Early winter is my favourite season, particularly if the sky is clear and the air sharp. Those are the sort of conditions we have been enjoying in Scotland recently - and I have found it ideal writing weather. So I have now finished volume ten of the No.1 Ladies’ Detective Agency series, which rejoices under the title of Tea Time for the Traditionally Built. I finished it last Tuesday, when I wrote the final words: ’ … the lovely smell of rain.’ That was it. There then followed a few telephone calls: to Richard Beswick, my editor in London; and Edward Kastenmeier, my editor in New York; and to my agents, Caroline Walsh and Robin Straus in London and New York respectively. These are all people who have been intimately involved in the Mma Ramotswe books. And there are others: Diane Martin of Random House Canada, Neville Moir of Polygon in Edinburgh and Rowan Cope of Little, Brown have also played a major part in the publishing of these books. Others who play a big role are: my assistant, Lesley Winton; Jan Rutherford, who is my publicist and press agent in Edinburgh; Bobby Nayyar, who looks after this newsletter and a whole lot of other things in London; and Michiko Clark and Russell Perrault, in New York. (I could mention many other names, but this list is getting a bit long and those not mentioned will know how much I appreciate them too!) In a way, it’s a bit of an extended family, with you, the readers, ultimately being the most important members of the family. Obviously I cannot be in touch with everyone, but I must say that little gives me more pleasure than to hear from people who read the Mma Ramotswe books and the books in my other series.
In Edinburgh we had the launch of my new novel, La’s Orchestra Saves the World. It was a wonderful affair, held in the Queen’s Hall, with about six hundred people present. The Really Terrible Orchestra played a selection of pieces from the era in which the novel is set, and their rendition of ‘In the Mood’ brought tears (of laughter) to many eyes. The trumpet section did its best, as usual, but … A donation was made to the Gurkha Welfare Trust, which was received by a tremendously smart Gurkha officer who marched into the hall in full dress uniform to accept the cheque. He was in fact the Queen’s Gurkha Orderly Officer, sent specially for the occasion, and so it was a great honour. We also had another charity represented, Sistema Scotland, which has set up an orchestra for children on a housing estate where there is a certain amount of need. This orchestra sent a group of its very small players (they are aged about seven) who enjoyed themselves greatly playing a little of what they had learned. Sistema Scotland has been strongly supported by my friend Peter Stevenson, who appears - as himself - in the Isabel Dalhousie novels.
What’s next? Corduroy Mansions is still running in the electronic edition of the Telegraph. In January I go to India to appear at the Kolkata Book Fair and to deliver lectures at the University of Kolkata. Then on to Australia and New Zealand - the details of the events there are set out below. In February Abacus brings out the paperback edition of The Miracle at Speedy Motors.
I’m very much looking forward to one event in particular - the one that will take place on April 1 in the Town Hall, New York. Those of you reading this who live in that part of the United States (or indeed elsewhere) may wish to come along and hear that extraordinary orchestra, the Really Terrible Orchestra (RTO). I shall be talking about the books as well and I do hope that it will be an enjoyable evening. Quite a few people are travelling over from the UK to attend this event, so if you feel like splashing out and treating yourselves to a short spring break in New York …
It is almost Christmas, of course, and I would like to wish you a Happy Christmas and a very good New Year. I hope that we shall have the chance to meet at one of my events in 2009, but if we do not, we shall still be in touch through my newsletter and through the books. Thank you very much for your support over the past year.
Warmest wishes,
Alexander McCall Smith