Texto para realizar un Abstract:
10 Ways to Promote
a First Book
By Aaron Shepard
Printed
in the SCBWI Bulletin, June–July 1994
Your first
book may be a masterpiece, but first books have a nasty way of getting ignored.
Bookstores may not bother to order it. If they do carry it, store personnel may
not know it’s on the shelf. Another problem is that, if your book appeals to
special audiences, your publisher may not know how to reach them.
My own first
picture book was Savitri: A Tale of Ancient India (Whitman, 1992), a retold 3,000-year-old story
of a princess who outwits the god of death to save her husband’s life. Here are
ten methods I used to boost recognition of the book.
1. Throw a
book party. I mailed out
200 invitations to friends, booksellers, librarians, reviewers, and everyone
else in my community I wanted to let know aboutSavitri. I didn’t expect them all to come, but
I at least made them aware of the book. The party cost me nothing, because I
held it at my home, asked friends to bring potluck desserts or beverages, and
sold books during the party.
2. Visit
local bookstores and libraries. I showed the
book to my local booksellers and librarians and encouraged them to order it.
From this came several invitations for storytelling/signings, plus a bookstore
offer to host receptions for future books.
3. Compile a
list of reviewers. Usually your
publisher will ask you for a list of periodicals that would be especially
interested in your book. If the book appeals to one or more specialized
audiences, this is particularly important. From standard library references
such as The Encyclopedia of
Associations and Ulrich’s International Periodicals
Directory, I made a list of
Hindu, yoga, and Indo-American publications, including newsletters of major
organizations. Having been a professional storyteller, I also listed
storytelling publications and children’s radio shows.
4. Compile a
list of retailers. Your
publisher may ask also for a list of bookstores for special notification.
Again, this is most important for a specialized book. From telephone
directories at my library, I made a list of bookstores specializing in Eastern
religion, along with a smattering of educational resource, feminist, New Age,
and museum bookstores. Small, specialized booksellers are often overlooked by
publishers’ sales representatives, but can be major sales outlets if your book
meets their needs.
Normally, stores
on your list are notified by the publisher, but I took care of this myself, so
I could add personal notes. In an age of computerized mailings, a scribbled
note gets attention!
5. Offer
school visits. My first
school visit came just a couple of months after publication, from someone on my
review copy list. After that, I sent notices of my availability to a number of
schools, along with information on me and my book. (Such mailings work best if
you follow up with phone calls.)
6. Produce
an instructional aid. This is
something for use in the classroom in conjunction with your book. Drawing on my
experience in reader’s theater, I produced a script adaptation ofSavitri. My hope was that teachers who used the
script would also want the picture book to share with students.
As it
happened, Whitman’s promotions director declined to use the script in the
publisher’s promotional efforts. But it is now posted on my Web site
(www.aaronshep.com) and is also included in my published collection of reader’s
theater adaptations, Stories on Stage.
7. Join
organizations. In order to
link up with people who buy and promote books, I joined the Association of
Booksellers for Children, the Northern California Children’s Booksellers
Association, the Association of Children’s Librarians (for the San Francisco
Bay area), the California Reading Association, and the Sacramento Area Reading
Association.
The newsletters
of these organizations are very informative, and the meetings are great places
to get known. For instance, I arranged to read Savitri at a monthly meeting of the Northern
California Children’s Booksellers Association—in this way reaching many of the
area’s children’s booksellers at one time.
8. Attend
events. In the half
year after Savitri’s publication, I attended—at my own
expense—the American Booksellers Association convention in Anaheim, the
American Library Association convention in San Francisco, the Celebration of
Children’s Literature at the University of California, Berkeley, and the Northern
California Booksellers Association convention in Oakland. At each of these
events, I found many opportunities to show the book to people who could help it
along. (I also made friends and had a lot of fun.)
9. Write an
article. In case you
haven’t noticed, this article too was meant as a way to promote the book—as
well as a way to share useful information.
10. Work on
your next book. There is no
end to the ways you can promote a book, or to the time you can spend doing it.
But the very best way is to work on your next one. Repeated publication builds
your reputation and sales potential better than anything else. So, promote your
work, but don’t forget that your readers are waiting for more!
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