Alright, ya’ll. It’s
time for me to finally write this BookCon recap that I’ve been mentioning for
the past week. Here’s Day 1 of BookCon in all it’s glory!
First, I guess I
should make the disclaimer that this was my first BookCon experience, and I
only was able to go because I live in NYC. If I didn’t live in NYC, I don’t
think I would go. It’s just too expensive. But, I only had to pay the ticket
prices, no travel expenses, so that was good for me.
Also, I was unable
to sign up for any autographing tickets, simply because I accidentally
overslept when the tickets went live. Ugh. I’m just glad I got to meet Renee
Ahdie and co. the day before BookCon started, so I didn’t miss out on
author-meeting opportunities.
Now, onto the
actual things that happened during BookCon, starting with the line. My roommate
and I got up around 7 a.m. to get to the Javits Center (BookCon’s location) and
get in line around 9 a.m. (It’s a one-hour train ride to Javits from our
apartment.) But apparently, some people got there ridiculously early, because
we were in one of the last sections set up for when security released the lines
one-by-one to enter the convention center. This meant my roommate and I missed
our first planned ARC drop of Empire of
Sands from Hachette. They’d all been nabbed.
Fortunately,
though, we did get in a random line for Harper Voyager for two finished fantasy
books: The City of Brass and The Poppy War. That was super exciting. The City of Brass had been catching my
eye.
That all happened
in the first 15 minutes. After those 15 minutes, our plan was to go to Penguin
Teen’s Underlined birthday giveaway at 11:30, so we had some time to kill
between 10 a.m. and 11:15 (because all lines can only form 15 minutes before
the planned event. Note that this tidbit becomes important for Day 2’s chaos.).
We just walked around for a while and ate some food, but once the Underlined
line formed, we actually left once we learned what was being given away—just portable
chargers and random stuff. I did get a free tote from another Penguin giveaway
though. It was for Melissa de la Cruz’s Hamilton books.
Our next plan was
to go to Epic Reads’ ARC drop, but apparently, that one had a ticketing system.
You had to stand in line an hour early just to get a sticky note ticket. Then,
you had to stand in line an hour later to play a plinko game for one possible
ARC out of a few options. Needless to say, my roommate and I did not get a
chance to participate in any of these plinko events. The lines were crazy. But,
the only ARC I wanted from Epic Reads was What
If It’s Us, so I wasn’t too bummed. We did end up nabbing a Harry Potter
poster from the Scholastic booth, though. And it is awesome!
Our first
successful event was for Penguin Teen’s Book It giveaway. Penguin had postcards
with three different travel options, and, when you checked one, you got an ARC
for that destination. There was a European option, which was for an ARC of The Brilliant Death, a Middle East
option for Darius the Great is Not Okay,
and a tropical option for Seafire.
The first day, I got Darius the Great is
Not Okay, which I had never heard of before, so that was a surprise. Oh,
they also had luggage tags for everyone.
After the travel
event, we chilled around the Hachette booth until more ARCs of Empire of Sands dropped. Thankfully for
my roommate who was dying to get her hands on a copy, we were able to grab one.
I also got back in line for an ARC copy of Annex
as well.
Once the ARC drop
was over, I had some time to kill because my roommate had to go to a Naomi
Novak signing. I rested my feet for a bit and ate the brownie I got from
Starbucks earlier in the day. When her event was over, we thought about trying
for the Epic Reads ARC plinko game again, but the line was stupid long and
icky, so we called it a day.
City of Brass by S.A. Chakraborty
The Poppy War by R.F. Kuang
Empire of Sand by Tasha Suri (ARC)
Darius the Great is Not Okay by Adib Khorram (ARC)
Annex by Rich Larsen (ARC)
Slayer by Kiersten White (sampler)
All in all, day
one was fairly successful. There were a few snags, mostly with the Epic Reads booth,
but I ended up with two finished books and three ARCs, so all was well in the
world. Oh, and I forgot to mention, my roommate and I were being super picky
about what books we were getting in line for. We didn’t even worry about
Macmillan or Simon & Schuster’s booths (or any of the smaller booths),
simply because we both work at those two companies.
Did you go to
BookCon this year? Or any year? If so, what did you manage to get? And if not,
what would you have liked to get?
I am so glad you enjoyed your time at book con! I've wanted to go for so long. It's definitely a plus that you live in NYC.
ReplyDeleteKrystianna @ Downright Dystopian
Yep. It's a big plus.
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