reclaiming wife

Book Tour

Meg Keene: You're Welcome, Internet. from Rory Gordon on Vimeo.

Party In A Book Store from Rory Gordon on Vimeo.

Dear Team Practical,

I've been writing you letters for years, but this time I just want to say thank you. Thank you for supporting the APW Book and helping it to do so tremendously well that, in month two of the book being out, we're in the third printing (howcrazyisthat). Thank you for coming out on the book tour. Thank you for being smart, articulate, and hilarious, and making a month on the road a total joy.

And what better way to end this whole tour than with some video? The first video is an interview with me, mixed with some fun stuff. The second interview is bits of me speaking. Both of them are me with my most casual, least professional, least NPR voice. Fun, no? Hopefully it will make all of you feel a bit like you came on the tour, or like we had a drink together. It was all shot by Rory Gordon Photo in LA, who's a total wonder-ball, and shoots photo and video for weddings and small businesses. If you've been pondering a bit of video, you should totally call her right this second. She's so easy to work with that the whole thing seems effortless.

And finally, finally. The book tour is over, sort of, for now. Next week, once I've gotten enough sleep that I'm coherent enough to write, I have a bunch of entrepreneurship posts (and some marriage posts) up my sleeve about the broad scope of things I've learned in the past month. Plus, we have a ton of APW projects that we'll finally start getting to show you next week, and then even more projects a few weeks after. So! There is so much more happening. But for now, we'll bring the book tour to a close with this. Perfect.

And, for the record? I've decided I want to do more public speaking. So if you want me to speak at an event in the Bay Area (or can get me to LA), let's chat. I'm quite the talker, and I make good jokes, too.

Thank you thank you thank you,

Meg

David took this picture of me exhausted but super excited about getting back on the train, on my last day on Amtrak. This is how I really felt. The book tour was, well... scary, first of all. A month ago, when I got on the train for the first time, I was sad to leave my home and my husband for so long, and I was overwhelmed by not knowing what was coming. And it turns out what was coming was huge. It was packed bookstore event after packed bookstore event. It was NPR and talk radio and newspaper interviews. It was encountering more kindness and more friends than I had any reason to hope for. And through all of that, there was Amtrak. The train became a sort of steadying force through the month. It was a place that was always more or less the same. It was a place where I knew there would always be a kind-hearted staff ready to take care of me. And I mean that in a personal way: they reminded me to go to bed, encouraged me to get enough sleep, brought me meals to my room when I was tired, gave me tips on places to go in the next city, and made a lot of jokes. And they did that not because I was special, but because that's how they treated everyone. And when you add to that the fact that Amtrak actually sponsored my book tour? Well, they have a very special place in my heart.

Plus, let's face it. The Coast Starlight is some of the prettiest track in America. You go over the sand, through miles of untouched beaches. First class passengers have access to the Pacific Parlor Car, which is a fifty-year-old car that looks like, well, a Parlor. I've taken The Coast Starlight a lot this year in coach, and I have been dying to get into the Parlor Car. And this time I got to. They serve food upstairs, and they have a viewing deck with overstuffed chairs, and downstairs they have a tiny and adorable movie theatre. And in the afternoons, they have a wine and cheese tasting. Which, it turns out, is basically the staff pouring you as much tasty local wine as you can drink. We stopped after five pours, though our porter reminded us that we had "nowhere to be." Which is exactly the point of train travel, really. Nowhere to be, except the place where the train is taking you (a little tipsy, in this case).

So it was a near-perfect trip, and for the first time I had my husband on board. He'd flown down to LA for the final book event, and I begged him to take the train back up with me so I could show him around "my train." And once he'd gotten the full tour, seen the sights, and read some magazines on our couch, he agreed that it was a really nice way to travel.

At book tour stops, I kept being asked if traveling by train was as nice as I made it sound online. And I always said the same thing: it was better.

So, so long Amtrak. I'll miss you, but I'll see you again soon. And thank you. I owe you a whole lot.

Pictures from the train (I know!!) from Instagram, where I documented the trip. Follow me on Twitter for more.

**This post was made possible by Amtrak, who sponsored my book tour. Thank you Amtrak!**

APW Book Tour: L.A.

The Amazing Wonderful Fabulous & Kind Team—Photographers: Chi-Ling Wang, Jessica Schilling & Rory GordonEvent Venue: Vroman's Cardstore * Special Thanks: Dana of the Broke Ass BrideBecca, and Tabitha for introducing, organizing and providing the food and decorations! *

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Oh LA. The last stop on the tour, my other hometown stop (Brooklyn was the first), and it was just what it should have been. It was sort of perfect, really. When we showed up, we were ushered into the back room, which will go down in history as the coolest back room ever. At first I noticed that they had a sort of inspiration board on the wall, and then I walked over and said, "Oh! These are a bunch of 100 Layer Cake boards! They have stuff from my friends hung on the wall!" and Rory poked her head up from behind the camera and said, "Well, you run with one very cool crowd." I sort of startled when she said that, thinking about how much I wanted to be friends with a bunch of creative awesome women a few years ago, and how much that dream has blossomed into a reality.

Because LA was all about creative women and amazing friends. Tamera of Verhext was in town from Vermont, and she showed up to hang out with me in the back room before I went on. Dana of The Broke-Ass Bride introduced me (and almost started crying while she did it, how sweet is that?). And along with Becca of Stumble and Leap and Tabitha of Glitter & Ganache, those girls pulled the whole thing together into a P-A-R-T-Y. Becca brought food and booze and organization, and Tabitha masterminded the decorations. And that wasn't even all. The topper on the cake was that friends that I've known since childhood (some of whom I hadn't seen in twelve years or more) showed up, and my parents were there, and some of David's family were there, and everyone cheered me on. It was magic.

All that, before I even started speaking. The LA event wasn't huge (which was the perfect way to end things) but it was big enough. About sixty of you showed up, and we talked, funnily enough, about weddings. There had been very little discussion of weddings at any tour event other than San Francisco, but in LA most of the questions were about weddings. So, I ended the tour talking about what the book is actually about. And making jokes, and trying to not let my mom totally take over the proceedings with her stories. Ha! Moms. We love them. And afterwards, one of David's older cousins came up and told me that I was officially the funniest person in their family. And the swear-iest. Two designations I'll totally take.

And then, I started signing books, champagne cork after champagne cork was popped, and the real party started. Shotgun Shirley's baby snuggled up with Brandi's baby. People made new friends. People talked to old friends. People toasted. And an hour in, I walked over to the fantastically lovely bookstore ladies, to ask if I needed to round everyone up and shoo them out, and they told us it was a Sunday afternoon and the store was ours. They had two questions though: could I sign some books for them to give away to (sometimes crying) brides, and could they have some champagne? And obviously the answer to those questions was a huge yes.

So thank you LA (and the couple that drove in from Las Vegas, and the other couple that drove in from Phoenix!). You were beyond lovely and the best possible way to end the tour. And please, tell me your stories from Sunday afternoon in the comments.

But that's not quite all. Because... drum roll please... Rory of Rory Gordon Photo made two totally amazing short videos of the event, so tomorrow, everyone gets to experience the book tour, just a little bit. Till then, mwah, and thank you.

I'm on the train right now, chugging through the desert on my way home. Well, actually, I'm not technically on my way home to San Francisco. I'm on my way to LA and to my parents house, but that's close enough for me to feel like this month-long tour is really truly winding to a close. Also, by the time you read this, I'll be safely in LA, since West Texas has a lot of dirt and artists, but very little cell phone signal. Which is all as it should be. I'm due up for staring out the window.

I got on the train last night in Houston, and as we were sitting in the car waiting for the train to pull up, I was describing sleeper cars to my friend Kristen. At the end of my description, she just sighed, and said she wanted to get on the train with me. And it's funny, after a month on the road, as I'm finishing up doing the whole loop of the United States by train, I was so happy when I got to my little train bedroom. Happy and tired, and I fell right asleep. I fell so solidly asleep, in fact, that when the train stopped moving for two hours in San Antonio and they connected some new cars, I didn't even surface.

I feel like I fell into some sort of magical universe when I agreed to do the this trip by train. I'm traveling in this fantastic way that so few people my age seem to know about. At each stop, everyone has a million questions for me about Amtrak, and then they sigh dreamily, and go home to plan a trip. And as for me, if I'm still happy to see my sleeper car bed after a month, you know Amtrak is doing a million things right.

So today you'll find me staring out the window, not working for once. I'm pondering the desert and thinking how much it looks like where I grew up. I'm thinking about this trip and how it's changed me. I'm thinking about seeing my husband and my family in LA. I'm thinking about how I deserve at least a week of sleep when I get home, if not more. And I'm thinking about wearing a super cute dress I got in Austin at the LA book tour event, to bring it home with style. And I'm thinking of how I'm going to go to bed early on the train tonight, and how when I wake up, I'll be in LA. Like magic. Thanks Amtrak.

Picture of my early morning LA arrival from Instagram, where I'm documenting the trip. Follow me on Twitter for more.

**This post was made possible by Amtrak, who is sponsoring my book tour. Thank you Amtrak!**

* If you haven't entered the APW Amtrak Honeymoon Giveaway, you should! If you win, your tickets are good through 2013, so you can take the trip next year too! So go enter already. The odds are pretty amazing, given the enormity of the prize.*

APW Book Tour: Austin

The Amazing Wonderful Fabulous & Kind Team—Organizers: Elissa R. for the taco after party * Photographers: Elissa R. Photography (Digital) & Zachary Hunt Photography (Instant)* Event Venue: Book Woman, Austin's Feminist Bookstore *


 


Until this trip, I'd never been to Texas. I'm not sure how that happened, given how huge Texas is and how many friends I have in Texas (it seems like half my friends at NYU were from the arts high school in Houston), but there you are. So I was curious, to say the least. And what I can tell you is that Texas treated me very, very well, and it was also the hardest and most exhausting part of my book tour.

I showed up in Houston where one of my best girlfriends lives. She put me right to bed, and then I was up at 6:30 am for super delicious hipster Houston breakfast, and then off to rent a car and drive to Austin. I listened to country the whole way because it seemed like the thing to do. Also, a lot of country songs surprise you by being about Jesus, right at the end. Which I suppose isn't surprising, once you know the drill. But it was like: heartbreak, I love my jeans, I love my dog, I love my wife, love my kids, I love ice cold beer… I love Jesus! And every time I was surprised by the final twist. But I digress.

So, I arrived in Austin (which is in fact more adorable and hip than you've heard), moved into my Bed & Breakfast, and then sat down and did four interviews back to back. Even my publicist thought I was crazy, scheduling that many interviews in a row, but I figured knock them out, get them done. And then it turned out two of the interviews were for feature articles, and were an hour long. Perhaps I should pay more attention to what I'm scheduling next time! But what the heck. I do like to talk, and everyone I was talking to was charming and smart. So by 5:30, I was done with all the interviews and I could hardly stand up, let alone speak coherently. And I had an event to do. Hum. So I lay down for a quick nap, ditched plans for an exciting hairdo, chased a wayward cat out from under my bed (which took ten minutes and made us late). Then my friend Michelle and I (Michelle drove up from College Station, just for the event) whisked off to Austin's feminist bookstore.

And, somehow, no matter how tired I am, when you put me in front of a crowd, I'll stand on the chair and sing my song. So I made everyone move up to the front, so we could all be cozy. Then we talked about feminism and weddings, and about how weddings brings us right up against the parts of our lives and culture that are still far from equal and makes us grapple with them. We talked about name change, and how in my opinion, the important bit isn't what decision we make, but how we open a dialogue with the people around us (and particularly with men) about issues of equality and emotion and family names. The crowd was lovely (Austin you do it up right), and after I signed books, someone gave me a crazy delicious gluten free cupcake to eat, and I somehow stumbled off to eat a few tacos with the final stragglers of the night.

And then, when I woke up the last morning, I felt like I'd hurdled the last huge hurdle of the tour. And after some girl gab and shopping in Austin, and way more girl gab in Houston, I caught a train. LA, I'm resting up for you… because I think the last stop of the tour should arguably be the best. Let's bring it.

When Amtrak asked us to do a Honeymoon Giveaway with one of the destinations being New Orleans, they asked us if we'd mind spending a weekend in The Crescent City, to write about it. Would we? Ha! New Orleans is one of my favorite places in the world, so I thought that would be just fine, thanks. Plus, I wanted to remind y'all that putting your honeymoon dollars to work in NOLA's ongoing recovery was a brillant choice... not to mention eloping in the city (they just put in a wedding chapel in the Quarter, if you're into that). And then, thanks to Amtrak, I was able to take Maddie along with me, which turned a good weekend into something great. Which isn't to say that this post is sponsored. It's totally not. In fact, we paid our own way in the city, so if this post is sponsored by anyone, it's sponsored by me (the best kind of post).

So! We agreed to go to New Orleans, but we had no idea what was in store. It started on the train to Atlanta, when our porter, a NOLA native, remarked that we were lucky to be in town for Krewe Du Vieux. Now. As a person who loves New Orleans (and who watches Treme. You watch Treme, right?) my whole face lit up with wonder the minute she said that. We were going to be in town for the first parade of the Mardi Gras season? The local, racy, super ironic one? I felt like the universe was raining blessings on my head. But then it kept getting better, in totally surprising ways. Claire (who you remember from her post about caring for her nieces during her first year of marriage) invited us to hang out with her family, and the girls, over a Sunday morning brunch. Then we realized it was Super Bowl Sunday, which meant that we were presented with an enormous bucket of free crawfish when we went out to dinner, and that when we went to Preservation Hall, it was the emptiest I've ever seen it. So we ended the weekend just hanging out with forty other people and listening to legendary jazz musicians. You know, whatever, nothing doing.

And then, there was the joy of watching Maddie discover the city for the first time. But I'll let her tell you about that.

From Maddie:

I'll tell you the truth, I was prepared to be disappointed by New Orleans. Like my experiences with Paris and New York City, I expected New Orleans to be a place that's great to live in, but which fails to live up to reputation over the course of a mini-getaway (or which requires a significant amount of money and access to truly take advantage of during such a short stay.)

Then I stepped off the train. And it smelled like my childhood vacations to Florida, charged with hot damp air and a soft breeze. I looked around and I saw people dressed like me, which is a rare occasion (with leopard jackets and zebra suitcases, oh my!) And as I scanned my surroundings I slowly realized that this might be a place where I would not only enjoy a visit, but perhaps even want to live.

Well, yeah.

On the way to our hotel, I kept asking Meg "How have I never heard of this place before?!" and she kept looking at me like I'd failed elementary school geography or something. But of course I'd heard of it. I just wanted to know why nobody told me that this is where I belong.

But I can't give all the credit to the city itself. My tour guide was remarkable. Keeping us off the beaten path, Meg ensured that we were enveloped by the neighborhoods of New Orleans, so that rather than arriving as outsiders, we quickly became wrapped in the fabric of the city. Which, really? Is what it's all about.

On our first night in New Orleans, after a day-long train ride, Meg took me to Praline Connection for fried chicken, pralines and sweet tea (yeah, I'm jealous of my former self even as I'm writing this). As we were finishing our meal, a band of young jazz musicians set up shop on the corner in front of the restaurant and began playing a serious brass band set. Meg and I threw money down on the table and ran outside to catch the action.

At first, the crowd listening stood mostly still while hesitantly moving their feet. Then they began to sway. And before long, they were dancing. And then Meg and I were dancing. Or at least, I was swaying and doing the hip-tap thing which are my cumulative dance moves when Michael isn't around, and Meg was dancing. I remember looking over and seeing a group of jocks in their late-20s moving like Shakira, and a young couple dancing with progressively less restraint as each song came to an end.

I don't know how to express the sentiment of that moment any other way than that I thought to myself, "This is what living should feel like." I mean, within an hour of arriving in New Orleans, I was eating food that went straight past my lips and into my soul and I was surrounded by a hundred people who had collectively agreed that they didn't care if they looked stupid doing it, they were going to dancing like no one was watching.

I don't know about you, but that is more than I could hope for in a honeymoon. That's what I'm looking for out of life, and New Orleans offered it up to me without question before we'd even had a chance to properly introduce ourselves to each other. And maybe that's southern hospitality. Or maybe it's what I really suppose: that New Orleans is actually the most romantic city in the world.

But for me, the real joy of the trip, the real lightbulb moment, came at the end. During the brunch with Claire and her nieces, it came up that her five-year-old-niece sings songs of her own composing, and likes an audience. I also (of course) sang songs of my own composing at five, so I tried to get her to sing one. She was feeling shy, so I thought she might feel better if I stood up on my chair and sang a small song about the chickens in the brunch garden (yeah, I just typed that) for her. So I did, and then we all had King Cake. Afterwards, Claire emailed me :

After we left Slim Goodies, Five-Year-Old Niece says, "I didn't know grown ups could stand up on chairs in public and sing their own songs." I laughed and asked "Why not?" "Well, usually adult ladies just like to sit around and talk in their inside voices. But not her." So thanks for showing her that women can stand up and sing their own songs in public.

And then I realized that it had taken a five-year-old girl (who are always the wisest) to explain the whole book tour to me. The book tour has been about me singing my own song in public, and all of us talking about how we each have a song to sing, so we need to clamber onto our chairs and get warbling. It just took a small girl and New Orleans to point that out to me.

Because that's how New Orleans does. Always.

P.S. Maddie has made me promise that if the winner of the Amtrak Honeymoon Giveaway chooses New Orleans as their destination, I will give them the Meg Keene New Orleans Itinerary (TM) if they request it. It will involve a lot of eating and music, so you know.

Photos by: Maddie of Hart & Sol West