Writers Tricks of the Trade Issue 3 Volume 9 | Page 17

lishers—may not respect tradition, be un- cooperative or goof. One of my writing cri- tique 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 be- fore their strict sixteen-week 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 thou- sands of galleys sent to the important re- view publications lie fallow in slush piles, the chances of having a book reviewed by a major journal—even one published tradi- tionally let alone getting a glowing re- view—is remote. Because she had me to nag her, she moved on to alternative marketing and re- view-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 mar- gin 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 responsi- ble for our own careers. Sometimes when we wait to take responsibility, it is too late in the publishing game. F ALL 2019 Some publishers charge the author an additional or separate fee for marketing. Many who offer marketing packages do not offer a review-getting package. If they do, the review their authors get is a paid-for review, which is definitely not the route you want to go. More on that later in this chapter. Many publishers do not even have lists of people to contact who might help your marketing with endorsements or reviews. Further, many big publishers are relying on bloggers for their review process more and more as print journals and newspaper book sections shrink or disappear and as they begin to understand that grassroots public- ity—reviews or otherwise—can produce a very green crop. And bloggers? Well, that’s a resource pool you can easily plumb your- self. My first publisher supplied review cop- ies only upon written request from individ- ual reviewers. They did not honor requests generated by their authors’ initiatives. This meant that I could not count on them to supply books to reviewers I had successful- ly queried for a review. Unless the reviewer accepted e-copies (and many reviewers don’t!), I had to order copies directly from the publisher and then reship them to my reviewers. This method is slow, cumber- some, unnecessarily expensive, unprofes- sional, and discourages authors from trying to get reviews on their own. Publishers should offer review copies to a list of reviewers—even unestablished grassroots bloggers—who have been re- sponsive to their authors in the past. And they certainly should not charge an author for review copies. Publishers have a profit P AGE 13 W RITERS ’ T RICKS OF THE T RADE