Back
in the summer of 2004, after reading that Joyce Carol Oates was giving an
author talk at a local library, I decided to print out the first chapter of my
novel, Lily Steps Out (Penumbra
Publishing 2012), enclose it in a SASE and bring it to the reading. She’ll say NO? She’ll say NO. Nothing
ventured. Nothing gained.
Off
the library I went, and sat through her talk clutching my offering with sweaty
hands and a pounding heart, all the while instructing myself, DO IT! DO IT!—Full disclosure: I was
starting to chicken-out. Her presentation over, I queued up to buy her book and
ask her—beg if necessary—to read my chapter. My turn came. She autographed my
book. I mustered all my courage.
“Ms. Oates,” I
said, “I’m a writer too and I’ve written a novel. It would mean so much to me
if you would read the first chapter.”
“Oh, I can’t,” she said. “People ask me all
the time. I just don’t have the time.”
“Ms. Oates,” I said. “You’re like a movie star
to me.” (This is true.) “I’ve read almost all of your novels and you’re
collections of short stories more than once.”
I could sense the impatience of the
crowd behind me waiting their turn. Move
it lady, someone muttered behind me, but lady didn’t move. Lady stood there citing short stories Oates had
written years and years before, until finally, I heard, “Send it to me at
Princeton.” Words from heaven. I flew home, called the college, got her address
and ran to the post office.
About a month or so later I received
this typewritten postcard:
Sept.
17. 2004
ONTARIO REVIEW PRESS
9 Honey Brook Drive
Princeton, New Jersey
08540
Dear Rita Plush,
Your story is very engagingly
written. The voice is shrewd, sharp, funny, and yet tender. Perhaps the
theme of the “Middle-aged housewife who becomes impatient with her
life” is somewhat familiar, so it’s difficult to make such material
distinction. Still this is promising, and might well make a readable and marketable
novel. Good luck!
Joyce Carol Oates
I couldn’t believe it! But there it was,
from her brilliant fingertips—Joyce Carol Oates, the esteemed, the prolific—she
has her own Book of the Month Club, and why shouldn’t she? the woman writes a
book a month—the most fabulous of the fabulous, whose books I loved, whose
short stories I swooned over—Joyce Carol Oates liked my chapter. She thought it
PROMISING! If something could be worn
out by looking at it, that postcard would be dust today.
When I knew my book was to be published,
I scanned the post card onto a letter asking Ms. Oates if I could use the quote
on the cover. A few weeks later I received the reply, “Yes you can. Good luck!”
And there it reads on the cover of Lily Steps Out:
“…engagingly
written. The voice is shrewd, sharp,
funny,
and yet tender.”
Rita
Plush is an author, teacher and lecturer on the decorative arts. She is the
facilitator of the Self-published Authors’ Roundtable that meets monthy at the
Manhasset Library in Manhasset, LI. During
her thirty-five years as an interior designer, Rita was the coordinator of the
Interior Design/Decorating Certificate Program at Queensborough Community
College and taught several courses in the program.
The
publication of her novel, Lily Steps Out
(Penumbra 2012), was the subject of a feature article in Newsday’s Act II section in July, 2012 called, “Published &
Proud,” followed by “Rita Steps Out,” in the Times Ledger, August,
2012. Her short stories appeared in many
literary journals including The Alaska
Quarterly Review, The Iconoclast, The MacGuffin and Passager before they were included in the collection, Alterations (Penumbra 2013).
Lily
Steps Out Amazon US, Amazon UK, Barnes & Noble
Alterations Amazon US, Amazon UK, Barnes & Noble
3 comments:
Wow. Rita, I would have passed out in a fangirl heap and died on the spot. Fantastic.
Laurie, maybe Rita could introduce you. :)
I have three contemporary writer role models and JCO is definitely one of them. She is a writing beast, and I so admire her. What a great story, Rita!
Post a Comment