Posts from — August 2010
Galleys are Here
I got a copy of the galleys for Life from Scratch in time for the book event tomorrow in New York. The book isn’t slated to be released until December 1, 2010 (just in time for Christmas, hint hint), but Mediabistro chose it for its book club, and I’m doing a reading in New York tomorrow night. The event is free, though you do need to RSVP. And if you are not in the city, I will hopefully post pictures/video and such on the book site.
I wrote the book, so I obviously knew everything that was contained inside, but I still started sobbing when I saw the dedication line. It was around the time that I wrote this post that I realized the right person to receive the dedication. I walked downstairs and asked Josh if he minded if I dedicated the book to someone other than him — the obvious receptacle of all of my thanks. But he understood completely, and agreed that there was clearly only one person who should receive the dedication.
My grandmum was alive when I got the first book deal and she even got to take a copy of my book around her nursing home and try to convince the other 90-year-old women that they needed a book about infertility (you know, just in case they were considering using donor eggs). She died before I sold this book last spring, a book that would have been much more up her alley (she was a spicy lady, and she would have clapped through the sex scenes). Every time I called her, she asked me if I had sold another book and she asked me when she was going to get her commission for being my cheerleader.
The book is dedicated to her.
Front of the galleys (the real book will look more polished. These are just for review purposes)
Back of the galleys
Keeping all of you in my pocket during the reading tomorrow night. I love it when the blackberry buzzes while I’m out. It makes me feel as if one of you is just rubbing my leg for a moment to say “hello.”
August 16, 2010 40 Comments
DIY MFA: Be Your Own Publicist (Part Ten)
Welcome back to your Do-it-Yourself MFA program.
Now it’s time to get out there and sell the book. Actually, this part should be happening while you’re still writing the book (if it’s non-fiction) or editing the book (if it’s fiction). In other words, it is never too early to create buzz.
Here’s an analogy: sometimes PR people contact me, wanting me to write about their product. The reality is that it’s almost never a product I already know–iPods sort of sell themselves–but instead, a small niche product. Here’s the reality–if they had purchased some ad space on a few blogs and I had subconsciously heard of the product several times before they approached me, I’d probably be more interested in getting a sample and writing about their product. But when they’re cold-calling me without any prior poke into my subconscious, it would have to be a pretty incredible product to get my attention. And frankly, if it was that incredible, they probably wouldn’t be approaching me to write about it because it would already be selling like hotcakes.
Books work with the same thought. If you cold-call the reader, for example, just setting it on the table in the bookstore and hope they pick it up, 99 times out of 100, they will walk on by without glancing at it unless it has a remarkable cover or title. But if you saw reviews and ads and met the writer in passing at a conference, chances are, when you bump into that book down the road, you’ll be more likely to give it a try. Therefore, the marketing wheels need to be turning early-on in order to catch the crowds right at the book’s release.
Some of these avenues will be closed off to you if you self-published your book, but regardless of the size of your press, the rest of these are places to try to get a bit of publicity for your book.
- Your Blog
- Your Book Site
- Other People’s Blogs
- Reviews on Book Sites
- Reviews in Print Mediums
- Readings at Bookstores
- Readings at Conferences
- Speaking Gigs
- Advertisements
- Email List
Let’s explore these ideas:
Your Blog
Hopefully, you’re still writing on your blog and keeping up your platform. You already have people who like your writing style so tell them about your book. Not by continuously clocking them over the head with it, but you should use your blog to shout to the world that you do, indeed, have a book.
Your Book Site
And for the love, set up a book site. A place to point people toward for information about your book’s release, upcoming appearances, and an excerpt. Make sure that’s it’s both eye-catching and easy to navigate.
Other People’s Blogs
Otherwise known as a virtual blog tour. You can ask others to write about your book or have them conduct an interview with you. You may do a guest post on their blog if they’re open to the idea, therefore reaching new readers who may not know about your blog or book. Sometimes, another person will organize the virtual book tour for you.
Reviews on Book Sites
The best place to have a review beyond a site that contains your niche audience for your book is on a book site. After all, people who read book sites usually read books. Try to make connections with book bloggers (and by make connections, I mean take the time to build a relationship. Please don’t write a general email to every book blogger or reviewer begging them to look at your book) and you can usually arrange to have the publicist send them a review copy.
Reviews in Print Mediums
These are getting harder and harder to get. If you have any connections, use them. Your publicist at the publishing house will also be using their connections. Instead of trying to get a review in People magazine or the New York Times, focus on your niche audience. If it’s a non-fiction book, is there a magazine that covers the topic? If it’s a fiction book, is there a smaller magazine that might do a review?
Readings at Bookstores
It’s not that publishers don’t send authors on book tours — there are people reading at bookstores every night of the week. But do the math — there are many more authors and books than there are bookstores and not everyone will get a book tour. In fact, most publishers no longer put their money toward book tours because they often aren’t worth the cost. The exception is with big name authors who can pull in the audience. Speak directly with local bookstores or the scheduler at your local big chain store.
Readings at Conferences
Are there conferences going on that are connected in some way to your book. A piece of general women’s fiction might work well with BlogHer. A book about a specific medical condition may fit with a conference being held on that medical condition. Search to see if there are conferences you should be attending and networking at as well as places where you could speak about your book.
Speaking Gigs
On that end, if you have a non-fiction book, you may be considered an expert in a topic and get a speaking event at a conference or meeting where you can also mention your book. If you have a piece of fiction, you may be able to get a speaking gig about publishing in general and mention your book there.
Advertisements
Purchase advertisements in smart places. It might be worth your money to purchase ad space on a popular blog that is read by people who might like your book. It is worth getting print advertising in a magazine that caters to people who would read your book, or buy advertising in a newsletter.
Email List
This is not a time to get shy. Email out one or two announcements about your book or readings to your friends. Ask them to forward it to their friends. You do not want to be annoying and send out dozens of emails, but this is also a time to get by with a little help from your friends.
Other suggestions for ways people have publicized their book?
Okay class, any questions on what was discussed here? Please leave them in the comment section below and I will answer them in the comment section below. Keep in mind that I have a lot of topics to cover so your question may be answered in a future installment (see below). So keep your questions about book publicity.
Heads Up and Looking Back: topics that will be covered in future installments or that were covered in past installments
1. Before You Even Get Started
2. Are You Ready to Be an Author?
3. How to Write a Non-Fiction Book Proposal
7. What Happens Next–Waiting for a Book Sale
8. Self-publishing and Self-representation
10. THIS POST
11. A Mishmash of Leftover Questions and Answers
August 15, 2010 2 Comments
What I Learned at BlogHer
I did two of the photography sessions at BlogHer last week, and even though I didn’t edit these images, I thought I’d throw them up because I freakin’ took them through glass with a point-and-shoot. Did you read that? Through glass. With a point-and-shoot.
Click on each thumbnail to see the larger, clearer image.
We spent the day at the aquarium after swinging by my cousin’s house. Our time was limited, so we decided to visit our favourites. We swung by the clown fish and the crocodiles. We spent a long time wandering by the sharks. We learned that you can’t determine a sea turtle’s sex until they’re around 20-years-old. That horseshoe crabs have blue blood.
During the dolphin show, Josh and I were whispering and the ChickieNob asked what we were talking about.
I said, “Daddy and I may be planning a surprise for you.” To which she shrieked, “you’re getting me a dolphin pet!”
Er…no…we are not getting her a dolphin pet. Not even when she sketched out how the dolphin would be ours, but would live at the pool, and in the winter, could move into our bathtub.
She earnestly inquired why the aquarium didn’t have a mermaid exhibit. I mean, on the spectrum of interesting sea life, she does have a point that more people would want to see mermaids than shield shrimp.
We went out to dinner and walked by the Harbour, and then made our way back home.
August 14, 2010 16 Comments
301st Friday Blog Roundup
Today is Friday the 13th. That only occurred to me because someone Tweeted about it earlier in the week. I also missed the fact that it was 8/9/10 on Monday. I am not the brightest woman when it comes to dates, though I have 2012 circled on my calendar not just because the world is ending that year, but because it’s also Queen Elizabeth’s diamond jubilee.
Though I’m usually fairly anxious around certain dates, allowing my imagination to run towards grotesquely disturbing scenarios, I’ve never had big feelings concerning Friday the 13th. Even if I live … like … 2 miles from Camp Crystal Lake and I totally know someone who knows someone who is the cousin of the counselor who decapitated Mrs. Voorhees.
It’s one of those dates that I feel like I should have big feelings about. If I’m not worried, then I must be a fool.
You know how girls pinched each other’s arms with a Cootie Shot to ward off boy germs? Mentioning that it’s Friday the 13th feels like a horror Cootie Shot.
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The Weekly What If: In honour of spooky things and Friday the 13th — would you knowingly eat a whole spider (as in, you would need to pick it up and pop it in your mouth, unadorned by other ingredients) in order to gain an extra year of life? If the number was limitless, how many spiders would you eat?
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Thank you to all of the people who participated this past week with the Cake Extravaganza for the Roundup. I Stumbled all of the posts (because I seriously have mad Stumbling skillz), and I hope that the party continues.
Just to repeat an idea from last week — and I’ll keep annoying you with it until it catches on:
I set them out there simply because I hope that you too will read these posts if you missed them the first time, or nod in agreement if they moved you too, and then jump into the comment section on that post and let the author know.
300 (okay, 200) posts later, and that last concept, sadly, hasn’t truly caught on. So let’s remedy that for the next 200 posts. If you click over to read (and for the love, you should click over to read because you’d want people to do the same if a post from your blog was here and hopefully, I do a decent job of remembering who has been featured and who hasn’t and keeping it fresh each week), please leave the author a comment. Answer their question, let them know you’re abiding with them, tell them how hard you laughed. The Roundup has always been about community discussion. And it has been way too quiet.
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And now, the blogs…
All Aboard the Pity Boat has a post about her dad that I not only couldn’t stop thinking about, but made me burst into tears when I tried to tell Josh about it. I cannot tell you about it without ruining the gorgeous ending.
FtM Doctor has a post about a complicated situation; where one person wants a child and the other does not, and they are situationally infertile, adding an additional emotional layer to the decision. It is a post about reaching out to those around him, begging for the right words that will bring the peace of heart he craves with this situation. And it’s never easy; there are no perfect words. But that doesn’t mean that you don’t stop by an offer support anyway.
DI Mom has a post about the two sides — love and hate — that rises out of infertility and their need for donor insemination. Oh my G-d, it’s a gorgeous post; especially her ability to see the beauty in the small realities of life.
Fertility Foibles has a post about the two year anniversary of learning about their son. She writes, “When parents go to help at the orphanage, I get photos, videos and updates about how he’s doing – just like I would if I was carrying him in my uterus and going to the doctor and getting ultrasounds.” I love the analogy, and your heart aches for all of them in terms of the wait.
Lastly, A Garden for Butterflies has a post about rewriting your story. The moment in the post that gutted me came in the middle: “The story I was working on took such a dramatic change that it’s like a new book had to start. The story where I was in love and loved and joyfully waiting for my son stopped abruptly. The story of being admitted to the hospital, inducing labor for a pregnancy that I wanted, holding my dead son, then the years of grief could not be combined with the story of happily expecting a baby.” Do you really need more than that to click over and read the post in full? Then I promise you that she will help you reexamine your own life by the time she writes the last line.
The roundup to the Roundup: It’s Friday the 13th! Answer the Weekly What If. Thank you for participating in the Cake Extravaganza. Comment, pretty please. And lots of great posts to read.
August 13, 2010 18 Comments
There is Nothing Funny About Eating a Turtle
The Wolvog, ChickieNob and I have been enjoying the Judy Blume oeuvre this summer, most recently Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing (Josh flipped out when he saw the cover of the book, mixing it up with Then Again, Maybe I Won’t. I guess in Josh’s world, drinking Juicy-O and masturbating are one and the same.)
Before we got to the last chapter this week, I mentioned that something really funny was going to happen because … I remembered the ending as humourous. Granted, I hadn’t read the book in about 30 years, so I had vague memories.
I wish I could have videotaped the expression on the Wolvog’s face as the scene unfolded. First, the wide grin anticipating something amusing. And then the knitted brow of a boy who doesn’t quite understand what just happened. And finally, his lower lip trembling as tears rolled down his face, his heart breaking for the turtle currently being churned up by the acid in Fudge’s stomach.
He buried his face in my upper arm and sobbed. For ten minutes. I apologized several times, admitting that the scene wasn’t quite as funny as I remembered, and he informed me that, “eating someone’s pet is never funny.” (which is true.)
But the worst part came after he had calmed himself down and he asked, “is Dribble going to be okay?” And I had to explain (since I thought it was why he was crying in the first place) that Dribble was dead after being pooped out by the little brother. And the tears began anew, despite being promised that it was only a story (“There are some very real boys, Mommy, who would name their turtle Dribble and there are real boys who would swallow a turtle.”)
He finally told me that he needed a break from my stories.
So tell me, what book are you currently remembering fondly from childhood that you will soon discover is not quite as benign as you think?
August 12, 2010 26 Comments





















