On Losing a Book Tour

My commute today is a few dozen steps to the corner of the yard where my tiny studio is waiting for me as it has every day for the past ten years. Today was going to be the start of a publisher sponsored book tour, my very first in more than 20 years as a working writer. It would have been in support of the paperback release of A Wolf Called Wander. I would have traveled across the country and met and been inspired by thousands of students and their wonderful teachers and librarians. I would have made new indie bookseller friends and seen cities I’ve never visited and had new and interesting research opportunities. And I would have sold hundreds of books. Now, because of the pandemic, that opportunity is gone and nothing will bring it back.

And I am feeling such gratitude! First, and most importantly, I’m grateful to all the school boards and superintendents who made the call to close schools and protect the families they serve. I’m in awe of the energy they’ve thrown into educating their students at home. I’m intensely proud of my fellow booksellers who have sacrificed income in favor of the safety of their shop patrons–many of whom are the grandmas and grandpas of my readers. Special cheers to those who are scrambling to make books available to their communities via mail and delivery and ebooks and downloadable audio. I’m thankful that my publisher HarperCollins has valued my safety over their profits and not even asked me to do something that would put myself and my family at risk. I’m grateful to have a roof over my head and my family at my side in these heart-rending times. I’m thankful to be able to stay in and do what I can to protect those for whom staying at home is not possible. I’m grateful for the vast majority of Americans who understand the importance of elective quarantine and hand hygiene.

One thing I came to appreciate in researching A Wolf Called Wander and it’s companion A Whale of the Wild, is that humans are pack animals too. And we are being hunted by a microscopic creature, weak out in the air, but intensely powerful once it breaks the fortress of our lungs. Thousands of our fellow pack members have fallen prey to it. Even so the human pack has the upper hand. Because a virus can’t run. It can’t even crawl. It can only get from one human to the next if a human carries it. And so I’m sending up a howl of solidarity to my fellow pack members, today and everyday, until victory is ours. I will do everything in my power to starve our predator and I will trust my fellow humans to chose life over profit and do the same.

7 thoughts on “On Losing a Book Tour

  1. Natasha Wing

    Our neighborhood howls at 8pm and it sounds like wolves!
    Sorry about your book tour being cancelled. Maybe after this is contained, you can reinvent a new one and it might be even better!
    Love your little red writing studio.

    1. Rosanne Parry Post author

      I’ve been thinking of all those evening cheers going out to health workers all over the world as the howl of the human pack. It’s just so magical to raise your voice with others. Thanks for chiming in here!

  2. Marilyn Taylor McDowell

    It is most definitely sad about the book tour, yet your attitude is wonderful. These are two beautifully written books and ones our library is happy to recommend to our young patrons. We already have A Wolf Called Wander and I’m looking forward to ordering A Whale of the Wild. It may be a while but it would be a fine thing to have you come to Vermont. It would be lovely to see you. It will happen. Patience.

    1. Rosanne Parry Post author

      I’d love to come to Vermont some day! Let’s keep in touch. Eventually public events will be possible. And in the meantime, zooms and skypes and the like for schools and library book clubs are free, so I’m happy to connect with your readers that way.

    1. Rosanne Parry Post author

      Thank you! Even as dark at the days are, there’s much to be grateful for.

Comments are closed.