Neil Strauss, Addendum
How I put myself in the position to spend 45 minutes with one of my favourite writers:
- Read The Game by Neil Strauss in 2007. Love it; re-read it several times. Buy a used copy from eBay and a new copy from a bookstore to lend to friends.
- Through Neil’s mailing list, receive information that Emergency, his new book, was due in March 2009.
- Email several people to find the Australian publisher of Emergency. (Answer: Text Publishing)
- Request a review copy of Emergency for FourThousand.
- Inadvertently receive two copies of Emergency from different publishers. (I’m still not sure how this happened.)
- Review Emergency for FourThousand.
- Send review link to Text Publishing to solidify that relationship.
- Through his mailing list, receive information of Neil’s forthcoming Australian book tour in June 2009.
- Contact Text Publishing to request an interview Neil on behalf of FourThousand. (This request was a near-certainty, given my relationship with the publisher.)
- Discover that Neil’s book tour omits Brisbane. Sadly, resign the interview to a 20 minute phone call.
- Meet with Nick Crocker on Sunday, June 21 2009. He suggests the unforeseen possibility of flying to Sydney to interview Neil in person. (Nick: “Since he’s such a massive influence, why don’t you spend a couple hundred dollars to fly down to make a better impression?” Andrew: “…” [stunned silence, having not considered this option at all])
- Later that night, book flights to Sydney to interview Neil in person.
- Fly to Sydney on Tuesday, June 23 2009.
- Meet Neil. Complete my biggest interview yet by having a conversation, instead of referring to questions point-by-point.
- Begin transcribing the conversation at Sydney Airport.
- Fly back to Brisbane, head full of inspiration.
- Per Neil’s advice, outsource the rest of the interview transcription; in this case, to Israel, to an excellent transcriptionist named Tamara Bentzur. (I found her by Googling “outsource transcriptions”.)
- Spend the next two-plus months pitching the interview feature to various magazines in an attempt to recoup the $300 airfares.
- Get rejected.
- Eventually post the entire interview – 8,000 words-plus – online, free.
Regrets? None.