One Month Before Book Launch
- At February 05, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
So, it’s been a whirlwind time – launching a revamped web site (new code, new host, new graphics), looking at houses (we’re thinking of selling our two-story townhouse and buying a one story house), meeting with dentists (been rejected by most – no one wants to work on a girl with a novocaine allergy apparently), finishing projects, starting new projects (eep!) and counting down til the book launch on March 1! How is it February already??
At one month out, this is what I’m doing for the book:
–starting to send out book postcards to people on my mailing list (mostly people who’ve bought my books before, friends, and family.)
–still contacting people about readings (readings probably will fill my calender for a whole six months to a year after a book comes out)
–Contacting book sellers, trying to find people interested in teaching my book (any of you ecopoetics professors want a copy, just let me know!) and contacting book bloggers. (This year, I did not use Netgalley, a useful but expensive service that kind of helps you promote your book to book bloggers, librarians, book sellers, and reviewers. I did have it last year, and I think it helped get reviews…)
–I put an announcement about my book in the Horror Writers Association newsletter, and bought a small ad with them as well. (I love speculative writers!)
–Started taking pre-orders for the book.
–Set up the Goodreads giveaway.
So that’s what I’m doing at one month to book launch! If you have any other suggestions for what I should be doing, leave them in the comments!
Oh, and check this out if you’re interested in learning how to “read” submittable statuses: Kelly Davio’s Five Tips on Reading Submittable from an Editor’s Point of View on the Gailey and Davio Writers’ Services site…It’s a really helpful post!
Goodreads Giveaway of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter Starts Today (and new web site preview)
- At February 01, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
It’s February 1 – yes, an epic Seattle Superbowl is happening today, which is exciting (Go Hawks! on the menu? Deconstructed seven-layer dip, gluten-free baked chicken fingers with cranberry barbeque sauce, cheese quesadillas with homemade corn tortillas, and blue potato salad for the Hawks colors), but it’s also the first day of this Goodreads Giveaway of my newest book, The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, out March 1. Go sign up to win!
Goodreads Book Giveaway
The Robot Scientist’s Daughter
by Jeannine Hall Gailey
Giveaway ends March 01, 2015.
See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.
And, once again, my husband Glenn, my little brother Mike, and I have endeavored to go in and mess around with the web site. We’ve changed hosts, updated all the WordPress widgets (and, well, after two years, they were almost all broken) and updated with new graphics (thanks to my sister-in-law Jen Gailey and my book’s cover artist Masaaki Sasamoto.) Here’s a screen shot of the new look. Let me know what you think!
Fascinating Discussion of Poetry Book Sales and My Own Tips for Selling Poetry Books
- At January 30, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
5
Just read this very practical and interesting discussion of the realities of poetry publishing up at Real Pants. The comment thread is just as interesting, so read that too.
So, the question is, what can the average poet with a book coming out do to make sure they sell a decent number of copies? People on the comments thread (including me) had different ideas of what made for a successful poetry book. I’m interested in helping other poets succeed in hitting closer to the 800-book mark than the 30-book mark.
The first thing is, don’t despair. I’m here to say it’s possible to sell 1,000 copies of your poetry book (or even 10,000 – it happens – see my post here about how that is possible.)
But for “regular” poets who aren’t superstars with small indie presses without dedicated PR folks or a big budget, how can you make it work, or at least not put your publisher in too much debt? There’s no one magic recipe, but…
- Getting the word out about your book is tough if you’re a poet with a small press, but not impossible. With my first book, Garrison Keillor read a couple of poems on Writer’s Almanac (Click here to hear one of them) and it made a huge difference – and all that took was an effort by my publisher (sending a copy to NPR’s The Writer’s Almanac) and a little luck. If you get a starred review on Publisher’s Weekly, or a review on Shelf Awareness, or you get picked up by The Rumpus Book Club, or you get your book mentioned in Oprah or Elle or some major magazine – those things can make a big difference to your book. You can’t make any of those things happen, but they could happen. Make sure you and your publisher work together to target a few of the major media outlets, even if they are long shots.
- The weirdest thing today is that, even with all the social media (and I blog, use Facebook, and Twitter) my friends (and even some close family members) will still say: “Oh, you have a book coming out?” I feel like I’ve been saying it over and over, but people may or may not be paying attention. You don’t want to over-saturate your audience of friends and family with notices, but on the other hand, a postcard and an e-mail announcement and something on Facebook and twitter is NOT overkill. Because chances are, most people will overlook three of those four notices. And those are the people that already like you.
- Some combination of the following: set up readings (especially if you’re a good performer – and it’s not everyone’s bag), try to get your book taught if you can (and sometimes that depends heavily on subject matter and who you are), get people to talk about your book – reviews, interviews, blog book tours, local radio, word-of-mouth, whatever. It helps if you’re a superstar but most of us aren’t superstars; having a great personality helps, too (graciousness and kindness go a long way…) Try to show up at AWP (if you can afford it – for those unaffiliated with a university the trip usually runs about $1500.)
I think the most important thing is not to 1. expect the book to sell itself or 2. expect the publisher to do all the work. If you go into it with realistic expectations, knowing you will need to put a certain amount of time and effort, I don’t think you’ll go from that wild “I’m going to publish a book” ecstasy to the depths of “I’ve published a book, but no one cared” depression.
Come out to the TEXTure show at Method Gallery Talk, Reading, and Reception Tomorrow
- At January 28, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
1
The TEXTure show reading, talk and reception
Tomorrow night, January 29, starting at 6 PM at the Seattle Central Library in the Microsoft Auditorium, three poets and four artists get together to read poetry, talk about artist collaborations, and generally celebrate a show that brings together art and poetry. Sherman Alexie with Lia Hall and Cedar Mannan of Noble Neon, Daemond Arrindell with Maura Donegan, Carol Milne with Jeannine Hall Gailey. Talk hosted by curator Mary Coss.
And afterward, a reception at Method Gallery where you can check out the art and poetry exhibit in person! That will be immediately following the talk/reading.
I’ll be reading from my upcoming book, The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, and I’m pretty sure you’ll enjoy hearing from Sherman Alexie and Daemond Arrindell. Should be fun!
Sample Poem from The Robot Scientist’s Daughter and the pre-order page is up for signed copies!
- At January 23, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
4
A sneak peek poem from my upcoming book, The Robot Scientist’s Daughter. This one has references to tropes of scientist’s daughters in sci-fi films, including Bladerunner and Killer Shrews. Hope you enjoy!
The Robot Scientist’s Daughter (in Films)
Is always beautiful in films, in a neat blonde updo
and fifties-style dress. She helps the hero escape,
she leads him off the island or planet, she gives him the code
to shut down all the robots before they take over the world.
The robot scientist’s daughter carefully holds on to secrets
about her father at the dinner table. She’s demure but knows
her way around a gun rack or a test tube. She sneaks out
to rescue prisoners after her father has a drink. The robot
scientist’s daughter must be there to humanize
the robot scientist; he is both a protagonist we identify with
and a villain we know must fall. If he had no daughter,
the camera would have no way to enter his laboratory
with a sympathetic eye. Sometimes the robot scientist’s daughter
pretends to be a robot herself, handing out food efficiently
without smudging her makeup. Sometimes she turns out to be a robot
all along implanted with heartwarming but false memories.
Sometimes she has a telepathic link to genetically-engineered dinosaurs. When she was a child, she had only robots to play
games with, mostly hide-and-seek and chess. This helped
and hurt her socialization. The robot scientist might be named Morbius, while his daughter is named Susan. She will be
the downfall, the island crumbling, scientist buried beneath rubble, killer shrews loosed on the world.
And now, for the first time ever, you can pre-order your signed copy of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter! If you do, you may get it before the release date AND get the added bonus of special swag!
Update at 10:30 AM Pacific 1/24: While we figure out why forms won’t work on my web site, I’ve gone back to using PayPal buttons instead of the fancy order form.
You can pre-order a signed copy from me via PayPal here:
If you would rather mail me a check, please e-mail me at jeannine.gailey at live.com and let me know your shipping address.