“My avocation was a spark ignited by sugar.”
Remember Candy
Dots? Sometimes called buttons, those little rows of rainbow sugar were
easily peeled off long white strips of paper. (I always ate the cherry
rows first.) Penny candy and nickel chocolate bars were sweet rewards in
my childhood. Neighborhood Groceries or “Dimestores” displayed glass
canisters of candy that could be scooped into little bags for little
cravers deliberating over choices like Atomic Fireballs, Tootsie rolls,
Root Beer Barrels, Sugar Babies, Blackjack Gum, and Taffy squares in
four flavors. I was lucky to get my fix for a dime…at a little red brick
store
about half way (six blocks) between home and school. (Yes, I once
walked a mile for a two cent box of candy cigarettes.)
So, as my
mouth is now under construction for implants with three dead molars
needing replacement, I’m shamed into recall. Did the origin of my
porcelain decline begin with a landmark splurge after winning my first
writing contest at age ten? A Western Union Telegram (remember them?)
notified me of my win. A five dollar prize in the hands of a ten year
old with a sweet tooth was dangerous. I blew it on Candy Buttons.
The win propelled a normally shy little redhead to the front of her
class for Show and Tell. I like to imagine classmates were more awed by
telegram proof of my new literary status than the candy strips I
distributed.
Decades later, as I prepare a power point
presentation for Book Clubs and organizations interested in the novel
journey of a writer with a crammed portfolio and sore gums, I am
reminded of those Candy Buttons and what literary lessons I might
salvage from that bittersweet splurge:
Everybody loves a winner!
True. It is easier to get noticed when you can show you have some
credible awards and great reviews. This requires losing enough humility
to put yourself out there. I try to do a lot of 21st century Show and
Tell now that I’m an award-winning author working on my fourth book.
Marketing means spending to receive! So
true. Candy was once a sweet incentive to grow attention. Not so much
today. Adult readers in a market with more supply than demand crave
discounts, free books, gift certificates or even trendy gadgets to win
their attention. Book parties--online and off--feature incentive
give-a-ways to promote a book. However, the price of those give-a-ways
and necessary ads, as well as review and promo services, can take a
bittersweet bite out of royalties. New novelists are like minnows
swallowed up by bigger fish with a publisher or a unique platform that
attracts schools of followers. I think of “50 Shades of Gray”—and turn
50 shades of green over the 16,000 reviews it garnered and how the book
saved a Publishing House. No candy or freebies required?
Creative people need to promote creatively!
Right. When a promotion works well, writers are encouraged to repeat
the success and always think outside the box. Candy Buttons inspired
celebrity a half century ago. Are they still sold—like candy cigarettes
and tootsie rolls? I check online and find Minnesota’s largest candy
store (a 90 minute drive away) sells new and nostalgic candy. In a
historic town closer to home, I find a chocolate shop that also sells
Candy Buttons. Five packages for $6.00 inflates the childhood price by
about 1000%. Still, it’s a small price to pay for renewed celebrity and
more readers. When I present my “Novel Road” power point to Book Clubs
and aspiring authors, I’ll have a sweet reminder to give away with
bookmark swag. It feels right—a nostalgic treat to promote a taste for
my nostalgic brand of fiction.
“Sweet!” My eight-year-old
granddaughter approves the idea with a high five and a toothy grin white
as chicklets. She loves to read, but actually prefers veggies.
Cj
Fosdick still craves chocolate, but gleans sweet rewards from her
Romantic Suspense/Time Travel www.cjfosdick.com and http://amazon.com/author/cjfosdick
novel series that began with “The
Accidental Wife.” Follow her on FB, Goodreads,
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