Heard from Peter Mayer
Dec. 11th, 2006 11:35 pmI've mentioned the Minnesota singer Peter Mayer's music before on this LiveJournal; I love his music and have all of his CDs and have heard him in concert several times. I mentioned that a number of his songs made it onto my Winter playlist. I especially recommend his album Midwinter for anyone who has seasonal affective disorder. There is one song in particular on that album, "The Longest Night" that has been an especial comfort. (You can hear a lovely clip from the beginning of "The Longest Night" from the page for this album at CD Baby.)
So I contacted him by e-mail through his website to let him know how much his music has meant to me. I just got a lovely acknowledgment e-mail back from him.
I've gotten some notes by e-mail over the year from people responding to my books, and so I know how much it can mean to an artist/creator to hear from people who have enjoyed their work. I have a friend who is a well-known YA author, who has remarked rather wryly about letters she gets from kids at times. "Clearly school assignments," she says. "Their teacher thinks it would be a marvelous idea to have the kids write to a favorite author and get an answer back--never thinking to include an SASE or to consider the financial and time burden it would be to reply when I can sometimes get hundreds of the things a month. Funny how they dry up during the summer when school is out."
True. So I approached him by e-mail, not expecting a reply, but was very pleased to hear back from him.
Have you ever written to an artist, an author or a musician, just to tell him or her how much you've enjoyed their work? Tell me about it, why you felt the urge to write. Did you get any kind of response? I've sent a number of them myself over the years. Not all of them have responded.
So I contacted him by e-mail through his website to let him know how much his music has meant to me. I just got a lovely acknowledgment e-mail back from him.
I've gotten some notes by e-mail over the year from people responding to my books, and so I know how much it can mean to an artist/creator to hear from people who have enjoyed their work. I have a friend who is a well-known YA author, who has remarked rather wryly about letters she gets from kids at times. "Clearly school assignments," she says. "Their teacher thinks it would be a marvelous idea to have the kids write to a favorite author and get an answer back--never thinking to include an SASE or to consider the financial and time burden it would be to reply when I can sometimes get hundreds of the things a month. Funny how they dry up during the summer when school is out."
True. So I approached him by e-mail, not expecting a reply, but was very pleased to hear back from him.
Have you ever written to an artist, an author or a musician, just to tell him or her how much you've enjoyed their work? Tell me about it, why you felt the urge to write. Did you get any kind of response? I've sent a number of them myself over the years. Not all of them have responded.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-12-13 01:41 am (UTC)The most memorable one was probably when I emailed Augusten Burroughs after reading Running with Scissors. I had meant to just tell him how much I liked his book, but I ended up giving him a brief account of my own bizarre childhood. He wrote back and told me to write a book about it... and I did... and that was my first book.
I got to know Sean Stewart because I wrote him a fan letter. He replied, we corresponded on and off, and we've had lunch a couple times when he stops by LA. That's pretty cool-- he's a great guy.
I think every author I've written too has been very cool, actually. I think the last person I wrote to was Michael Ruhlman, to praise his book Soul of a Chef. (I decided that since I'd read it about ten times, he really ought to know.) He wrote me a very nice letter in reply.