What. Could. Be. Better?
The man. The legend. R.L. Stine being brilliant. |
When we finally made it, the festival was in full swing. The tiny campus of USF-St. Petersburg was packed with early risers, already in line to meet their favorite authors or attend their readings. The sheer amount of people that came out for the event was awe-inspiring.
I'm so used to not attending book events, since there's a lack of them where I live. But being able to go, and with a great friend no less, made attending this festival 100+ times more awesome.
Instead of a series of panels, the Festival of Reading schedules authors to speak for about 45 minutes, and then sign books for 45 minutes afterwards. The campus was small, but not small enough to see two authors in one hour - a huge bummer, since we ended up missing John Henry Fleming by four minutes. Yes, I counted. He had disappeared like a magician by the time me and Jennifer burst into an empty signing room.
We tried seeing Carl Hiaasen first thing in the morning, but found the ballroom to be filled to the brim with his fans. All the seats were taken. Standing room taken. And with fifteen minutes before the talk began, the room was already boiling hot. From years of going to anime conventions, I knew this was a bad sign. Rooms don't get hot so soon, so fast, at the very beginning of the day when a nice breeze was still blowing outside.
We ducked out of the room and opted for lunch instead. It was a shame, but as soon as we popped open our cold, spicy sushi rolls, we knew we made a good decision.
The morning, after all, was chilly enough to wear coats. It was glorious - I think even my coat was smiling, because it rarely gets to leave my closet - for about a half and hour. Before it got REALLY HOT outside. So we buried our coats in our bags and ate our cold lunches.
I've recently become a rabid fan of Starbuck's Pumpkin Spice Chai Tea Lattes. There it is. Oh my gosh. The autumn feels.
Re-energized, we went back upstairs after the Hiaasen fans left to listen to R.L. Stine talk.
R.L. Stine was my Reason For Coming. In the sense that, if I got to meet him during the festival, I would consider it one life goal achieved.
Like many people, I grew up reading his Goosebumps series. I used to borrow stacks of those books from the library, and never moved from the couch until I had finished them all. Between my brother and I, we owned a lot of Goosebumps books, and most of them have stayed with us over the years. Here's a photo of all the books we have now, give or take a few that I have in my room, where I'm rereading them (eh, I can't help it):
Jennifer and I settled into our seats. We were both surprised that R.L. Stine's talk wasn't packed with people, but also thrilled at the same time. It meant we wouldn't slowly bake for the next 45 minutes, haha. Stine walked around the room before the talk started, chatting with readers. When he stepped up to the podium and began to talk, I was blown away by how epic he was in his presentation. I mean, he was ridiculously funny and engaging. He shared some of his fan letters, and I was lucky enough to film snippets of that, so you completely understand what I mean when I say that we were rolling the aisles over his charmingly frank delivery (videos HERE and HERE, via my Instagram).
He shared a "true" ghost story (debatable, even by him) and talked about the new Goosebumps movie coming out soon (and how he was told he was too old to play himself in the movie, awwww). When he opened the floor for questions, a bunch of kids came up to the extra mic. I've never heard kids ask questions, despite having attended panels for years. The coolest part was that the kids wanted to know what his favorite things where - his scariest book, his favorite book to write, etc. I don't think adults ever ask those kinds of questions.
It was hard to tear ourselves away, but Jennifer and I wanted to make sure that we had a good chance of meeting Stine at the signing. We slipped out of the room and went outside where they had set up booths for the authors (thankfully shaded for them). We ended up talking to the people in line with us as we slowly moved forward in line. And then... sooner than I thought, I was face to face with R.L. Stine!
This was probably not my shining moment of cleverness. I asked him to sign one of my favorites of his books, and we ended up talking about it a little (more like bumbling on my part, haha) as he signed the book. He was very kind, and managed to play off my awkwardness to make us both laugh. The biggest question people asked me when I started posting these photos to Instagram was what book was it that I picked?
It was a hard decision, but I went with ESCAPE FROM THE CARNIVAL OF HORRORS, the first of the Goosebumps' Choose Your Own Adventure books.
Do you see the holographicness? Do you? It's blinding. This photo doesn't do it justice, but you would know if you ever read one of these.
I think I've read this book every way you could. My brother, mom, and I took turns reading it out loud. Many times I cheated by bookmarking the pages so that if I got a bad ending, I didn't have to start all over again (I'm sure I'm not the only one). This book, in particular, has my favorite bad ending of the Choose Your Own Adventure series, featuring the Doom Slide.
What are you waiting for? Go read it.
Book Haul:
Okay, so this time, it's not a "haul." But I did get two great books. The first is R.L. Stine's newest Fear Street book, Party Games. I didn't read as many Fear Street books (though Sunburn is one of my favorite books, ever, but my copy is too tattered to have survived the journey to the festival). But the premise sounds intriguing. It won't be long before I start reading it. Like, probably tomorrow.
Then there's this beauty. I could not have left the festival without this extensive collection of Andrew Lang's fairy tales. The thing is, I could talk about Lang for a long time. It should probably be its own blog post. But he is my favorite fairy tale curator. I only owned one of his collections, the classic Blue Fairy Book, so finding this book that covers multiple collections seemed like a dream come true. I started reading it last night before bed, and YES, it is a dream come true.
And one more thing: when I first saw this book sitting underneath B&N's vendor booth, I thought, my gosh, the cover art reminds me of Thumbelina's book.
IT DOES. More magic, my friends.
Have you ever met a favorite author? what was the experience like? What about book events/festivals? I'd love to hear about it!
This sounds amazing! I hope I can go to this in the future.
ReplyDeleteIn 8th grade, I was obsessed with the Kingdom Keepers book series by Ridley Pearson and convinced my dad to sign me out of school to take me to Orlando for a signing Pearson was holding with Dave Barry for their latest Peter & the Starcatchers book. I was in a daze the rest of the weekend.
You should! I was a lot of fun! Just make sure you study the schedule ahead of time so you know who you want to see.
DeleteAwww, I've been wanting to read the Kingdom Keepers series for a while now! It seems very unlike me, as a Disney park fan, to have done that yet, haha. So I guess he was pretty awesome, eh? That's so cool.
I'm not much better a Disney park fan since I gave up partly into the third book in the series. The first one is probably the best. And yeah,it was pretty wonderful to meet an author whose work I loved so much for a change. In elementary school, USF held a young writers conference and they had several authors to speak and sign books, but I wasn't a huge fan of any of their works.
DeleteYeah, we don't get too many YA authors around here. I feel your pain. But that can always change!
DeleteI met a favorite author once, took an instant dislike to her and never read anything by her ever again. (That's probably not the kind of answer you were looking for, lol.)
ReplyDeleteYou are an awesome travel companion. Thanks for making a good day great!
LOL, well, that can happen too. I once saw an HGTV star, and the same thing happened to me as with you (replace "read with "watch" and you're totally accurate).
DeleteThanks! You are too. We're traveling twins :D
I met Lemony Snicker once. I stuttered and basically said I dreamed about new books of his coming out, then realized how creepy that sounded and tried to save the situation. It was awkward. I was awkward.
ReplyDeleteIt was also beautiful, and maybe he'll remember me.
Come out to LA for the Festival of Books! It's awesome!
And by Snicker, I mean Snicket. Thanks, Autocorrect!
DeleteYES, I remember you telling me about that. SO AWESOME. Even if you were nervous, that was such a great thing to say to him.
DeleteI want to! It seems like LA has some awesome festivals/conferences.
Like you, because of where I live I don't have many opportunities to go to events like these- or meet favorite authors for that matter. I would love to though… I think I need to try and look up book events in the "big city" closest to me…
ReplyDeleteSounds like your day was AWESOME. And what finds! I love the edition of fairytales that you bought. O.O Looks so pretty...
Hi Joni! I've started to get into the habit of searching for events, because sometimes there are things going on, but I'd never know because they aren't advertised that well. It's tricky, but well worth the effort!
DeleteIt is. It's so pretty. I started reading from it and it's so hard to put it down *_*
Politics and Prose in D.C. always had the best author events. The highlight was when Kate DiCamillo, Jon Scieszka, and Katherine Paterson -- the Holy Trifecta of Children's Literature -- came to visit. Definitely a starstruck (and mildly awkward) moment for me!
ReplyDeleteDid you hear that Netflix is adapting A SERIES OF UNFORTUNATE EVENTS into a mini-series?