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"I dropped a copy of The Cookie Story in the
mail, along with my letter, and by evening I had all but
forgotten about it. Martha Stewart probably got a thousand
letters a day, more than she could read in a lifetime, and in
truth, I couldn't believe I had even written to her. What had I
been thinking? Almost two weeks after that, in a state of shock,
I read Martha Stewart's heartfelt response..." |
Sitting at the kitchen table, I
watched the tiny screen as Matt Lauer reported that a silver SUV
containing Martha Stewart had slipped past photographers and
into the Alderson Federal Prison Camp, where she would begin
serving a five-month sentence.
Since my idea of a gourmet lunch is a grilled cheese with the
crust cut off and my idea of decorating is putting twinkle
lights in an artificial banana tree, the news that America's
lifestyle diva was entering federal prison, although
interesting, seemed certain to have no impact on my life. How
wrong I was.
About a year earlier, after 25 years in the Las Vegas
entertainment industry, I had begun to write stories for my
niece, stories that she seemed to enjoy very much. One story
became two and two became ten and before I knew it, I had a
co-writer, Dondino Melchiorre, and an illustrator, Juan Varela,
and a small publishing company, Story Store Collection
Publishing.
Juan doesn't exactly speak the king's English, but his Spanish
is superb (unfortunately, my high school Spanish had disappeared
into a black hole along with pi and the date of Magna Carta),
and we often found ourselves dancing a tango of jumbled
languages and cultures.
From that often frustrating beginning came the idea that would
transform our books from just another collection for children --
we'd make them bilingual. Story Store Collection Publishing
could not only give young readers a head start in acquiring
reading skills; we would contribute to their acquisition of a
second language as well.
During our first year, we experienced all the pain, joy, and
frustration that every self-publishing entrepreneur goes
through. Dondino and I wrote; Juan illustrated; and we made
calls and wrote to printers, marketing experts, toy
manufacturers, investors, family, and friends. But if there is
one thing I learned from the experience, it's that the manner in
which events unfold can be mostly a matter of serendipity.
My next-door neighbor Jim Sinclair, a Des Moines lawyer, had
shown up at my door one evening with a story about cookies that
his eight-year-old son, Nick, had written for class. Would you
and Dondino like to hear it? he asked. We'd love to!
At first we listened out of neighborliness, but soon we were
listening out of sheer pleasure. The Cookie Story told about a
little boy and his dog, Lola, who adore cookies so much they
begin to see them everywhere. For this cookie-loving pair,
television was worst -- there were the Nestle Toll House
commercials, Cookie Monster, and even "the queen" of cookie
making, Martha Stewart.
Until then, we had published only our own work. The idea of
publishing Nick's seemed ludicrous, but the more times I read
his story, the more convinced I became that it deserved a wider
audience than his teacher, his father, and the next-door
neighbors. It should be published, and we were just the
publisher for it.
Three months later I sat at my desk looking at the first
prototype of the lavishly illustrated, now bilingual book
entitled The Cookie Story by Nicholas Alexander Sinclair, with
a little help from his friends. Our wonderful book seemed to
provide an angle--eight-year-old author with cookie lust--that
would attract attention. But whose? Two words seemed to jump
into my head: Martha Stewart. And I knew just where I could
reach her.
I pulled out a yellow legal pad and began to write.
Surprisingly, the words poured out as a I told Martha about Nick
and his story and about what he thought of her incarceration,
what he thought about her life, and how she was still the Queen
of Cookies.
Later that day, I dropped a copy of The Cookie Story in the
mail, along with my letter, and by evening I had all but
forgotten about it. Martha Stewart probably got a thousand
letters a day, more than she could read in a lifetime, and in
truth, I couldn't believe I had even written to her. What had I
been thinking?Almost two
weeks after that, in a state of shock, I read Martha Stewart's
heartfelt response. She and her prison colleagues loved Nick's
book, she said, and as soon as she returned to television, she
wanted to have Nick bring his book and appear on her show.
Although I was thrilled, I also knew that her room in a federal
prison and our appearance on the show were probably light-years
apart. Still, there was reason to hope.
I soon learned that Martha Stewart is a woman of her word.
Shortly after her release and return home, I received a phone
call from her personal assistant, who passed me on to one of the
producers of "Martha."
And as they say, the rest is history. On November 3, 2005, Nick,
his father, his step mom, Dondino, and I flew to New York to
watch Nick make his debut on national television. What an
incredible interview! Everyone at Martha's show loved him. With
sales up and Nick planning his second book (The Flying
Cookie), our company's future is beginning to look brighter.
We at Story Store Collection Publishing live by words written by
Mahatma Gandhi: "First they ignore you, then they laugh at you,
then they fight you, then you win."
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Donna Gummelt, writer at Story Store Collection Publishing,
worked on this article with Randy H. Wall, the company's English
editor and an assistant professor of English at South Plains
College in Lubbock, TX. For more information, visit
http://www.StoryStoreCollectionPublishing.com. Activate Your Risk-Free Test Drive >>
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