I walked into the downtown offices of Gotham Books this afternoon with the corrected first-pass page proofs of Duke: A Life of Duke Ellington tucked under my arm. Emily Wunderlich met me at the elevator with a big grin on her face and the first copy of the advance uncorrected proofs of Duke in her hand, hot off the press.
Advance uncorrected proofs, usually referred to by authors as “bound galleys,” are the bound volumes that are sent out to editors and reviewers a few months prior to the publication of a new book. They look like trade paperbacks–or, to put it another way, like actual books. Until this afternoon, Duke consisted first of images on a computer screen, then a stack of printed-out pages. Now it’s a physical object.
Emily gave me the bound galleys. “What do you think?” she asked.
“Holy shit!” I blurted. “It’s real! And it’s beautiful!”
“It sure is,” she said.
I went home happy.