The Book Publicity Blog

News, Tips, Trends and Miscellany for Book Publicists

NPR Books Watch — 3/19-3/25

Anyone who emails me the imprints of all the books listed (or houses if no imprint is available) will win the NPR Books Grid for the prior week that includes, in addition to the information below, interviewer, pub date, imprint, genre, post-interview Amazon ranking, pre-interview ranking (if the book was mentioned on Shelf Awareness and I was able to look up the number before the interview), and interview hyperlink.

* indicates the interview is a rebroadcast.

***

TOTAL book stories for the past week: 23 (15 last week)

All Things Considered: 4 (5  LW)

Diane Rehm: 3 (2 LW)

Fresh Air: 2 (3 LW)

Morning Edition:  3 (2 LW)

NPR.org: 5 (4  LW)

Talk of the Nation: 3 (2 LW)

Tell Me More: 0 (1 LW)

Weekend Edition Saturday: 0 (0 LW)

Weekend Edition Sunday: 1 (0 LW)

All Things Considered Room and the Chair, The Lorraine Adams
All Things Considered Three Books … / Three Stories Of Gossip Not Even Austen Could Resist    
All Things Considered Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz Mordechai Richler
All Things Considered Watchlist Jeffrey Deaver
Diane Rehm Big Short, The Michael Lewis
Diane Rehm Bargaining with the Devil Robert Mnookin
Diane Rehm Heaven Lisa Miller
Fresh Air Jane’s Fame Clare Harman
Fresh Air Superbug Maryn McKenna
Morning Edition Getting Organized in the Google Era Douglas Merrill
Morning Edition Keeping the Feast Paula Butturini
Morning Edition Jane’s Fame Clare Harman
NPR.org Animal Factory David Kirby
NPR.org Ask, The Sam Lipsyte
NPR.org What We’re Reading: March 23 – 29    
NPR.org Lonelyhearts Marion  Meade
NPR.org Rapture Ready! Daniel  Radosh
Talk of the Nation Genius in All of Us, The David Shenk
Talk of the Nation Imperial Life In The Emerald City Rajiv  Chandrasekaran
Talk of the Nation Things They Carried, The Tim O’Brien
Weekend Edition Sunday Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter Seth Grahame-Smith

March 26, 2010 Posted by | NPR Books Watch | , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment

The WNBA’s online book promotion panel

Last week’s AAP / Association of American Publishers and WNBA / Women’s National Book Association Book Marketing Online panel offered some interesting takeaways for book promotion.  I’m not going to summarize all the issues raised here (for the complete Twitter roundup of the panel, check #wnba318 or watch the video at moderator @SueGreenbergPR’s Book Buzz site), but here are a few:

Panelists emphasized that although it might seem ideal to Facebook and tweet and blog and maintain a website, the reality is that most busy authors simply don’t have the time, the desire (or perhaps the expertise) to be involved in a myriad of online activities.  So the smart thing to do when you’re pressed for time is pick one (or more) platforms and start building followers in that community, whether it’s Facebook, Twitter or a blog.  (Keep in mind, though, that interacting with online fans need not be a time suck.  Panelist and author @abbystokes pointed out that she tweets for 15 minutes in the morning and evening without interrupting her writing and teaching time.)

Also keep in mind that quality can be more important than quantity when it comes to followers on Facebook or Twitter — you want followers who are interested and engaged, not just people who accept a fan request and then never bother to check the page.  Also, use social media to listen as well as talk.

Location-based social networks like Foursquare, Gowalla and Whrrl could one day be used — assuming they catch on — to build author tours and to promote books by offering badges / pins, etc.  (I just suggested to Foursquare that they add a “Book Nerd” badge, which I thought would be fun and in the spirit of the “game” — we’ll see how that one works out.)  At the very least, these LBS networks can definitely help us book peeps find one other during BEA, so sign up, folks.  At this point Foursquare seems to be the most popular service with Gowalla a distant second.  (Only one of my 500 Facebook friends is on Whrrl and I can’t find an obvious way to import my Twitter or Gmail contacts — not that it doesn’t exist, just that it’s not obvious — so that gets my thumbs down.)

In case you’d like to find out more about the panelists and their blogs, here’s the 411:

– Fauzia Burke, President of FSB Associates, Book Marketing on the Web

@FSBAssociates

http://www.fsbassociates.com

 

– Peter Costanzo, Director of Online Marketing, Perseus Books Group

@PeterCostanzo

http://bookcurrents.blogspot.com

 

– Andrea Fleck-Nisbet, Digital/Online Sales & Marketing Director, Workman Publishing

@WorkmanPub

http://www.workman.com/blog/

– Ron Hogan, Director of E-Marketing Strategy, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt

@ronhogan

http://www.beatrice.com

– Kelly Leonard, Executive Director, Online Marketing, Hachette Book Group

@KellyLeonard

www.HachetteBookGroup.com

–Kate Rados, Director of Digital Initiatives, Chelsea Green Publishing

@katerados

http://www.thenewsleekness.com/

 

– Abby Stokes, teacher, author of Is This Thing On?

@abbystokes

http://abbyandme.com/ (Includes links to blogs and sites mentioned during the panel)

– Organizer/Moderator: Susannah Greenberg, Susannah Greenberg Public Relations

@SueGreenbergPR

http://bookbuzz.com

– A/V: Yen Cheong

@yodiwan

The Book Publicity Blog (http://yodiwan.wordpress.com)

***

Were you at the panel / did you watch online?  What did you find most interesting?

March 23, 2010 Posted by | Online Marketing | 3 Comments

NPR Books Watch — 3/12-3/18

I helped out with the AV at a terrific online publicity and marketing panel last night at the AAP / Association of American Publishers hosted by the WNBA / Women’s National Book Association.  I will (hopefully!) summarize the talk in a post next week, but you can also check #wnba318 for the Twitter roundup or moderator @SueGreenbergPR’s Book Buzz site for the video.  Also, panelist @abbystokes lists the various websites mentioned during the panel on her site Abby & Me.

***

Anyone who emails me the imprints of all the books listed (or houses if no imprint is available) will win the NPR Books Grid for the prior week that includes, in addition to the information below, interviewer, pub date, imprint, genre, post-interview Amazon ranking, pre-interview ranking (if the book was mentioned on Shelf Awareness and I was able to look up the number before the interview), and interview hyperlink.

* indicates the interview is a rebroadcast.

***

TOTAL book stories for the past week: 23 (15 last week)

All Things Considered: 5 (3 LW)

Diane Rehm: 2 (2 LW)

Fresh Air: 3 (4LW)

Morning Edition:  2 (2 LW)

NPR.org: 4 (5 LW)

Talk of the Nation: 2 (3 LW)

Tell Me More: 1 (0 LW)

Weekend Edition Saturday: 0

Weekend Edition Sunday: 0

All Things Considered Yugo, The Jason Vuic
All Things Considered Eternity Soup Greg Critser
All Things Considered Big Short, The Michael Lewis
All Things Considered Elmore Leonard, At Home In Detroit    
All Things Considered Forty Rules of Love, The Elif Shafak
Diane Rehm Death and Life of the Great American School System* Diane Ravitch
Diane Rehm Second Nature Jonathan Balcombe
Fresh Air Big Short, The Michael Lewis
Fresh Air Courage and Consequenc Karl Rove
Fresh Air Peddling Peril David Albright
Morning Edition My Life with the Taliban Abdul Salam   Zaeef
Morning Edition Week in December, A Sebastian Faulks
NPR.org Valley of Death Ted Morgan
NPR.org What We’re Reading, March 16 – 22    
NPR.org Death and Life of the Great American School System Diane Ravitch
NPR.org So Much for That Lionel Shriver
Talk of the Nation History of White People, The Nell Irvin Painter
Talk of the Nation Brainwashed Tom Burrell
Tell Me More Instinctive Parenting Ada Calhoun
Tell Me More NurtureShock Po Bronson

March 19, 2010 Posted by | NPR Books Watch | , , , , , , | Leave a Comment

The Future of Book Publishing from South by Southwest

It’s that time of year again, when thousands of people with Macbooks and iPhones migrate to Austin for the annual South by Southwest Interactive (SXSWi) festival.  Following up to last year’s trailblazing but ill-fated New Think for Old Publishers panel, this year’s A Brave New Future for Book Publishing brought together a stellar line up — and some of my favorite publishing bloggers — including Booksquare‘s @booksquare, HarperStudio‘s @debbiestier, The New Sleekness‘ @pablod, Vook‘s @vooktv and Booktour.com‘s @weegee.  Among other issues, they discussed the iPad (of course), ebook pricing issues and the importance of an author’s online platform (or “tribe”).

You can follow the original Twitter stream of the panel at #futurebook (although there were so many tweets flying back and forth, it left my head spinning).  For a more concise wrap up of the panel, I recommend Peter Miller’s post for the Los Angeles Times‘ book blog, Jacket Copy and GalleyCat‘s  compilation of some of the best tweets.

Since the future of publishing is a particular interest of mine (if you have a chance, check out some of the Future of Publishing Blogs on my blogroll) and since I must admit I enjoy naval gazing as much as the next New York City media type, I thought I would weigh in on one issue that always looms large: what is the role of the publishing house in a world in which self publishing platforms are ubiquitous and the Internet has turned the traditional retail model on its head?

I work for a large publishing house (“legacy publishing” as some call it), so don’t let it take you by surprise when I say that I believe we, i.e., publishing houses, do indeed play a vital role in today’s cultural marketplace.  Publishing isn’t perfect — even most in the industry aren’t shy about admitting that — but not acknowledging our role in bringing books to readers even in this 2.0 world is naive and short-sighted at best.  Here are a couple reasons why:

***

The Filter: It was interesting — and not a little amusing — to see people in the #futurebook Tweet stream clamoring for “slush pile software” that will trawl through writers’ submissions and pick out the best ones.  (Coincidentally — or maybe not — I received a press release yesterday about WeBOOK , a site that matches up writers and literary agents.)  There are a lot of would-be writers, some of whose writing could use, shall we say, a little work.  Until that slush-pile software is developed, it’s publishing houses (and literary agents) doing the filtering.

The Distributor: If you self publish a book and no one reads it, are you an author?  Publishing houses also help turn words on a page into a book in someone’s hands through advertising, marketing (bookstore events, media coverage, etc.) and sales (distribution to and placement in stores).  Granted, we’re not the only “book funneler” — the Internet being another — but we still get lots of books to lots of readers.

***

You get my point.  I think we’re important.  On the other hand, if we don’t acknowledge that readers today are looking for ebooks and vooks (video books) and POD (Print on Demand) and not, say, Gutenberg bibles, then we’re being naive and short-sighted.  The truth is that most publishing houses do indeed recognize the need to change and adapt.  The crucial question, though, that has yet to be answered, is that in this changing marketplace, how exactly is the role of a publishing house changing and how can that role(s) best be executed?  For the answer to that, you’ll have to, um, check back next year.

March 16, 2010 Posted by | Miscellaneous | | 11 Comments

NPR Books Watch — 3/5-3/11

Anyone who emails me the imprints of all the books listed (or houses if no imprint is available) will win the NPR Books Grid for the prior week that includes, in addition to the information below, interviewer, pub date, imprint, genre, post-interview Amazon ranking, pre-interview ranking (if the book was mentioned on Shelf Awareness and I was able to look up the number before the interview), and interview hyperlink.

* indicates the interview is a rebroadcast.

*** TOTAL book stories for the past week: 23 (15 last week)

All Things Considered: 3 (4 LW)

Diane Rehm: 2 (2 LW)

Fresh Air: 4 (3 LW)

Morning Edition: 2 (1 LW)

NPR.org: 5 (5 LW)

Talk of the Nation: 3 (2 LW)

Weekend Edition Saturday: 2 (1LW)

Weekend Edition Sunday: 2 (3 LW)

All Things Considered Poisoner’s Handbook, The Deborah Blum
All Things Considered Three Books … / Three Family Secrets We Can’t Keep    
All Things Considered Modern Home Eric Puchner
Diane Rehm Death and Life of the Great American School System Diane Ravitch
Diane Rehm Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand Helen Simonson
Fresh Air Infinities, The John Banville
Fresh Air Whip Smart Melissa Febos
Fresh Air Comeback America David M.  Walker
Fresh Air Eclipse of the Sunnis Deborah Amos
Morning Edition Eclipse of the Sunnis Deborah Amos
Morning Edition Made for Goodness Desmond Tutu
NPR.org This Book is Overdue! Marilyn Johnson
NPR.org Poisoner’s Handbook, The Deborah Blum
NPR.org What We’re Reading, March 9 – 15    
NPR.org Angelology Danielle Trussoni
NPR.org Courage and Consequence Karl Rove
Talk of the Nation About a Mountain John  D’Agata
Talk of the Nation Devil and Sherlock Holmes David Grann
Talk of the Nation Tattoos On The Heart Father G
Weekend Edition Saturday Jesuit Guide to (Almost) Everything James Martin
Weekend Edition Saturday My Dream of Stars Anousheh  Ansar
Weekend Edition Sunday Hole We’re In, The Gabrielle  Zevin
Weekend Edition Sunday No Apology Mitt Romney

March 12, 2010 Posted by | NPR Books Watch | , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment

NPR Books Watch — 2/26-3/4

In honor of the birds chirping outside my apartment this morning, I wore my not-NorthFace coat to work.

***

Anyone who emails me the imprints of all the books listed (or houses if no imprint is available) will win the NPR Books Grid for the prior week that includes, in addition to the information below, interviewer, pub date, imprint, genre, post-interview Amazon ranking, pre-interview ranking (if the book was mentioned on Shelf Awareness and I was able to look up the number before the interview), and interview hyperlink.

* indicates the interview is a rebroadcast.

***

TOTAL book stories for the past week: 15 (22 last week)

All Things Considered: 4 (4 LW)

Diane Rehm: 2 (2 LW)

Fresh Air: 3 (2 LW)

Morning Edition: 1 (2 LW)

NPR.org: 5 (3 LW)

Talk of the Nation: 2 (1 LW)

Weekend Edition Saturday: 1 (0 LW)

Weekend Edition Sunday: 3 (1 LW)

All Things Considered Please Peter  Wild
All Things Considered Map of the Invisible World Tash Aw
All Things Considered Girl Who Fell From The Sky Heidi Durrow
All Things Considered Grow Your Own Drugs James Wong
Diane Rehm Asleep Molly Caldwell  Crosby
Diane Rehm Art of Choosing, The Sheena  Iyengar
Fresh Air Shocking True Story Henry Scott
Fresh Air Shaking Woman, The Siri Hustvedt
Fresh Air They Fought for Each Other Kelly Kennedy
Morning Edition Death and Life of the Great American School System Diane Ravitch
NPR.org Hypochondriacs, The Brian Dillon
NPR.org True Confections Katharine Weber
NPR.org Making Toast Roger  Rosenblatt
NPR.org What We’re Reading: March 3-8  
NPR.org Three Books … /
Three Trips To The Other Side Of The Tracks
   
Talk of the Nation No Small Matter Felice C.  Frankel 
Talk of the Nation Calculus of Friendship, The Steven Strogatz
Weekend Edition Saturday Bear That Wasn’t, The Frank Tashlin
Weekend Edition Sunday Moonfixer Earl  Lloyd
Weekend Edition Sunday Alice I Have Been Melanie Benjamin
Weekend Edition Sunday Poet Lucille Clifton: ‘Everything Is Connected’    

March 5, 2010 Posted by | NPR Books Watch | , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Why we schedule bookstore events (and why we don’t)

There’s no doubt that bookstore events (talks / signings) are an important part of the book promotion process.  At the same time, the goal of a book publicist isn’t simply to carpet bomb bookstores within a 50-mile radius of an author.  Let me break it down.

***

Why We Do Schedule Events:

Sales: Sending an author to a store to talk about / sign their book usually (hopefully) helps increase sales.

Support:  Thus, scheduling events is a way for authors and publishing houses to support bookstores.

Audience: An author appearing at their local bookstore is as close to a sure fire hit as you can get since authors can, generally speaking, get their friends / neighbors / colleagues to show up a book signing and buy books.

Way back when, I thought the only reason for an author’s friend (or mother) to show up at a signing was to keep the seat warm — they probably already got a free book, right?  Then my friends started writing books and I found myself buying books at their signings — even though I work in publishing and can often get them for free.  Moral of the story is that bookstores know they can count on pretty robust crowds and sales when an author’s friends show up at an event.  (Not to mention that as foot traffic in the store increases, so do spur-of-the-moment purchases.)

And Why We Don’t:

Topic:  Some topics work really well for certain stores — fiction, for example.  Other stores find novelists simply don’t draw an audience.  Some topics are great for certain types of venues, but not for general-interest bookstores.  Some stores only sell mystery titles, or travel, or science fiction.  Bookstores know what works best for them.

Location: Typically, we’ll schedule no more than one signing in a given area.  Realistically, there are a limited number of people in a designated location who will attend a talk / signing for an author.  If they show up for the signing at the local independent bookstore on Tuesday evening, that doesn’t leave very many people attending the signing at the Barnes & Noble half a mile away that Saturday (or vice versa).

Audience size: When was the last time you went to a book signing for a non-celebrity author?  How many people were there?  Bookstores do their best to promote events with in-store signage, information on their websites, newsletters and sometimes, advertising, and book publicists do likewise by trying to schedule interviews for the author with local media prior to the event, but sometimes even the best efforts don’t pan out.

Which is why if an author has no local connections and the book’s topic would not be of particular interest to a community, stores may be a little more reluctant to schedule events.  Of course, we know that plenty of stores do welcome authors with no local connections,  but they spend a fair amount of time and money promoting their talks and signings, so they do need to be selective about the authors they host.

Time: Events take time.  Book publicists take time to set up events.  Stores take time to promote them.  Authors take time to talk and sign at them.   All that time is time not spent promoting books in other ways.  So while scheduling some books events is a good thing, it is possible to go overboard and reach a point of diminishing returns.

***

I realize it looks like there are far more reasons to not schedule bookstore events than to schedule them, which isn’t necessarily the case — I think it’s more like the “Don’ts” just need more explanation than the “Dos.”

How do you feel about scheduling / hosting / speaking at bookstore events?

March 2, 2010 Posted by | Book Tour, Bookstores | 7 Comments

   

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