathon. Many thin people were running from one place in London to
another more than 26 miles away. None seemed to be enjoying it very much. Some were quite elderly, some
were in obvious distress. Very strange, really. London's public transportation system is entirely adequate,
even on a Sunday. And failing that, there are taxis.
Saturday, April 25, 2009 Day 11, Part 2 (UK)
The rest of the day was dominated by a truly huge line at Waterstone's in Guildford that took up every minute
of the two hours allocated to it. Thanks to all for such a heartwarming display. All authors should be so
lucky. And I saw the numbers behind the listGone Tomorrow sold more than the number two, three
and four books combined. Did I say I love this job?
Day 11, Part 1 (UK)
A proper breakfast
I'm in a fine hotelwasn't sure where at first...staggered in bleary-eyed from the Bradmobile last night
and went straight to bed. Turns out I'm in Westminster, near the Houses of Parliament...with a morning off
and absolutely nothing to doa bit like a government minister, then.
Off to Guildford soonmore later.
Friday, April 24, 2009 Day 10 (UK)
Peterborough Central Library
Gotta say, the Harrogate breakfast was heavily berry-based too. Plus yogurt. A huge basin of the stuff,
with berry compote. Plus a croissant. Coffee wasn't great, either. I'm turning into a fruit bat.
We left Harrogate after a quick print interview ahead of July's appearance at the crime festival, and entered
the parallel dimension known as the East of England. West and central parts are pretty fast A to B, but getting
anywhere in the east takes forever. We arrived in Scarborough with minutes to spare, and most of those minutes
were taken up with print interviews and associated photography on the sea front. Then came the panel appearance
at the Festival, with my pal David Hewson and Graham Hurley, with Peter Guttridge moderating. It was a fun hour,
followed by an enormous fish and chip lunch, followed by another interminable drive to Peterborough for the
evening event. Nice people, good questions, lots of books to sign.
Then we drove back to Londonwatched Liam Neeson in "Taken" on the way. Guildford tomorrow afternoon...meaning
we leave atsay it out loudTEN TO ONE PM. A lie-in! A perfect morning in prospectif breakfast is
berry-free, that is.
Thursday, April 23, 2009 Day 9 (UK)
Town Hall, Preston
The Malmaison is the only hotel in the world where I prefer to go down
for breakfast, rather than having room service. Main problem is you
have to make your own coffee, plus the delivered menu involves all
kinds of mandatory yogurts and nuts and berries. I mean, what am I?
A small rodent that lives on the forest floor? I don't think so.
Whereas the dining room serves eggs and bacon and fats and sugars.
So, suitably nourished, we left Manchester and headed for Merseyside,
specifically for the charming Pritchards bookstores in Formby and
Crosby, plus an outreach gig they arranged at a school.
Then we went to the BBC to be piped into the Simon Mayo show, almost
certainly my favorite book radio. It's intelligent without being
precious, and populist without being trashy. In other words, they let
me on the show.
Then we drove north to Preston for the main event in the baroque
splendor of the Town Hall. Very nice people, lots of fun, lots of
energy.
Then a late sprint to Harrogate, where we are staying ahead of
tomorrow's line up. It's half past midnight now, and breakfast is
coming seven hours from now...
Wednesday, April 22, 2009 Day 8, Part 2 (UK)
The crowd at Deansgate
So, at 5:30 we headed out for some city center stock signing, and then
to Waterstone's on Deansgate. Delightful sold-out crowd, many old
friends, many new faces. Always a favorite gig. My old pal Johnny
Briggs was there (Mike Baldwin from Coronation Street for the Brits
among you.) Plus Clair and Dawn...you know the Scissor Sisters?
These are the Stalker Sisters. All the way from Gloucestershire, just
to say hi.
Then dinner at the Gaucho with Ali Karim and area sales rep, the
transcendentally eccentric Martin Myersanother 13-year veteran of
the Reacher wars.
Day 8, Part 1 (UK)
Serene on the outside, Saw V on the inside
A heroic nighttime drive by Brad got us to Manchester at 2:30 in the
morning. I lolled in the back and watched Saw V on the video system.
First up this morning was a TV interview with a crew from my old hood,
Birmingham. Then came a 75-minute signing line at Waterstone's in the
Trafford Centre. Then I ducked out for a cigarettebut apparently
not far enough out...a security man in a bright red blazer suggested
I move a little further. We discussed the issue politelyi.e. he
wasn't bleeding or anything afterward, which is pretty much the
definition of polite in Birminghamand then I was surrounded by an
entire platoon of bright red blazers...Patsy was working out how to
use an "Author Arrested" headline to our advantage...Brad was
clearly figuring he'd take the three on the left while I took the
three on the right...but you'll be pleased to know that for possibly
the first time in 54 years I did the smart thing and kept my hands in
my pockets. No harm done, except we had to get sandwiches for lunch,
not pizza.
After that we did the Becky Want show on BBC Manchester and now we're
resting up ahead of the Deansgate experience tonight.
Tuesday, April 21, 2009 Day 7 (UK)
In honor of Gone Tomorrow, it's a subway-themed #1! Bravo, Lee!
Early start and a busy morning with sales rep extraordinaire Garry
Perryfirst to Gatwick with some good bookselling friends, then
Stansted. Plenty of Reacher books are sold at British airports...
Then back to London for the Sun Talk Internet radio show, and an
interview with the Sun newspaper.
Then my thirteenth publication dinner with Transworld folkthey gave
me an Aston Villa shirt with "Reacher 13" on the back. And they had
some newsafter only three days on sale, and two days ahead of its
official release date, Gone Tomorrow is already number one on the UK
charts. Ireland, too. Thanks, folks.
Manchester nextit's midnight and we're on the way up there right now.
Monday, April 20, 2009 Day 6 (UK)
Lee's view at Borders London-Kingston
The day started with a mystery...I had a nine o'clock interview
scheduled with an Icelandic journalist named Arni. What would he be
like? A leathery old guy in a knitted sweater, I guessed, probably
smelling of herring. Then I thought, no, maybe in Iceland Arni is a
woman's name, and maybe she's cute.
I never found out. He (or she) never showed up. Bankrupt, possibly.
Then the Bradmobile swept up to my hotel at ten o'clock on the dot
with Transworld publicity director Patsy Irwin aboard, and we were off
and running...first stop was book collectors' haven Goldsboro, where
I signed hundreds of copies destined mostly for the States, and met
delightful long-time Reacher reader Ali. Not Ali Karim. A lady.
Stock signings next, around The City, and a lunchtime sit-and-sign at
a Waterstone's. Long line, lovely people.
Then more stock signings, and the evening event in Kingston. Great
crowdthe lens on my phone isn't wide enough. But hey, it's a phone.
Although I'm typing this blog on it too.
Right now waiting for room service curry at the Gatwick Hilton. We
hit the airport stores early tomorrow!
Sunday, April 19, 2009 Day 5 (UK)
The Indespensibles: Steve Fisher & Darley Anderson
A day of meetings, semi-social and semi-businessand this being the
world of publishing, all of them involving food and drink.
First up was morning coffee with my UK editor, the beloved Marianne
Velmans of Transworld. Then straight to lunch at The Ivy with author
David Baboulene, who is writing a book for a university press about
story structure, and who wanted my views. So that lasted about a
quarter of the way through the appetizerI warned him in advance I
don't know much about theory.
Across the street from The Ivy is the St Martins theater, where The
Mousetrap has been running for 57 years. Looking at me from the
photograph of the current cast was an old actor friend of mine. He
once wallpapered my dining room. But now he's got a proper job.
Last came afternoon tea with my movie agent Steve Fisher and my book
agent Darley Anderson. Steve is in town for the book fair, and it's
rare that we can all be in the same place at the same time, so we
celebrated. They have been with me from the beginning and built the
Reacher story from the ground up.
Tomorrow the tour starts in earnest.
Saturday, April 18, 2009 Day 4 (UK)
London town from my window; that's Hyde Park in the distance.
Not much to say today...got up in Amsterdam, flew to London (on a
plane, you understand) and will spend the weekend here with most of
world publishing because of the London Book Fair. Thus, plenty of
opportunity for meetings both business and social, which I'll report
on in due course, or not.
I brought a coat and an umbrella and haven't used either yet. Spring
has sprung big time in Europe and it's lovely.
Friday, April 17, 2009 Day 3, part 2 (Holland)
#7 of 7: Dirk Koppes of De Pers newspaper
The Ambassade Hotel on the Herengracht in Amsterdam has a library full
of books signed by authors passing through on tourincluding four of
mine. It's a beautiful room, which is just as well because I was in it
all day, for four interviews in the morning and three in the
afternoon...
...separated only by lunch with two beautiful women from the
publishing house and...
Lee & the Luiting girls
...many photo sessions out on the street, and
followed by dinner with three beautiful women from the publishing house.
And that's it...I move on to London tomorrow. More to come from
there.
Day 3, part 1 (Holland)
Picture Lee smokin' in his PJs
Holland has succumbed to no-indoor-smoking madness so there was a
brief author-in-pajamas-in-doorway scenario this morning, but nobody
caredthe Dutch are very broadminded: the law as written applies to
tobacco only. You can still smoke pot indoors, so all is not lost...a little mellow and fuzzy, but not lost.
More interviews coming up...more later.
Thursday, April 16, 2009 Day 2, part 2 (Holland)
Say kaas!
So, after lunch (which was a bacon and cheese sandwich plus a fried
apple thing) I had three more interviews, which means that so far by
my count six-thirteenths of the Benelux population knows all there is
to know about Gone Tomorrowshort of actually reading the book for
themselves, which happily they seem to be doing, because the book is
selling very well.
That it's selling at all is a miracle of speedy translation. Holland
in particular suffers from a cultural phenomenon whereby people prefer
to read in Englishas a mark of sophistication and accomplishment, I
think. If the Dutch translation is even a week or two late, it suffers
badly in the market. But this year it's ready from the get-go...
Photographing the photographeris this how Escher got started?
...which made me feel a tad guilty about going to the American Book
Center to promote the English language edition (confusingly, the UK
release.) But we had fun there.
Then I had dinner with the aforementioned speedy translator, Jan Pott,
who seems to have done a fabulous job. I forgot to ask him the Dutch
for "Reacher said nothing." But I'm sure he knows.
Amsterdam in the AM
Day 2, part 1, Twitter style (Holland)
Slept well, got up, had breakfast, did two interviews, now eating lunch.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009 Day 1 (Holland)
Looks like the party's started!
Late evening rain at JFK made for a takeoff delay and we were stacked
up over Heathrow for a half hour, which made the Amsterdam connection
impossible...except that plane was delayed too, so what went around
came around. Weather in Amsterdam was beautiful, tulips are
everywhere...if it was like this all the time I'd move here.
Did the first interview and had drinks with my Dutch publishers, and
then dinner with their major clients and Val McDermid. Got an e-mail
between the guinea fowl salad and the veal steakNothing to Lose in
paperback is #1 in the UK.
Now I'm heading for bed. Good night.
Tuesday, April 14, 2009 Day 0 (Holland)
The trusty Rimowas wait in the corner of Lee's office. Extra points for IDing the guitars.
Remember that old bookEurope on Five Dollars a Day? How about: Europe on one bag for sixteen days?
My schedule shows I'm starting in Amsterdam, which is always a pleasure. Slight displeasure getting there,
thoughI was booked non-stop from JFK, but that flight was withdrawn...so now I'm going through London.
Could have used KLM direct, but they don't have lie-flat beds. So I'll have to connect at Heathrow's Terminal
Five, which gets me in a little later than ideal, which means I have to jump in immediately with the first media.
But I like Dutch journalists, and Val McDermid is in town, too, so we'll have dinner plus a big joint interview
Thursday morning.
So, I'm all packed, as usual with identical outfits. Which turns out to be why we're featuring audience
photos on the blog...Maggie said to me, thing is...you always, um, look the same, so let's get pictures of
something else. So brush your hair and get ready to smile!
(Fashion notes: Shirts and pants by Lands End, jacket by Brooks Brothers, shoes by Churchs. As always, each shoe
is worth more than the rest of the outfit. I'm a cheap dresser. And the Rimowa suitcase cost more than everything
in it.)
My iPhone is charged. My bills are paid. I have things to read. I just checked in online. The car to the
airport is booked. More later.
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