Pub Day, it’s called. That’s what the publishers call it when your book gets published. They call it Pub Day.
This is the day when the book you’ve been working on for the past year finally hits shelves. The day when your words go out into the world. The day when it all becomes real.
This is the day when you cannot resist, no matter how cool you pretend to be, walking into a random Barnes and Noble just to see your book on a shelf.
Your book. With your name on the jacket.
And when you see it, sitting there among the others, you feel something. Something huge. You dust off the jacket and make sure your book looks nice and crisp. You flip through the pages just to make sure everything is in working order.
When the employee finds you and asks if you need help, you touch your own book and say, “No, I’m just browsing.”
And the employee who—according to book-store dress code—has multiple piercings, pink mohawk, and many tattoos, stares at you. “Why are you
touching that book?”
“Because I know the author,” you say.
“Really?”
“Yeah. Really.”
Pub Day is a big deal. Not to anyone else but you. Hardly anyone in the great wide world actually cares whether your novel is published.
Fewer care that you’ve spent the greater part of a year working with fictional people, in a fictional setting, who do fictional things.
But you care.
Because you still remember what brought you here. You remember your father’s untimely end. And how he made the front page of the newspaper the day before his fate, because he lost his mind and tried to kill his own family.
And you remember how you felt when the sheriff deputies told you that he died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. And how they had to use his dental records to identify him.
You remember…
