Writers Tricks of the Trade Issue 6, Volume 6 | Page 19

WHY GETTING GREAT REVIEWS IS YOUR JOB CAROLYN HOWARD-JOHNSON Excerpted from Carolyn’s new How To Get Great Book Reviews Frugally and Ethically: The ins and outs of using free reviews to build and sustain a writing career YOU NEED THIS ARTICLE! HERE’S WHY: In spite of a contract or even an advance your publisher may not be a true publisher. True publishing includes the marketing of a book. Think big names like HarperCollins and Knopf. They assign a marketing budget to your book and an actual marketing department complete with actual human-type marketers who are trained in the specialized field of not just marketing, but marketing books. Except for those who write only for pleasure, there is no reason to publish a book that doesn’t get read. And here’s more: Big publishers are relying on bloggers for their review process as print journals and newspaper book sections shrink or disappear and as they begin to understand that grassroots publicity—reviews or otherwise—can produce a very green crop. Bloggers, you say? Well, that’s a resource pool you can easily plumb yourself Some publishers—even traditional publishers—may not respect tradition, be uncooperative or goof. One of my writing critique partners was published with a fine press. When she learned they had not sent advance review copies of her literary novel to the most prestigious review journals before their strict sixteenweek deadline, she was naturally upset. They explained it was a snafu that could not be fixed. That was no comfort at all. It did help her to know that because thousands of galleys sent to the important review publications lie fallow in slush piles, the chances of having a book reviewed by a major journal—even one published traditionally let alone getting a glowing review—is remote. Because she had me to nag her, she moved on to alternative marketing and review-getting strategies found in Chapter Six of this book. Using those methods, she was still able to schedule several major bookstore appearances that tend to favor established names and rely on big-journal reviews in their decision-making process. Nevertheless, it’s not the kind of loss any author wants to face. These days most small publishers have no marketing department—or marketing plan. In fact, many admit that when it comes to marketing, you are on your own. No offense, publishers. I know many of you do a terrific job considering the profit margin in publishing these days. Let’s face it, you can use help, and you don’t need to deal with disappointed (irate?) authors. And, authors! We are ultimately responsible WRITERS’ TRICKS OF THE TRADE PAGE 11 CAROLYN HOWARDJOHNSON AUTHOR, BOOK PROMOTER Visit Carolyn’s website “Sharing With Writers” NAMED TO "WRITER'S DIGEST 101 BEST WEBSITES," THIS BLOG IS A WAY TO CONNECT WITH HER READERS AND FELLOW WRITERS, A WAY TO GIVE THE TEACHING GENES THAT POPULATE HER DNA FREE REIN. “ I FERVENTLY HOPE IT WILL ALSO BE A FORUM FOR THE EXCHANGE OF IDEAS. PLEASE FEEL FREE TO SEND ME YOUR OWN QUESTIONS ON ALL THINGS PUBLISHING AND DON'T FORGET YOUR EDITING QUESTIONS. FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN EDITING AND GRAMMAR, GO TO WWW.THEFRUGALEDIT OR.BLOGSPOT.COM.” NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2016