Saturday, March 3, 2012

LAS VEGAS REVISITED


Note: This piece first appeared (this month) in Black Lamb, a monthly literary magazine I contribute to. It's quite long, and some readers may prefer to skip to the end for the dessert: a 55-word story about taking on more than you can handle.

I’ve been passing through Las Vegas since 1960, when you could pay for a full tank of gas with a five-dollar bill and get two silver dollars in change. I ate 99¢ dinners at the Silver Slipper before I was old enough to gamble. I spent a weekend in the Vegas Greyhound station when I was twenty-one, but because I was almost broke at the time I only gambled on penny slots.
The fact is, I’ve never been much of a gambler. But when Susan and I went to Las Vegas in 1990, we made the biggest gamble of our life together. No, we didn’t get married; we had already been married for three years, and that decision had been no gamble. It was a lock, a guaranteed jackpot.
We had also been in business together as publishers for five years. Using the name John Daniel, Publisher, a sole proprietorship I’d established in the 1970s, she and I had combined our skills, our contacts, and our financial assets to build a publishing house that was tiny but distinguished. We had published such treasures as Janet Lewis, Hildegarde Flanner, Nancy Packer, Mary Jane Moffat, E. S. Goldman, Carolyn See, John Espey, and, most recently Jess Mowry, plus others you may not have heard of but who had dedicated, devoted, book-collecting fans.
It was a bit embarrassing that the American Booksellers’ Association would chose Las Vegas, the epitome of nonliterary pastime, for their annual convention. But they did, and they did it to the hilt. One publisher got to have it both ways by hosting a “bad taste party” at Caesar’s Palace. Susan and I didn’t go to that one, but we went to one just as weird, a party thrown by Random House at the former Las Vegas residence of Elvis Presley, promoting a new piece of fiction by Jackie Collins. Talk about class.
While we were in Las Vegas for this business convention, Susan and I didn’t do all business, and in fact we actually indulged in the goofy game of video poker, a relatively new high-tech version of old-fashioned slot machines. Video poker did not require the gambler to use any right-arm elbow grease, and this new-fangled no-arm bandit fostered the fantasy that thought and talent might improve the gambler’s chances. (By the way, it was still “gambling” in 1990, not the euphemistic “gaming” it has since become.) So we spent twenty dollars a night—a ten-dollar roll of quarters for each of us—and played at adjacent stations, amiably competing for who could run out of coins last.
But that wasn’t our big Las Vegas gamble.
Amidst all this Hype, Glitz, Hokum & Schlock (Is that the name of a law firm, or what?), we decided on the floor of the convention hall to take our business seriously and make it grow.
To grow we needed big-time book distribution. We had, only weeks prior to the ABA, been dumped by our small press distribution company, Texas Monthly Press, leaving us without a venue to show off our wares at the Vegas ABA. As it happened, Texas Monthly Press had been bought by Gulf Publishing, which had bought the booth at ABA but decided not to use it. Since TMP was breaking their contract with us, we had the chance to forgive them in exchange for their entire booth—free. No hard feelings. So long, Dearie.
Then, free of TMP, we had quickly made arrangements to be distributed by National Book Network, a strong and rapidly growing distributor of mid-sized publishers. It was an expensive contract, but the best offer we had. So, even before we got to Las Vegas, we had made the first steps in our scramble up the slippery mountainside. We now had a prominent distributor, and we had a booth all to ourselves in the choice part of the convention hall, which happened to be back-to-back with NBN, our new distributor, on the aisle behind us.
So part of the Big Gamble was already under way when we rented a Ford Taurus station wagon; filled it with books, posters, and convention supplies; and drove over the Halloran Grade on Interstate 15. As we descended into Las Vegas, we passed, way out on the outskirts of town where the sidewalk ended in the desert, a new casino under construction named Excalibur, which looked like Camelot on steroids.
We got to the convention center on a Thursday afternoon, and the big affair lasted until Tuesday morning. It was grueling. It was thrilling. It was a roller-coaster of adrenalin and exhaustion. We worked the floor hard, shaking hands with friends old and brand new. We cruised the aisles for handouts, ideas, and contacts. We worked just as hard at the parties as we did on the convention floor, laughing, swapping business cards, and listening for more ideas.
With every day that passed—and those few days felt like two weeks—our resolve to grow grew stronger. We had gambling fever. We said to each other, over and over, “Maybe we should…” and “What if we tried…?”
Tuesday noon arrived, the convention was over, and it was time to dismantle the Emerald City. As we knocked down our display and schlepped our wares to the Taurus, we were exhausted physically but still high on the changes we were going through, knowing we were on the verge of a growth spurt. So instead of driving all the way back to Santa Barbara and our one-room office on lower State Street, we decided stay the night in Nipton, a two-building dot on the map of the Mojave Desert, ten miles off the Interstate on the California side of the state line. One building was a four-room hotel; the other building was the store where Nevadans came to gamble. It was the closest place to Las Vegas where a hard-core fool could lose money to the California lottery.
We stayed in the Clara Bow room of the Nipton Hotel, named after the sexy silent star who had once owned the entire town. Freight trains roared through about once an hour, sounding like banshees on roller blades. The late-afternoon light on the New York Mountains was crevassed with purple shadows. The stars at night were ablaze. Morning was still and silent, except for those wonderful fast freights rattling by. Noon was hot and alive with the buzz of desert life, if only you listened hard enough to hear the lizards crawl.
We decided to stay another night.
We made lists. We went over our notes, over and over. We made phone calls from the pay phone outside the store. We flexed the muscles of our imagination. The gamble was only half placed, so it was time to bet all the chips we had on the future of our business.
We decided to incorporate, to become Daniel & Daniel, Publishers, Inc. Health plan, the works.
We decided to do everything our new distributor, NBN, suggested that we do, which meant a lot more work for us. And more expense.
We decided to hire a staff, starting with a production manager/designer and a marketing director. Payroll taxes.
We decided to rent a bigger office in the center of Santa Barbara.
More warehouse space.
Two more computers.
A company vehicle, big enough for hauling forty-pound boxes of books.
We made more phone calls, loaded the station wagon, and zoomed out of the desert, back to Santa Barbara, and into the big time.
Les jeux sont fait! The chips were down, the dice were tossed, and here goes nothin’. What were we doing? Would we go broke? If so, what would we do? Go back to clerking in bookstores?
Or would we win big? Would we publish best-sellers? Would our brilliantly reviewed novels be bought by Spielberg? Would our authors get on Johnny Carson? Would Daniel & Daniel become a household name among publishing houses? Would some big publisher (hello, Random House?) buy us out and put us out to green pastures?
So. How did we do? Bars? Cherries? Lemons?
A bit of all of the above. Yes, we did grow measurably. We moved into a two-room office, and later into a four-room office, and eventually into a giant cavern of space in an arty building on Lower State, which was hard to heat in the winter, impossible to cool down in the summer, but huge enough to handle the growing accumulation of equipment and staff.
We hired a staff, starting with a production manager/designer/typesetter. Then we added a receptionist who also worked as Susan’s assistant in the marketing department. Next we split that job into two, so we had a receptionist and a marketing director. Then our production manager started using one or two interns. The place was buzzing.
We went from publishing ten books a year to publishing about thirty-five. A good number of these books were published under a separate imprint, Fithian Press, which was reserved for author-subsidized projects, which was how we earned enough income to keep this whole boat floating.
We made more and more money.
We spent even more and more money.
It more and more resembled gambling addiction. We had to keep covering our bets, and the bets kept getting bigger. Businesses have growing pains, just like teenagers, and this one was outgrowing its britches with every passing season. We had to publish more and more Fithian Press books to be able to afford the expensive losses we incurred by having our literary A-list distributed by NBN. We were working our butts off just so we could stay in business and work our butts off harder. We were riding on a wild horse. And, as long as we’re tossing metaphors in the air, we were swimming in deeper and deeper water.
We did incorporate, and we did buy a company vehicle. Those bets paid off. We established a payroll, with benefits for us and our staff, and that was good, and given our size it was necessary, but it was costly. More quarters into the slot machine than quarters coming out. Being distributed by NBN was a disaster. They oversold our books, earning huge commissions, then charged us for the returns when the sold books came back. NBN might have been a good distributor for other publishers, but for us it was an unwise bet. One of those bets when you know you have to quit while you’re behind, and there was an extra charge for quitting.
None of our authors got on Carson or any of Carson’s successors. We had no best-sellers, which was fortunate because we would have had to go into debt to finance the reprints. No big company came knocking on our door to buy us out.
By 2002, twelve years after the Las Vegas ABA where we had placed our big bet, we decided to cash in our remaining chips and face the fact that when you gamble in Las Vegas, the house always wins. It was time to downsize.
We got rid of the payroll, we moved into a tiny office and then into home offices for just Susan and me. We’re back to publishing about eight books a year. We now call ourselves semi-retired, which means we only have to work half-days, and we get to decide which twelve hours a day to work.
Yes, we still work as hard, but we worry less. We’re done taking chances. Getting to this point was a roller-coaster of a twelve-step program. From now on, if being in business means taking big gambles, in the words of Samuel Goldwyn, “Include me out.”
But I’ll say this much about that 1990 ABA in Vegas. It gave me all I needed for the most successful novel of my writing career, The Poet’s Funeral. Set in Las Vegas at the very same convention, it’s a send-up of every aspect of the publishing business: the authors, the agents, the editors, the publishers, the publicists, the critics, the distributors, the booksellers, the readers and collectors.
That book was my love song to the gambling industry that defined my working life.


•••



Excalibur
It felt light as he drew it from the stone and held it high, dreaming of the Grail.
But when he looked farther into the future and saw a round table in splinters and his dreams trashed by civil war, the sword grew heavy in his hand.
By then he could not put it down.

18 comments:

  1. Well, John, you were right; it was a long post. But a very interesting one! Quite a gamble you two took. To me, it's another example of how we change throughout our lives. Sometimes, we want to step things up a bit and sometimes, we want to scale them down. All part of the pattern and wonder of life!

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    1. I agree with you, Patricia. Life is a series of chances we take, choices we make. They often make more sense in retrospect.

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  2. John,
    I enjoyed every word of it. My wife and I also had a small business that got bigger. Our experience wasn't exactly like your - we weren't in publishing, which must be the hardest business to be in. As one of the big-time publishers said many years ago about the publishing business and books, "Gone today, here tomorrow." I have to explain that to manyh people, but not to you.

    People think when you own a company everything is roses. In fact, when I tried to collect SS at 62, the woman in the SS office said, "You owned a business. You could pay yourself anything you wanted to." Obviously, she had never owned a business.

    At any rate, thanks for a very honest and informative blog.
    Jim Callan

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    1. Thanks for your comment, Jim. Owning one's own business means you get to be your own boss, but it turns out you're also your own slave. As a colleague warned me: when you go into business for yourself, you only have to work half time--and you get to decide which twelve hours a day you want to work.

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  3. John,I'll have you know I read every word. What an inspiring post. Have a dream, make it happen and then change your mind. Having a passion is such a wonderful thing.
    Thanks for sharing this one,
    Theresa

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    1. Thank you, Theresa. Yes, it's important to make our dreams happen, or we'll always wonder what we missed. But, as you point out, it's important to be able to change your mind if the dream doesn't work out the way you wanted it to.

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  4. I read the whole exciting and scary story too. Interesting to hear more about how you did all this and managed to stay sane.

    Congratulations.

    Marilyn

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    1. Marilyn, thanks, as always. I'm not so sure about staying sane. Anyone who chooses to be a small press publisher might be deemed legally insane!

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  5. John, I loved the post as well as the ending (sorry that the 'big house' once again took you in), the house did not take all...bravo. Keep writing these post, I learn so much from you. You keep me inspired, that there is hope for all of our endeavor and sweat. Augie

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    1. Thanks so much, Augie. Endeavor and sweat are what the writing career is made of, but if you love the endeavor and can even put up with the sweat, you've already won the game.

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  6. John, like the song says, "You got to know when to hold 'em, know when to fold 'em." You and Susan had the guts to get in the game and even more guts to get out when that was the best thing to do. I think your story speaks well of both of you.

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    1. Many thanks, Earl. To tell the truth, I think we were pretty lucky, too.

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  7. I'm so glad I took the time to read your post. I once had my own business (nothing to do with books) and I do know what a gamble it can be. I give you and your wife a lot of credit for everything you did, from beginning to end. Terrific story and I have a lot of respect for you both.

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    1. Marja, thank you so much. Having your own business means working for a rough boss sometimes, but it's got a lot of rewards.

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  8. I was happy to read your entire post, John. Susan and you have had quite a ride with your business! What an ending to your story: you wrote and published your most successful book -- The Poet's Funeral. How inspiring!

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  9. Thank you, Eileen. It's such a pleasure to know you.

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  10. Loved your post, and I'm glad you and Susan stepped out in faith and lived your dream. Not everything has a storybook ending (not even in fiction :-)), but what a wonderful experience. And everything, both good and bad, is grist for your (writer's) mill.

    Also, loved the story at the end. I don't know how you come up with those 55 word stories. Wonderful
    Jackie

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