| 'Kiss me (your name here),' she said passionately
Canadian Press
December 12, 1999
Toronto - Mike Pocock has a novel idea for Christmas.
His London, Ontario - based firm publishes Love's Next Door, a 140-page
romance whose four main characters change according to each buyer's
specifications.
Pocock says people order the books for their wives, husbands, significant
others, moms, friends, anyone who enjoys a mildly erotic fantasy whose hero or
heroine bears their name, features and habits.
Orders have been placed through his Web site (romancebyyou.com) from all
over North America. One customer wrote from Florida: "My husband jokes
about making love to Sharon Stone. I gave him Love's Next Door
for his birthday and included Sharon as the leading lady. He chased me for
weeks."
The original story was penned by Christine Elliott, who lives in Saint
John, N.B., and had never written a book before.
Its heroine is a magazine editor in a big city who moves back to her home
town and finds her old high school crush living next door. He has a
girlfriend but, of course, she's a nasty bit of business and totally unsuitable.
It's only a matter of time before the girl-friend is toast and our heroine has
the boy next door.
To order a copy, customers fill out a list of 30 specifications, including
the names of the four characters (hero, heroine, best friend, villain), hair
colour and style of heroine, pets, favourite restaurant and preferred cocktails
of the protagonists.
Most of the choices are limited to what's on a prepared checklist that
translate into "more than 1,000" changes made by the computer in the text for
each customer. The glossy cover is personalized, too.
Pocock won't say how many copies he's sold since he put the novel on the
market four months ago. "Business is going very well for Christmas and we are
especially looking forward to Valentine's Day."
It's business is made possible by technology. Pocock worked on the
computer program himself, along with two other people. The books are printed
individually by an on-demand printer and they cost $29.95 each.
"Someone sent me an ad for a California publisher who does something similar
and they charge $240 (U.S.) for each book," he claims.
Pocock, 38 and single, says he sees himself as more of an inventor than a
publisher. "I have a number of U.S. patents in the interactive television area.
I'm a technology person."
Does he read romances? "I've had to, but I don't read them as a general
rule."
Reprint provided courtesy of The Province.
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