My friend David Meerman Scott was at the Wiley booth today at BookExpo America, signing copies of his new book, Real-Time Marketing & PR: How to Engage Your Market, Connect with Customers, and Create Products that Grow Your Business Now. Since I now live in New York but haven’t started working yet, I was able to attend. (David scored me a free pass. I was a John Wiley & Sons “Exhibitor Author,” which made for a couple of initially awkward clarifications at other publishers’ booths, since no conversation began without a subtle name-tag check.)
One thing I learned today: You really can come to know somebody pretty well without ever meeting him or her. I’ve been doing early-manuscript editorial work for David since the first edition (“1E,” if I’m successfully extrapolating from an abbreviation I heard thrown around today to describe later editions) of his popular but “underrated” The New Rules of Marketing & PR. That’s four years of reading “every word of every book that [he’s] written for Wiley,” he noted today. But because we got introduced via email by a mutual colleague (EContent‘s Michelle Manafy, who I’ve also worked for but never met), and because until now I’ve never lived in a city that’s especially well trafficked by business speaker-authors, we’ve never had the chance to meet. And yet, after reading and deeply engaging with so much of his prose, it really did feel like I already knew him. I was highly encouraged by this realization, since I don’t expect the trend of increasing numbers of “e-colleagues” to ever reverse itself.
Anyway, David, if you’re reading this (and if you doubt that he is, I can only assume you’ve never read any of his books), thanks for getting me in to a really fun event. It was great to finally meet you.
What kind of loot did I come away with? Well, the highlight might be an autographed copy of Leo Tolstoy and Ben H. Winters’s Android Karenina, from the publisher who brought us Pride and Prejudice and Zombies as well as Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters. I confess that I’ve heard about but never (yet!) read one of these remixes, but I was pumped nevertheless. I also procured a signed copy of Colette Brooks’s Lost in Wonder: Imagining Science and Other Mysteries, the 2010 Frommer’s guide for D.C., an unsigned copy of Richard Miller’s Fighting Words: Persuasive Strategies for War and Politics, a half-dozen less promising titles (some signed, some not), and–of course–a galley of David’s new book.
All in all, not a bad way to spend an afternoon! That’s it for now. Stay tuned for thoughts on why I love Minneapolis-St. Paul, even though the Brewers always more-or-less collapse when I go there.