Three Things No One Tells You Until Your First Book Comes Out

My first book Fire Girl: Essays on India, America, & the In-Between was the culmination of the strongest, most urgent dream I have had since I was six-years-old. Not for me a dream husband or a dream wedding. That I did well on those fronts is a bonus. But there’s never been a time of my life when I have not wanted a book with my name on the cover, and every step I have taken has been towards this goal.

Now, with the publication of my newest book, Women Who Misbehave, and with the pandemic still very much around us, I am in a reflective mood. Here are some lessons I learned from that first time thanks to Fire Girl.

ONE

Until your first book comes out and you are signing copies for the first time in your life, you don’t realize that there are two kinds of folks who show up to readings. The first, those who are interested in what you have to say and they want to get to it, so if you would just sign quickly and let them be on their way. They are not particularly keen to hang around and chit chat. The second kind of folks are those who want to have a meaningful conversation with you while standing in line. Mind you, they are not inconsiderate. They are mindful of your time and that there are others in line behind them but they still want a chat that’s more than small talk, and while you are chatting, they also want you to write something meaningful, something more than “Happy Reading” and your signature.

I know this second kind of person intimately because I have often been this person. Whether I am there to celebrate the author’s first book and excited to discover a new voice, or I have read their previous works and I am a huge fan, I hope they will remember our exchange at the signing table. That later that day they will think, Oh-so-and-so said that so-and-so-unmissable thing!

There are authors who really love the solitary life that writing demands. There are those who are anxious in crowds or who have the next book to write mapped out already and they must absolutely get to it. I am a little bit of all them, but I also love readings and signings and talking about books that aren’t even mine with fellow readers. I am ecstatic and excited and grateful when someone buys my work because in that purchase they are saying, “I see the years that have gone into this. I see the rejections, the everyday sacrifices that nobody asked you to make but you did because that is what makes you you.

TWO

Until your first book comes out, no one tells you that no one needs your book. You walk in to homes of your friends and family, especially those who love to read, expecting to see your title peeking out from a shelf or stacked on the coffee table. At first glance when you don’t see your book, you slow down, and you read the words on each spine carefully. When you still don’t see it, you are taken aback. There’s a sinking feeling in your stomach. You want to ask the obvious question, and sometimes, you do, letting go of all notions of self-respect and embarrassment. You hope you will hear something like, “I loaned it to my colleague” or “my sister saw it and took it home.” What you don’t expect are answers that range from “I have already read some of your writings online so I didn’t think there was any point,” or “I will get to it someday” or “I haven’t had any time.”

Until your first book comes out, you don’t realize that just because you are reading at an event or bookstore, you don’t have to mean more than just another name to the organizers. All you may be to them is how many chairs have to be set out or how many display copies put up in the window, if there even needs to be an announcement about you on their Instagram.

You also don’t realize that just because you are reading, anyone actually has to show up for it, even if you have friends in the city and they liked your status when you posted about it or even went so far ahead as to promise you that they will definitely be there. So you learn to do the next best thing. You thank the organizers, you make jokes to ease their discomfort, and you let your skin absorb their pitiful gaze. If it’s a bookstore, you buy other books from them, then you walk out and keep walking until you exhaust yourself.

THREE

Until your first book comes out, you don’t know the full extent of how grace can come from completely unexpected places. That someone you met once, and that too fifteen years ago in New Delhi, will show up to your reading in California. That a friend from childhood you have not been in touch with for twenty years will buy multiple copies to distribute. That strangers from unexpected places will write to you to thank you for your words. That you will be invited to read at intimate gatherings and book clubs and you will laugh until your sides ache. That unexpected allies will prop up online and they will interview you or share about your book in ways you could have only hoped. That your book will be taught in universities and you will be invited to deliver lectures, and afterwards, shy students will email you with their questions, and you will have the best exchange ever.

Until your first book comes out, you do not realize the full measure of why you write in the first place. Not for sales or readings or anything else, but because you have to do it for yourself.

Photo courtesy: Annie Spratt @anniespratt via Unsplash

Photo courtesy: Annie Spratt @anniespratt via Unsplash

RED INK

The first time I got applauded for writing, I was six years old, maybe almost seven. It was at my paternal grandparents’ home in Calcutta. My parents and I had come down for a vacation from New Delhi. My first story, a suspicious blend of two or more fairy tales, was one they had already heard. This time though they asked me to read it out loud to my grandparents as well.

In spite of the many decades that have passed since that moment, I still remember how it felt to have a captive audience and how much the four of them clapped after I finished reading my story. I had written it in red ink, by then established in my mind as the ink of choice of all my teachers at school, and so, undoubtedly, powerful. Why wouldn’t I channel that? Why would I write with anything but that?

That applause has stayed with me all these years. It’s what’s buoyed me up during all those years and years of my books coming close to getting a contract with a publishing house and then not. That applause and the encouraging words I received that day, convinced me to no end that my words were valuable, that there was an audience for it, that they needed it.

Ha!

I don’t have that epic level of confidence in my writing any longer. It’s hard to maintain that level of confidence when my writing has been rejected as often as it has. But I write because it’s more important to me than anyone’s approval or any book contract. I write because I love it more than anything else. I write because that’s how I make sense of the world and hold on to what I need to. That applause in my grandparents’ drawing room also makes me want to rush out to all the six-year-olds in the world, and tell them they and their dreams and their passions, likes, and loves matter.

Some things haven’t changed. Red is still my favorite color. It still reminds me of my school teachers. Most of them nice. Some not so. But all of them, powerful. Why the hell wouldn’t I channel that?

Photo courtesy: Jenn.jpeg @jenn_jpeg

Photo courtesy: Jenn.jpeg @jenn_jpeg

MAY I INTEREST YOU IN SOME LIFE ADVICE?

IMAGE COURTESY: Mike Marrah @mikemarrah

IMAGE COURTESY: Mike Marrah @mikemarrah

No? Well, too bad. Given that this is my space, I get to dole out whatever I want. So here it is: please do your heart and soul a gigantic favor, and wake up 30 minutes to an hour or even two hours (if you can manage by some miracle) before you absolutely have to wake up. Once you’re awake, do not check email or social media.

Well, I suppose you could check email if you absolutely must. If it can wait, let it wait. Thirty minutes, or even an hour, isn’t a lot of time.

But do not check social media. You do not need to know what Beverly had for dinner last night, if Nisha has mastered a song on ice creams and chocolates, if Karan and Arjun’s mother has thrown them the most lavish birthday party, or if I have plucked yet another handful of kale and Swiss chard from my tiny balcony garden. No one needs any of these updates.

And while you are at it, do not check the news or weather. Again, just for those thirty minutes or even an hour. This can be a hard one to avoid, I agree. Especially say, if it’s summer and you live in Hurricaneville like me. Or it’s monsoon and you must know the forecast before you step out of home. But if you are checking out the news just to update yourself about the general, everyday, gloom and doom of the world, you can wait. Again, it’s just thirty minutes.

Now in these thirty minutes do something purely for YOU and purely for joy. Write postcards, read, dance, draw, paint, walk, crossword, jigsaw, whatever you like, whatever you tell people you wish you had time for. I have been doing for a while right now, and it has been a gamechanger. This, and deleting social media/super distracting apps from my phone. Today is day 9 of The Great Unplug and it is so quiet and wonderful inside my head I wish I could invite you in for a cup of tea. Which isn’t to say I am not busy. I am. Insanely. But I don’t feel anxious. The first day without those apps was hard. But it’s been steadily getting better. And I absolutely wish the same peace and quiet for you.

Flatmates

These days, our balcony is not ours alone. We share it with seven different species of birds. Ranging from the smallest to the biggest, they are: Carolina Wrens, Carolina Chickadees, House Finches, Tufted Titmouse, Downy Woodpecker, Northern Cardinals, and Northern Mockingbird. {The photos here are not my own. While I have taken plenty, they lack professional quality, and I really, really want you to see the beauty of my flatmates.}

Carolina Chickadees

Photo courtesy: Brian Yurasits @brian_yuri via Unsplash

Carolina Wrens. Photo Courtesy: Kellie Shepherd Moeller @kmoeller via Unsplash

Although they haven’t let me get too close, the Wrens, no taller than my thumbs, are probably the most curious. Their heads rotate, nonstop, this way and that, and their up-in-the-air tails are as long as the rest of their body. I will forever be indebted to the pair of them that decided to make a nest and raise a family in one of our planters back in the early days of the lockdown. I used to sit outside for hours, working, watching, looking up their habits and preferred foods on the internet. Without these delightful birds, I wouldn’t have developed the appreciation I have towards my current flatmates.

I am amazed by the vocal strength of the Chickadees. There are three of them that are regular visitors. They are tiny with disproportionately big heads. If you didn’t see them and only heard them, you’d be forgiven for thinking they own not just my balcony but everything their gaze rests on. They are also the least willing to share food, unless, you are a bird of another species, preferably bigger in size.

Tufted Titmouse. Photo Courtesy David Lantrip

@lantrip via Unsplash

The Titmouse are fairly new to our balcony. They fly in with the chickadees, and never by themselves. To me, they look kind of flabbergasted, as if they can’t figure out why humans have named them what they have. “Why?,” I feel that’s their one constant question, and sadly, I have no answer. I find them exceedingly polite, not just to each other, but to others as well. I haven’t seem them squabble so it seems particularly unfair to me that they got stuck with such a terrible, confusing name.

The Mockingbird, easily our biggest visitor, deigns to land only on the balcony railing. It neither fights over the feeder nor engages with any of the other birds. It only eats, carefully and delicately, one blueberry at a time, on days when I set out a few. It’s magnificent, quiet, and a loner.

Northern Mockingbird. Photo Courtesy: Joshua J. Cotten @jcotten via Unsplash

Downy Woodpecker. Photo Courtesy: Bruce Jastrow @brucej6767 via Unsplash

The Downy Woodpecker has visited us only once so far. But I will always remember the moment I think. Me, looking up from my journal and mug of coffee at the feeder, and seeing this tiny, glossy creature, all fluff, perfection, and glow. What a gift!

My personal favorite are the Northern Cardinals. The pair of them—Red and Lali—are our most frequent visitors. I have loved the color red since I was a kid, and nothing has changed. It’s still my favorite. So, the fact that an actual red bird stops by my balcony every day and that too multiple times, feels unbelievable. There is often tension between Red and Lali though. They will eat side by side but not acknowledge the other one. Or, they will sit with their backs to each other. It’s only on rare occasions, that they will fly in and out together, or share the same sunflower. It’s a complicated relationship, and I stay out of it.

Northern Cardinal. Photo Courtesy: Aaron Doucett @adoucett Via Unsplash