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Gypsy Masala by Preethi Nair
Inspiring Creativity Success Story
Making Up the Rules
By
Preethi Nair
My first ever rejection letter came when I was eight and it was
written by Sarah Walker telling me why I could not be in her gang; “you ain’t got no friends 'ere skinny,” was
one of the reasons so eloquently stated. I remember going home, howling inconsolably
and then going back to school the next day and setting up my own
gang. Granted, it consisted of the rejects who were the last to
be picked at games, i.e. Fatima and myself, but at least I had
a gang and I learnt that if no one wants you to play by the rules
in their gang, you make up your own. It was second nature then,
when twenty years later, after being rejected by nearly every
major publisher, I set up my own publishing and PR Company to
produce and promote my first novel Gypsy Masala.
Gypsy Masala was a story written in my twenties about doing what
you really want to do in life and following your dreams. I clearly
wasn’t doing either, working as a management consultant in the
City. I had always wanted to be a writer but my mum and dad considered
it “the hobby”, having sacrificed so much by staying in England
just to give my brother and I an education. At every opportunity,
the old story came out about my dad having no shoes and having
to walk twenty miles to school, together with the fact that when
I was about six, my dad had spent an entire three months' pay
package and got into debt buying the Encyclopaedia Britannica
so we could have a better start.
So I wrote secretly every morning before going to work and then,
after three years, I decided naively to take a leap of faith.
I handed in my notice. Just before doing this, I was avidly packing
jiffy bags with my manuscript and pre-paid envelope and sending
it off to publishers hoping that leaving work would coincide with
being snapped up by one of them. It was not to be. The first jiffy
bag came back with a “Thank you Preachy but no thank you” note.
The fact that they had called me “Preachy” sent niggling doubts
as to whether it had ever been read but I tried to remain optimistic
as my leaving day loomed.
It was raining the day I left and instead of being elated, I
remember crying on the tube home and only to arrive back to more
rejections. “Good day at work?” My dad asked, and instead of telling
him that I had left to become a bestselling author, I imagined him
walking twenty miles with no shoes and replied, “Yes, good, we
got a new client.” I went to bed that night in tears. The following
day, I pulled myself together, put on a suit and pretended to go to work.
What I actually did was go to the library. I came up with this
plan to self-publish and as the week progressed I got more and
more excited by this idea and told my friends and family that
I was going freelance. Taking the deposit I was saving for my
flat, I found a printer and together we sat and designed my novel
Gypsy Masala. My publishing company, which was a PO Box faraway
in Northampton, was called “NineFish” and I told everyone that
I had been signed up by them.
At this stage, I realised that PR was fundamental but having
invested £9,000 into my first print run, I had no money left.
There was no alternative but to set up my own PR agency. That
was how Pru Menon, my alter ego, publicist and Director of the
Creative House was born — out of sheer necessity. I got two of
everything: email addresses, phone lines, fax numbers — and began
hyping myself shamelessly.
It was a nightmare to begin with and my incompetence was evident,
what with me stammering all over the place, but somehow I fumbled
my way through and by the end of three months’ hyping, it was
almost a slick operation. I could even change voices effortlessly,
depending upon which phone was ringing. And yes, when I wasn’t
busy, there were pangs of guilt at all the deceit but this made
me work even harder.
After securing a modest number of interviews, I remember happily
driving up to Northampton as I went to collect my books from the
printers. My parents had invited a group of friends to our house
for the homecoming but as soon as they began congratulating me,
this little voice inside my head said, “Look at p.179.”
Chapter 13 began on p.179. It was absolutely blank. I was horrified
— you can’t sell a book short of a page, even if it is indicative
of the author’s state of mind. I panicked while trying to appear
composed, and when the guests had gone, I went upstairs and broke
down. The media were waiting for books; it had taken me months
to set up and if the books weren’t delivered on time they would
move on to someone else’s work. After getting the printer to admit
that it was his fault, and being told it would take weeks to rectify,
I asked him to courier me 3,000 copies of p.179 so I could “Prit
stick” them in, and this is what I did. Coming up with a reason
why the house was full of books is difficult I can tell you but
looking at the surplus copies gave me yet another idea: I decided
to exhibit at the London Book Fair.
But, in the midst of all of this, there was the book launch to
organize. Being stopped by two policemen and asked to explain
how I came to be driving a blue Fiesta crammed with an African
dancer (long story but symbol of a dream-theme of the book),
four musicians and a huge drum which was seat belted to me or
trying to explain to my mother why her entire wardrobe of saris
was hanging from the restaurant ceiling was not easy either.
The stress of it all became too much for me to handle. At breaking
point I had to confess the whole story to two of my closest friends.
It was an enormous relief and despite thinking it was madness,
they offered to be Directors of my PR and Publishing companies
on my stand at the London Book Fair. Amazingly, it was at the
Book Fair that things really started happening: while the big
publishers were giving out leaflets, NineFish were giving out
books.
When press articles started to appear, there were no books in
shops. I had overlooked the entire distribution network, assuming
that copies would magically appear on the shelves. It doesn’t
work like that! Publishers’ sales reps go into bookshops six months
in advance of publication date to “sell in” their books. Rapidly,
I had to learn the art of door-to-door selling, so armed with
a travelcard, I pounded round most of the bookshops in London
and pleaded with store managers to stock my title. A few of them
looked at me with a strange expression and sent me packing. Others
actually read it — and placed orders.
When it all came together, when one book shop alone sold over
2,500 copies, when Pru was bizarrely short-listed as Publicist
of the Year, when interviews with the press coincided with other
bookshops supporting me... there was the oil protest — an oil
protest complete with a lorry blockade so that the books could
not move from the warehouse as orders came in. Momentum, so hard
to capture, had escaped me. Had two years of work come to nothing?
I was left to explain to my dad what I was doing in the Express
with a headline saying “The double life of Preethi Nair,” All
things considered, he took it surprisingly well.
Due to the press coverage, I thought that every publisher would
be clambering at my door — but this was not the case. The phone
was not ringing. Not surprisingly Pru and Preethi suffered an
equal identity crisis. Exhausted, disheartened, jobless and in
debt, I just wanted to give up. Then, at my lowest moment, I got
a call from Lynda Logan, one of the original WI Calendar Girls
whom I had met at the London Book Fair. I told her the whole story
and she invited me to stay with them in the Dales. After getting
to know them all, Tricia Stewart another one of the women suggest
I contact her agent Diana Holmes.
Diana and I clicked instantly and we spent hours talking. She
advised me to put all the Pru stuff behind me and to write about
me, my experiences, my story.
I went back to the Dales and began working on my new novel 100
Shades of White. It poured out of me in six weeks and this was
because for the first time someone had complete faith in me —
Diana was my reader. We spent weeks together getting the manuscript
right and then she took it to publishers.
100 Shades of White was sold as part of a three book deal to
HarperCollins and the BBC have bought it for a 90-minute adaptation.
Beyond Indigo, a fictionalized account of the whole adventure
has just been published, along with a revised reissue of Gypsy
Masala. The greatest irony probably is that for all the double
life business, what worked for me was being me and forging amazing
friendships. All these women now join Fatima as being amongst
my closest friends.
And so I will end by saying dream big even if you don't know
the rules — and if no one wants to play, devise a different set,
keep believing... and your gang will find you.
— Preethi Nair, www.preethinair.com
02/10/06
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