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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /srv/users/sandra/apps/sandra/public/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114When Judy Mandel sent me a note to let me know that her memoir, <\/em>Replacement Child<\/a>, was on <\/em>The New York Times best-seller list for e-books, I was beyond excited for her. This is pretty much every author’s dream, and it couldn’t have happened to a nicer or more deserving person. I asked her to share with us how it happened — this is her story.\u00a0In addition to authoring her memoir,\u00a0Judy is \u00a0a writing coach, teacher, and editor. Her\u00a0essays and articles have appeared in <\/em>Connecticut LIFE, <\/em>Complete Wellbeing Magazine, <\/em>The Southampton Review,<\/em> and other publications. Learn more on her website<\/a>.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n Sometimes it happens this way. An e-mail message pops up, like every other message you have ever gotten from your publisher. There is new interest in your book that\u2019s been out for two years. Or a new inquiry. Or a new promotion. Whatever.<\/p>\n But one of those messages recently brought me news from my publisher that I never thought I would see.<\/p>\n The email subject line read:\u00a0New York Times<\/em> Best Seller.<\/p>\n Wha-a-a-t??<\/p>\n I did what any reasonable author would do \u2013 I started crying.<\/p>\n Alarmed, my husband asked, \u201cWhat? What is it? Is someone dead? What\u2019s wrong?\u201d<\/p>\n I handed him the phone to read the note. \u201cOh my God!\u201d It was a unison chorus.<\/p>\n Yes, it was true. My little book, now in backlist, had made the E-Book New York Times<\/em> Best-Seller list \u2013 a writer\u2019s dream come true. For a memoir of an unknown writer, that\u2019s pretty much a shot at the moon.<\/p>\n Although I have always believed in the book and it had done reasonably well, I knew immediately that the reason for this burst of recognition came from my efforts to link my book to that of another famous author.<\/p>\n Judy Blume had released a novel, In the Unlikely Event<\/em><\/a>,\u00a0 that used the same historical context for her fiction that rooted my memoir. Hers revolves around the community reaction to the real-life series of plane crashes that happened within 58 days in Elizabeth, N.J. in the \u201950s. Mine centers on the second of those crashes that altered my own family. Her book brought mine a new audience.\u00a0\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n <\/a>I had heard about Blume\u2019s novel in early April from a reader of my book, Replacement Child<\/em><\/a>. She lived in Elizabeth at the very site of the plane crash that hit my family\u2019s home in 1952. She wrote to ask if Judy Blume had interviewed me, because she had talked to others in the town.<\/p>\n \u201cWho would know more about the crashes than you?\u201d she wrote. Blume had not.<\/p>\n Her book was due out in June. My first action was to notify my publisher, who was hesitant to infringe on Blume\u2019s book launch plans with any tie-in to my book. So, never one to let sleeping dogs lie, or even take a nap, I wrote directly to Blume on her website, thinking I had a 50-50 chance that she would write back.<\/p>\n It took a few days, but she did indeed write me a thoughtful note. It was then that I realized that all the hype about Blume being a down-to-earth, generous, and warm person was true. She told me she had read Replacement Child<\/em><\/a> when she started researching her book in 2009.<\/p>\n \u201cOf course I\u2019ve read your wonderful book,\u201d she said.<\/p>\n Be still my heart.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n I was content for a day with this exchange. When I mentioned it to my son, he encouraged me to ask Blume for some recognition. I practically begged for a morsel and she wrote back again: \u201cOf course I plan to acknowledge your book in mine and to blog about it later.\u201d<\/p>\n She sent me a signed advance copy, bookmarked to the acknowledgment: \u201cReplacement Child<\/em><\/a> by Judy L. Mandel is a book I recommend to anyone curious about the true story of one family who was caught up in the tragedy of the second plane crash.\u201d<\/p>\nHow my memoir became a New York\u00a0Times<\/em>\u00a0best-seller<\/h2>\n
By Judy L. Mandel<\/strong><\/h3>\n
It was true!<\/h2>\n
How it happened<\/h2>\n
Don\u2019t be afraid to ask<\/h2>\n