Robot Scientist’s Daughter on the Shelf, Cherry Blossoms, and other things to be thankful for
- At February 22, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Yesterday I had to run some errands, and on the way I stopped by Open Books, my favorite all-poetry bookstore in Seattle. Though it is a few days before The Robot Scientist’s Daughter officially debuts, I was very happy to see my book on their shelf. It makes it feel official, like, I have a real book!
It looks like early spring in Seattle, which is a few degrees warmer than where I live now. As we drove through the streets, I saw magnolia, forsythia, crabapple, and these pink cherry blossoms:
One reason (besides the hunt for a dentist) I’ve been too busy to notice these things is because we’ve been getting our house ready to sell, which for us, means cleaning, packing, donating and consigning boxes of clothes, books, magazines, and other stuff, taking down shelves, repainting scratches or filling in holes from picture hooks. It also means looking at houses to buy, trying to decide what our price range really is and what neighborhoods we’d look in. The Seattle real estate market is a pricey one, and often, over the past fifteen years or so, has limited our options. We did find a small house we liked, and today we’re making an official offer! No guarantee it will be accepted, but it’s a step!
First Review of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter! And a Poetry on Buses Poem…
- At February 09, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
Thanks to Allyson Whipple for the first (early) review of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter! So excited! Here it is: http://allysonmwhipple.com/2015/02/09/review-the-robot-scientists-daughter-by-jeannine-hall-gailey/
An excerpt: “The Robot Scientist’s Daughter brings us a beautiful, magical place with a horror story lying beneath. It will break your heart, and it will make you think.”
I am always grateful when thoughtful, intelligent reviewers give my books a little of their time and attention. It’s hard work to write a good review!
I was also happy to discover (a day or so late) my poem up on the Seattle Poetry on Buses web site. This poem was inspired by Redmond:
http://poetryonbuses.org/poems/jeannine-gailey/
Spring is coming, I feel, even though it is still early February. Yesterday I heard a frog singing in the woods, and the birds have been way more active than usual. My daffodils are pushing up. I also saw a mockingbird, which are fairly uncommon here (though very common where I grew up in Tennessee, so I always recognize them right away.) I think we could use a little spring.
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!
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.
Lessons in Poetry and Economics, #102
- At January 20, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
4
I’ve been pretty sick the last few days (I almost always get sick after going to the dentist – do you guys experience the same thing?) so while I’ve been trying to use my downtime for something productive.
Kelly Davio posted on poetry and money, and on a related note, I was thinking about how much money it makes sense to spend to help launch your poetry book. The equation is probably something like:
(how much money you have in your savings) + (how much you expect to make) – (what you need for actual life things) = money to spend on your book
Which usually doesn’t leave us with very much to spend, especially small press poets. A trip to AWP? Without university sponsorship, an AWP trip costs you at least $1500, including travel and hotel. Is it worth it to promote your book there? If a university offers you $500 for a reading, but it costs more than $500 to get there, is it worth it? If you spend, say, $50 or $200 on an online ad and you get sixty click-throughs but no sales, was it worth it? Your publisher might split the cost of an ad in Poets & Writers with you. Ah, the math of poetry!
One of the things I did was sign up for a Goodreads Giveaway, starting February 1, for The Robot Scientist’s Daughter.
Goodreads Book Giveaway
The Robot Scientist’s Daughter
by Jeannine Hall Gailey
Giveaway ends March 01, 2015.
See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.
I love Goodreads and like supporting it, and it’s a relatively inexpensive way to get your book into someone unexpected’s hands. You never know! Feel free to sign up!
I also sent several precious author copies to my talented cover artist in Japan, one to a writer who was nice enough to read and comment on the manuscript for me, and the folks that gave me blurbs, as well as one or two reviewers who had requested them. Since most publishers only put 10 author copies in the contract, that means I’m pretty much out already. Which means every paper copy I send out now costs me money. I have friends who have sent out hundreds of their own copies to friends, reviewers, libraries. The problem is, those friends have often been disappointed by the return-on-investment (or ROI) of those giveaways.
The most expensive thing I’ve ever done to sell books was, hands-down, traveling for readings. How do you know which readings to arrange, to accept invitations to? I also have friends who spent tens of thousands of dollars of their own money to support them as they traveled around the country to support their books. They did sell books, but enough to support the travel? The lucky ones broke even.
This is just Lesson #102, I’ll put up some more entries in this series, like which things have made the most sense to spend money on, and which have not. Also, you can’t count on magic, but it does sometimes happen! I am hoping and praying for some magic to happen this time around.
What about you? Do you have any economic advice for book launches or for poets in general? Any recommendations for creating magic? Leave in the comments!
Countdown to Book Launch: Three months to go!
- At January 13, 2015
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
2
So, here in January, it’s three months before the official launch of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, and I keep thinking of things I should be doing/need to be doing/didn’t get to do last week because of the dental emergency stuff. This is my fourth book, so you’d think I’d have this all down, but as you know, things change from year to year and day to day. So the way you have to prepare for a book launch each time is different. E-galleys, for instance, are new this time around—even Publisher’s Weekly takes them now. Another new thing I’m trying is that I’ve put my PR release as a PDF on my book page here.
I’m taking you with me on this journey of things to do at three months, in case some of this might be of interest to those of you launching books in the near future:
- First, I checked in with my publisher to make sure we weren’t duplicating places we were sending review copies, e-galleys, and PR releases. Since Mayapple Press is a smaller press, I don’t have unlimited review copies, and we want to make sure the places we’re sending are good target markets for this particular book. I’m trying harder with this book to make more of a local impact with local media, too.
- Second, I haven’t booked quite enough readings yet, so I still need to do that. Inquiries should go out soon to bookstores and libraries and reading series I’d like to connect with. I still haven’t been able to tell how much travel I’ll be up to, but I want to at least hit Port Townsend, Washington and Portland, Oregon on the tour. I already have planned readings on Bainbridge Island and in Seattle. Other possible tour cities include Cincinnati (where most of my family lives), Knoxville (where the book is set,) and New York City (dream!)
- Third, I sent out some queries to “dream” media folks that might be interested in the book. A lot of times they don’t like you to send attachments, such as e-galleys, but you can try writing them a nice note and see if they would like a review copy or a PR kit.
- Fourth: I’ve already ordered book postcards for the announcement and I can start addressing and writing those any time now, though they probably won’t go out any earlier than two weeks before the book’s release. I have a Facebook page for the book and I need to start updating it as advance reviews pop up, for instance.
There’s lots more I could be doing. Of course, this is all on top of literally visiting three different dentists and endodontists last week, and more this week. Super fun! But the problem is, you have to do the work, even if other things get in the way. I just remember doing last year’s Seattle AWP barely recovered from pneumonia and with a scarf wrapped around my broken elbow. There’s hardly ever a big literary event I’ve done that I haven’t had something else health-wise going on alongside it, come to think of it. I was diagnosed with my neural lesions just as I started working as Redmond’s Poet Laureate. Hilarious joke, universe.
We small press authors can all wish for the “win:” A Publisher’s Weekly starred review, a mention in Oprah Magazine, a book club pick, but the odds are not in our favor. Every time a small press book, especially a poetry book, gets some big media attention, I applaud, because they are up against bigger presses with more money and dedicated PR people. I care a lot about this book, and I want to do what I can to ensure it gets into the hands of people that might care about it too. A small press author can choose how much or how little work they do for each book launch; I wanted to give you a picture of what I’m trying to do this time around to give The Robot Scientist’s Daughter the best chance possible.
If you have good suggestions, I’d love to see the in the comments! I’m sure I’m missing some things. I’ve had like less than three nights with more than four hours of sleep in the last week because of dental pain (I know some of you guys know what I’m talking about), and that means my brain is not at its highest functionality. And of course, if you’re a reviewer or a blogger interested in an e-galley advance copy of The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, let me know.
Dermatographia, Book Launch Planning, and what to do at six months out
- At November 18, 2014
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
0
First of all, thank you to Ariana Page Russell for interviewing me over at her blog on dermatographia and poetry! She found a poem I wrote on the subject and decided to write, and it was really fun talking to her!
So, I’ve had my hands full trying to do all the things you’re supposed to do six months before launching your book, like send out e-galleys, contact bookstores and other locales for your book launch reading (I was planning on having mine at Open Books in Seattle, but they’ve announced they are no longer doing readings after December 2014, sadly.) I’m also trying to send out my little PR kit to magazines, book blogs, and other places – it seems early, but really it’s not too early, which is incredible, right?
The Robot Scientist’s Daughter book launch countdown! Six month mark. List of things to do: Find a place to do the book launch, send out e-galleys to likely reviewers, check proof, order book postcards…send out queries to people who might be interested in teaching, reviewing, or otherwise taking an interest in the book. I’ll do this again on the blog at three months, just so you can follow the trail of a poet trying to launch her fourth book of poetry! I don’t want to bore you with all the details, but just in case it’s useful to someone, I thought I’d document it…
Speaking of which, if there are any talented filmmakers or video experts out there who would be willing to help a poet out with a book trailer for credit, please let me know!

The Robot Scientist’s Daughter cover
The other thing I want to catch up on over the holidays is the best gift a writer could give a friend – some book reviews on Amazon and Goodreads! I’ve gotten behind on my reviews and have a stack of friends’ books that have come out this year. It’s a nice thing to do when you get a little downtime. Also, it’s been so cold, I really want to decorate the house early this year! I’ve already bought two little poinsettias AND a tiny rosemary Christmas tree…We actually had some sun for a few days, but it was cold enough for a hat, gloves, coat, and boots!
Sneak Peek at The Robot Scientist’s Daughter front and back cover – with blurbs!
- At September 27, 2014
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
11
I spent a week recovering with the serum sickness brought on by the Xolair, but don’t worry, I haven’t been just lazing around! I’ve been working on the final copyedits of “The Robot Scientist’s Daughter” with Mayapple Editor Judith Kerman and we’ve been finalizing the cover, front and back. You can read the blurbs now, kindly given by Ilya Kaminsky, Denise Duhamel, Stephen Burt, and Aimee Nezhukumatathil. Would you like to take a peek? We’ll have the pre-order page up soon, but for now…
Update: Mayapple Press now has a pre-order page for The Robot Scientist’s Daughter, and special pricing for those who order early!