The Book Publicity Blog

News, Tips, Trends and Miscellany for Book Publicists

NPR Books Watch — 7/23-7/29

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.

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TOTAL book stories for the past week: 37 (21 last week)

All Things Considered: 9 (4 LW)

Diane Rehm: 2 (0 LW)

Fresh Air: 3 (4 LW)

Morning Edition: 5 (2 LW)

NPR.org: 9 (4 LW)

Talk of the Nation: 3 (3 LW)

Tell Me More: 0 (0 LW)

Weekend Edition Saturday: 4 (3 LW)

Weekend Edition Sunday: 2 (1 LW)

All Things Considered Disappearing Spoon, The Sam Kean
All Things Considered California Schemin’ Gavin Bain
All Things Considered Full Cup, A Michael D’Antonio
All Things Considered My Guilty Pleasure / Mennonite in a Little Black Dress Rhoda Janzen
All Things Considered Thrilled to Death / Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy John LeCarre
All Things Considered My Guilty Pleasure / Regency Buck Georgette Heyer
All Things Considered Kook Peter Heller
All Things Considered Future Shock Alvin Toffler
All Things Considered Thrilled to Death / Advise and Consent Allen Jury
Diane Rehm Scout, Atticus and Boo Mary McDonagh  Murphy
Diane Rehm Hundred-Foot Journey Richard Morais
Fresh Air Fever, The Sonia Shah
Fresh Air Songs of Hollywood Philip Furia
Fresh Air Four Fish Paul  Greenberg
Morning Edition Cook’s Country Best Potluck Recipes Chris Kimball
Morning Edition Hamlet’s Blackberry William Powers
Morning Edition Visit from the Goon Squad Jennifer Egan
Morning Edition Every Man in This Village is a Liar Megan Stack
Morning Edition Star Island Carl Hiaasen
NPR.org New Face of Jazz Cicily Janus
NPR.org Layover in Dubai Dan Fesperman
NPR.org Fun In The Sun: Laugh-Out-Loud Summer Books    
NPR.org Ghost of Milagro Creek, The Melanie Sumner
NPR.org Jokers, The Albert Cossery
NPR.org Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet David Mitchell
NPR.org Super Sad True Love Story Gary Shteyngart
NPR.org Four Fish Paul  Greenberg
NPR.org One Nightstand, Six Affairs: Novels Of Illicit Love    
Talk of the Nation Hackers Stephen Levy
Talk of the Nation Wilson Daniel Clowes
Talk of the Nation Cocaine Nation Tom Feiling
Weekend Edition Saturday Never Tell Our Business to Strangers Jennifer Mascia
Weekend Edition Saturday Bliss, Remembered Frank DeFord
Weekend Edition Saturday London Cabbie’s Summer Reading Picks, A    
Weekend Edition Saturday From Those Wonderful Folks Who Gave You Pearl Harbor Jerry Della Famina
Weekend Edition Sunday Theater Geek Mickey Rapkin
Weekend Edition Sunday Neil Flambe and the Marco Polo Murders Kevin Sylvester

July 30, 2010 Posted by | NPR Books Watch | , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment

Tips for using Facebook both personally and professionally

Last week, Facebook announced membership had hit 500 million users.  In other words, most everyone using the Internet is on Facebook (or at least it sure seems that way).

The tricky issue is that where Facebook was once primarily used to connect with family and friends (IRL — In Real Life — friends, that is), it has since become an online meeting spot for friends, strangers, businesses and more.  Many users wonder who to friend request?  And perhaps the more delicate question is whose friend request do you accept?  High school and college classmates?  Colleagues at work?  Professional acquaintances?  Your boss?  Readers of your book or blog?  Which leads to the question: can you use your Facebook profile both for personal and professional encounters?  You’d probably get different opinions from different people, but my answer is yes, and I do (largely because maintaining one profile takes enough time; managing two would be impossible).

While there’s nothing wrong with ignoring a friend request (I do when I have absolutely no clue who the requester is, when I can’t see their profile because it’s locked down and when there’s no personal message to me explaining who the heck they are), if I (remember) I’ve had contact with the person — either in real life or over email — I usually do accept the request so as not to seem rude.  And on the upside, becoming friends on Facebook can lead to genuine friendships or at least professional relationships.  Also, my News Feed, made up of status updates from the myriad people and companies I “friend” or “like” is like a personalized newspaper: it serves to provide a good picture of what is going on not only with my “real” friends, but also in the publishing and media worlds.

For those of you who do use Facebook for all aspects of your life (and work), here are a few suggestions about how to manage your online profile:

Turn on your Privacy Settings so your profile can only be viewed by your friends, i.e., people in your network by going to Account (on the upper right hand of the page) and then clicking “Privacy Settings.”  You can have one setting for the entire profile; you can also set additional privacy settings for each portion of your profile — the Wall posts, Photos, Basic Information, Friends, etc.  (At one point, some high school and college students, alarmed that potential employers were scanning their profiles, changed their Facebook names or shut down their profiles entirely, which seems rather complicated and inconvenient since it’s easy enough to prevent people from seeing parts — or all — of your profile.  It’s also possible to hide your profile — also under Privacy Settings — so you won’t even come up in a search of your name.)

Use Facebook’s Friend Lists by going to Account and then “Edit Friends.”  This enables you to make certain posts / photos / sections of your profile available to only certain people (or visible to all your friends except for certain people).  For example, I have a list entitled “People I Don’t Really Know” and the people on that list cannot view certain personal information, photo albums or status updates.

This type of list can be particularly useful for authors — or anyone else — who may wish to grant family / friends more access to a profile than readers / colleagues / random acquaintances.  (In case you’re wondering, no author or colleague has access to my entire profile – I did say I’m pretty liberal about accepting friend requests, so you know the axe is going to fall somewhere — but most friends do see most of it.)  Of course, utilizing Friend Lists for the sake of privacy requires that you add people to Friend Lists — which nowadays can be done when sending or accepting a friend request.  (At one point I did have to go through my then 400-person friend list and add everyone to at least one list.  Better done sooner rather than later, needless to say.)

Turn on notifications for when you’re tagged in a photo or video by going to Account, then Account Settings, then Notifications.  Most Facebook users will use discretion when posting photos of themselves.  But many of us don’t necessarily trust our hundreds (or thousands) of friends to exercise the same discretion while tagging photos of us.  (Of course, sometimes there’s absolutely nothing wrong / illegal / incriminating about a photo other than the fact that you look god awful.)  Either way, by turning on notifications, you’ll know the moment someone tags you in a photo or video, although you’ll need to get to a computer to untag yourself since that can’t be done from a mobile device.  (You can also change your Privacy Settings so that only certain people can see the photos posted — by others — in which you are tagged, which is different from the photos posted — by you — in which you are tagged.)

Hide status updates you don’t want to see.  Let’s face it — some people (and companies) are really boring and it just gets annoying seeing their status updates about politics or religion.  All.  Day.  Long.  To get rid of a status update, let your cursor hover over the right side of the update.  You will see a “Hide” button pop up that will allow you to permanently hide updates from the person.  Status updates from all Facebook applications (like Farmville and Mafia Wars) can also be hidden in the same manner.  FB allows you to block all, say, Farmville updates from a user, without blocking all of that user’s status updates, which is incredibly useful because some Farmville players are really quite witty and amusing when they’re not, say, trading eggs and building barns.  Or perhaps you’d like to see what they’re reading via GoodReads, but not whether they’re riding a tractor.  You get my point.

And lastly, regardless of how high your privacy settings, always post as though your mother and your boss can see everything in your profile.  Murphy’s Law and all …

If you’d like to find out more, check out the All Facebook’s 10 Privacy Settings Every Facebook User Should Know.

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Do you use Facebook for both personal and professional reasons?  Why or why not?  And if you do, what are some of your tips for managing the balance?

July 28, 2010 Posted by | Social Networking | , , , | 3 Comments

NPR Books Watch — 7/15-7/22

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.

***

TOTAL book stories for the past week: 21 (24 last week)

All Things Considered: 4 (5 LW)

Diane Rehm: 0 (1 LW)

Fresh Air: 4 (3 LW)

Morning Edition: 2 (1 LW)

NPR.org: 4 (5 LW)

Talk of the Nation: 3 (2 LW)

Tell Me More: 0 (1 LW)

Weekend Edition Saturday: 3 (3 LW)

Weekend Edition Sunday: 1 (3 LW)

All Things Considered Disappearing Spoon, The Sam Kean
All Things Considered California Schemin’ Gavin Bain
All Things Considered Full Cup, A Michael D’Antonio
All Things Considered My Guilty Pleasure / Mennonite in a Little Black Dress Rhoda Janzen
Fresh Air Obituary / Remembering Harvey Pekar In All Of His ‘Splendor’    
Fresh Air Fever, The Sonia Shah
Fresh Air Songs of Hollywood Philip Furia
Fresh Air Four Fish Paul  Greenberg
Morning Edition Cook’s Country Best Potluck Recipes Chris Kimball
Morning Edition Hamlet’s Blackberry William Powers
NPR.org New Face of Jazz Cicily Janus
NPR.org Layover in Dubai Dan Fesperman
NPR.org Fun In The Sun: Laugh-Out-Loud Summer Books    
NPR.org Ghost of Milagro Creek, The Melanie Sumner
Talk of the Nation Hackers Stephen Levy
Talk of the Nation Wilson Daniel Clowes
Talk of the Nation Cocaine Nation Tom Feiling
Weekend Edition Saturday Never Tell Our Business to Strangers Jennifer Mascia
Weekend Edition Saturday Obituary / Ordinary Life Was Hard Enough For Harvey Pekar    
Weekend Edition Saturday Bliss, Remembered Frank DeFord
Weekend Edition Sunday Theater Geek Mickey Rapkin

July 23, 2010 Posted by | NPR Books Watch | , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Books vs. reviewers, in pictures

One of a book publicist’s jobs is to get reviews for books.  Which is tricky these days, what with the shrinking book sections (accompanied by shrinking staffs).  According to an April post on GalleyCat, traditional publishing houses published almost 300,000 books in 2009.  Now count the number of book reviews in your local newspaper.  Or on your favorite book blog.

This isn’t news, of course.  We’ve all known for years that book sections were getting leaner.  But the other day, Murderati had a post by Tess Gerritsen about what book editors are up against and I thought it was really informative and fun because she took some photos.  Gerritsen visited the offices of The Philadelphia Inquirer,  where an editor told her that the newspaper receives 800 books for review consideration every month.  Once the book department has weeded out the books they won’t cover, this is their “under consideration” pile.

And then I found more photos.

Over at the Dallas Morning News, book editor @mmerschel tweeted that he receives about 400 books a week.  Which means that if he neglects shelving books for a couple weeks, this is what happens.

These books are under consideration for coverage at I Just Finished and Stimulating Conversation: shelf 1 and shelf 2.

And these are awaiting review at Linus’s Blanket.

Every Day I Write the Book, with several “to be read” shelves (and piles), already posted lots of photos in “The TBR Pile in Pictures.”  (Her friends call her bedroom “the bookstore.”)

The upside is that book editors and bloggers LOVE.  BOOKS.  Their efforts to champion books and reading are much valued by those of us in the publishing industry.  But as the pictures illustrate all too well, there are a lot of us and not a lot of them, and that can create log jams.

One day, all (or at least most) galleys probably will be available electronically (as well as in print for those reviewers who prefer hard copies of books), searchable not only by publication date, book title and author name but also by genre and key word / phrase.  (Netgalley is a service that provides electronic galleys and has signed up several publishers as partners, but it’s been slow going.)  Book catalogs too will also be available online one day (and also searchable by publication date, title, author, genre, key word, etc.)  If reviewers can quickly, easily and securely search for what they want, that will obviate the need for book publicists to send out thousands of books — most of which end up discarded.

But until then, book reviewers, feel free to send me pictures of your “to be read” piles / shelves / bins / rooms and I will add them to the Flickr set.  Also, what are publicists doing (with regards to book mailings) that you love / hate?  And what do you think about electronic catalogs and galleys?  Would you use them?  Have you used them and what do you think?

Comments can be posted below or sent (with or without photos) to bookpublicityblog[at]gmail[dot]com.  (Let me know if you’d like your photos and / or comments to be anonymous.)

July 20, 2010 Posted by | Book Reviews, ebooks, review copies | , | 13 Comments

NPR Books Watch — 7/9-7/15

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.

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TOTAL book stories for the past week: 24 (23 last week)

All Things Considered: 5 (4 LW)

Diane Rehm: 1 (2 LW)

Fresh Air: 3 (5 LW)

Morning Edition: 1 (2 LW)

NPR.org: 5 (3 LW)

Talk of the Nation: 2 (2 LW)

Tell Me More: 1 (0  LW)

Weekend Edition Saturday: 3 (2LW)

Weekend Edition Sunday: 3 (3 LW)

All Things Considered Four Fish Paul  Greenberg
All Things Considered Faithful Place, A Tana French
All Things Considered Thrilled to Death / Eye of the Needle Ken Follett
All Things Considered You Must Read This … / McKay’s Bee’s  Thomas McMahon
All Things Considered Thrilled to Death / 1984 George Orwell
Diane Rehm Red Hook Road Ayelet Waldman
Fresh Air Unhinged Daniel  Carlat
Fresh Air Priceless Robert Wittman
Fresh Air Forbidden Creatures Peter  Laufer
Morning Edition Intelligence Susan  Hasler
NPR.org Mystery and Manners Flannery O’Connor
NPR.org Fever, The Sonia Shah
NPR.org Death is not an Option Suzanne  Rivecca
NPR.org Beakers To Beaches: Summer’s Best Science Books    
NPR.org Corduroy Mansions Alexander McCall Smith
Talk of the Nation Zoo Story Thomas French
Talk of the Nation Ghosts of Cannae, The Robert O’Connell
Tell Me More Scout, Atticus and Boo Mary McDonagh  Murphy
Weekend Edition Saturday To Kill a Mockingbird Harper Lee
Weekend Edition Saturday Charlie Finley G. Michael Greene
Weekend Edition Saturday Lucy Laurence Gonzales
Weekend Edition Sunday To Kill a Mockingbird Harper Lee
Weekend Edition Sunday How Did You Get This Number? Sloane Crosley
Weekend Edition Sunday To Kill a Mockingbird Harper Lee

July 16, 2010 Posted by | NPR Books Watch | , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment

How book publicity is like the World Cup

Under duress, I watched the World Cup final between the Netherlands and Spain yesterday.  Okay — so it wasn’t really “duress,” but everyone kept posting about the match on Facebook, and Versus wasn’t re-airing Stage 8 of the Tour de France until 5 p.m., and I was feeling lazy after running 12 miles in the heat, so I figured I might as well subject myself to the drone of thousands of vuvuzelas (yes — there’s an app for that) to see what the fuss was all about.

Of course, all the shots missed / were blocked for just about forever, until Spain finally scored in overtime and broke the stalemate to prevail.  Which is sort of how book promotion works.

A book publicist tries to “score” with a lot of media, but it can take a while, and “goals” can be few and far between.  Think soccer rather than, say, basketball.  And as with soccer (or basketball, for that matter), a failure to score does not necessarily indicate a failure to shoot — it simply means that sometimes, conditions just aren’t right for a goal.

The bottom line is that no book or author is ever a lock for any show, newspaper or website.  Nor is there a such thing as “only,” as in “only” online, or “only” a local show — these venues can be as tough to book as any other.

Which isn’t to say that eventually you don’t prevail — and knowledgeable, creative publicists can garner solid coverage of their books and authors — but you just may need a little overtime.

July 12, 2010 Posted by | Miscellaneous | | 10 Comments

NPR Books Watch — 7/2-7/8

Tour de France!  Who’s watching?

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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 (20 last week)

All Things Considered: 4 (2 LW)

Diane Rehm: 2 (3 LW)

Fresh Air: 5 (5 LW)

Morning Edition: 2 (0 LW)

NPR.org: 3 (4 LW)

Talk of the Nation: 2 (3 LW)

Tell Me More: 0 (0 LW)

Weekend Edition Saturday: 2 (2 LW)

Weekend Edition Sunday: 3 (1 LW)

All Things Considered Best of Kim Stanley Robinson, The Kim Stanley Robinson
All Things Considered Founding Myths Ray Raphael
All Things Considered Flooded Earth Peter D. Ward
All Things Considered Broken Karin Slaughter
Diane Rehm Freedom is Not Enough James Patterson
Diane Rehm Hamlet’s Blackberry William Powers
Fresh Air Lives Like Loaded Guns Lyndall Gordon
Fresh Air Billy Collins: A Poet’s Affection For Emily Dickinson    
Fresh Air Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet David Mitchell
Fresh Air On Writing* Stephen King
Fresh Air Shadow of Sirius, The W.S. Merwin
Morning Edition Madonnas of Echo Park, The Brando Skyhorse
Morning Edition To Kill a Mockingbird Harper Lee
NPR.org How Pleasure Works Paul  Bloom
NPR.org The Cookbook Collector Allegra Goodman
NPR.org Zombies And Giant Squid: Summer’s Monster Hits!    
Talk of the Nation What Women Want Paco Underhill
Talk of the Nation To Kill a Mockingbird Harper Lee
Weekend Edition Saturday Jan’s Story Barry Petersen
Weekend Edition Saturday Liberty Bell, The Gary Nash
Weekend Edition Sunday Parisians Graham Robb
Weekend Edition Sunday United Cakes of America Warren Brown
Weekend Edition Sunday Paris Underground Mark Ovendon

July 9, 2010 Posted by | NPR Books Watch | , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment

How do you track online “buzz”?

These past couple months have been incredibly busy, so I haven’t posted except on Fridays, when I do the NPR Books Watch wrap ups in which I list the books / authors that have been covered on the national NPR (National Public Radio) shows.  Book publicists — and anyone in the business of book promotion — know what a national NPR hit means, which is to say sales.  And typically lots of them.

One of the reasons why I hit upon doing the NPR Books Watch is because it’s easy enough (if time consuming) to look up book stories on the NPR Books page and then check sales rankings on Amazon.  In fact, Amazon is the quickest and most accessible way for anyone to get a snap shot of book sales (although you’d need to take the numbers with a grain of salt since they only reflect online sales rankings — not sales, per se — on one site).

But the truth is that a lot of what we do as book publicists is generate “buzz” — in other words, our efforts may not translate into immediate sales, even if down the line people end up buying more books.  Which brings me to the topic of this post.

The other day, I attended a Publishing Point talk with Martha Stewart Executive Vice President Gail Horwood and she shared a few simple tools the folks over at Martha Stewart use track (online) buzz:

Click throughs.  Link trackers like bit.ly or applications like HootSuite enable you to see how many people have clicked a link.

# of Friends/followers on sites like Facebook and Twitter

# of Comments on Facebook / blog / website posts

–  Retweets and @replies (if you use  Twitter)

How do you track buzz?  (I know the above doesn’t include web analytics applications like Google Analytics, but that’s the topic of another post …)

July 6, 2010 Posted by | Online Marketing, Social Networking | | 7 Comments

NPR Books Watch — 6/25-7/2

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: 20 (24 last week)

All Things Considered: 2 (8 LW)

Diane Rehm: 3 (2 LW)

Fresh Air: 5 (2  LW)

Morning Edition: 0 (2  LW)

NPR.org: 4 (4  LW)

Talk of the Nation: 3 (3  LW)

Tell Me More: 0 (0 LW)

Weekend Edition Saturday: 2 (2 LW)

Weekend Edition Sunday: 1 (1 LW)

All Things Considered Portrait of an Addict as a Young Man Bill Clegg
All Things Considered Journals Kurt Cobain
Diane Rehm Last of the Tribe, The* Monte  Reel
Diane Rehm Hero Found Bruce  Henderson
Diane Rehm Unwanted Sound of Everything We Want, The Garret  Keizer
Fresh Air Wisdom of Sam, The* Dan Gottleib
Fresh Air Manhood for Amateurs* Michael  Chabon
Fresh Air Before Roe v. Wade Linda Greenhouse
Fresh Air Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet Michael  Klare
Fresh Air Pearl Buck in China Hillary Spurling
NPR.org Reset Stephen Kinzler
NPR.org Everything Lovely, Effortless, Safe Jenny Holloway
NPR.org Best Of The Bestsellers: Wisdom Of The Crowds    
NPR.org How Did You Get This Number Sloane Crosley
Talk of the Nation Long for This World Jonathan  Weiner
Talk of the Nation Put on Your Crown Queen Latifah
Talk of the Nation Captive Jere Van Dyk
Weekend Edition Saturday Everything Lovely, Effortless, Safe Jenny Holloway
Weekend Edition Saturday Double Take Kevin Michael Connolly
Weekend Edition Sunday Chasing Goldman Sachs Suzanne McGee

July 2, 2010 Posted by | NPR Books Watch | , , , , , , | Leave a Comment

   

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