The Coffee Cup Story

Yesterday was the Day of the Slug. I parked on the couch and read, watched basketball, and read some more. (Michigan beat Vermont. Villanova won. UConn lost.) Eight hours of sleep last night and I’m beginning to feel human again.

Here is the freaky coffee cup story. Last Tuesday night I had a bizarre dream. I’ll spare you the details. The important thing is that I was being chased by a weird group of bad guys brandishing old-fashioned weapons. The bad guy crew included Vikings in period-appropriate gear. (It was one of those dreams.)

Me and my fellow-chasees made our way up to the attic where the bad guys cornered us. I saw three blue coffee cups on a table, empty. I picked up the first one and instantly I weighed nothing. I picked up the second and I started to float. I picked up the third and, if I scooped the air with the cups, I could fly.

The dream went on for a while. I’ll spare you those details, too. But I woke up mumbling “Blue cups, blue cups, blue cups.”

Jump ahead two days. I was in K’zoo with Terry and Kevin and Sue and we were drinking coffee in between school visits.

Image hosted by TinyPic.com These were the cups we drank from. They are almost exactly the cups from my dream.

I sort of freaked out a little itty bitty bit. I tried to buy the cups, but they weren’t for sale.

You can’t force the Universe, so I didn’t beg to buy them or anything.

But I am now on a Blue Cup Alert. I’ll let you know when they cross my path again. (There you have it, Aunt Barb!)

Day 12 – Kalamazoo – evening & Day 13

This Road Trip has been amazing. I’ve been an incredibly lucky author. I figure I traveled about 5,000 miles, talked to 4,000 kids, visited 10 school and 25 bookstores, stayed in 8 hotels, shook countless hands and signed countless books. (In 13 mornings, I received 12 wake-up calls. See previous post for details.)

I will be thinking about the people I met for months, especially the teenagers.

But I’m here to tell you, a trip like this can leave you feeling like yesterday’s gum stuck on a subway platform.

And then, a miracle happened.

Like I said, Terry Truman and I went to Kevin K’s house (and the house of his terrific wife, Kathleen) for a family dinner after the conference. Kathleen and Kevin are the parents of Abigail and Rachael. Along with feeding me, they let me play with their daughters, carry them around, pretend to be superheroes, and draw. Hanging out with little kids is the best medicine in the world. By the end of the evening I was still tired, but I felt whole again.

Image hosted by TinyPic.com Happy, happy author.

The King family joined us again for breakfast, so I got another dose of little kid-goodness before I had to step on the plane. It was heavenly. The French toast was pretty good, too.

Image hosted by TinyPic.com This is what I look like to a 4-year old.

More tomorrow, including the freaky coffee cups story. And maybe a writing prompt, if any of youse need something to write about.

Day 12 – Kalamazoo

Everything was great about this day, except for that one little thing.

But why start with the bad stuff? Let’s start with a little Kalamazoo random info.

You know how many cities take an iconic image particular to their region (cow, donkey, pig, etc.) and encourage artists to render this image in public sculpture around said cities?

Well, in Kalamazoo,

Image hosted by TinyPic.com it’s a taxicab.

Image hosted by TinyPic.com Because K-zoo is where they made the first Checkered Cabs. Which is pretty cool. Better than donkeys.

So, back to our program.

The plan was to wake up at 5:30am, so I’d have plenty of time to get ready before I was picked up at 7:30. Kevin was going to pick up Terry Trueman and me, then drive us out to the Adolescent Lit conference where we’d be speaking all day.

I called the front desk and set the wake-up call. Got to sleep around 1 am, figured I was good to go. I fell asleep instantly.

Kept sleeping.

Kept sleeping.

(notice how the wake-up call hasn’t showed up yet?)

Kept sleeping.

At 7:40 am, the phone rings. It’s Kevin. I don’t know who Kevin is. I am more deeply asleep than I have been in a month. I don’t know where I am, who I am, or what I am doing in a nice hotel talking on the phone to a strange man who sounds rather nervous. He tells me he is waiting downstairs. I mumble something about getting down there in 10 minutes.

I get out of bed, slowly. Still very confused. I turn on the TV. Turn on the coffee pot. Avoid looking in the mirror. And then it hits me.

OMG!!! I-am-in-a-world-of-trouble.

My name is Laurie and I know who Kevin is and I am supposed to give a very, very big speech in half an hour and I am in my pajamas. In Kalamazoo.

The next seven minutes were a blur. Suddenly I was in the lobby.

(We’ll skip the hours of self-loathing I tormented myself with. We have to skip it because I am still beating myself up about this. The ENTIRE trip I have woken up before my wake-up call came in. I should have set a back-up alarm or two or three. I shouldn’t have stayed up so late talking to Kevin and Terry. And on and on and on… )

We pulled into the parking lot and made a couple of decisions. I could have spoken as scheduled, but to be honest, my head was still waking up and I hadn’t eaten anything. Terry and Kevin and the other conference people were extremely gracious. Terry and I switched places so he spoke first thing and I spoke after lunch. (I apologize to anyone who had planned on listening to me in the morning.) Terry was funny and fantastic and I ate a bagel. During the end of his speech, I snuck off to the bathroom to put my make-up on. I had everything with me except the paint you put on to hide the raccoon circles under your eyes. I think I wound up looking like a strung-out clown, but everyone was too polite to say anything.

I was pleased with my speech. Along with talking about my books, I touched on the pain that most teenagers have to fight through while they are trying to live in the pressure cooker of their lives. I also ranted about how teaching the “classics” often turns kids off to reading completely and in many cases is helping foster this underliterate generation. Terry and I had a couple of signings and we did a Q&A session that was more like a stand-up comedy routine than anything else. The audience of librarians and teachers (hundreds of them) was fantastic. Thank you so much everyone for coming out and being so supportive.

Image hosted by TinyPic.com This gives some insight into one facet of Terry’s personality.

After the conference, Kevin took us home to meet his wife Kathleen and their kids.

See next post for more details.

Day 11 – Kalamazoo, pt. 2

Trying to catch up…

On Thursday afternoon, I had lunch and coffee at a great coffeeshop here in town. A freaky thing happened with the coffee cups. Remind me to tell you about it later.

Post-lunch came a visit to another Kalamazoo high school, Loy Norrix (which sounds to me like a character from a science fiction novel).

The students at LN did some cool projects tied to Speak.

Image hosted by TinyPic.com

Image hosted by TinyPic.com

Thursday night, Terry Trueman and I spoke at the public library (which is gorgeous and would make a great movie set). Many thanks to all the people who came out, especially the members of the Teen Advisory Board. Note to other libraries – Kalamazoo is constantly doing teen programs that have high attendance and enthusiastic participants. It can be done!! Contact Kevin King for details.

Gotta run right now for breakfast and a dash to the airport. I’ll finish updating tonight when I get home.

I’m going home!!! I’m going home!!! Wahoo!!