Writers Tricks of the Trade Volume 5, Issue 6 | Page 5
PRESS “CONTROL” THEN CLICK “BUY”
TO PURCHASE ANY BOOK
SOLICITING REVIEWS
FRED RAYWORTH
Okay. The book is in the can. The editing is done. The galley should be on the way.
What’s missing?
PRE-PUBLICITY.
What’s pre-publicity? You need to generate buzz about your upcoming
book. Then, when it hits, so shoppers know it’s out there and it is worthy of a read,
they need to see reviews pouring in. Not just reviews of family and friends, but
serious and varied reviews from respected publications in your genre.
FRED RAYWORTH
Yup. You need to get into the trenches and start a whole ‘nuther type of
querying you’ve probably never heard of. Querying for reviews.
A MAN OF MANY
TALENTS
Say what?
VISIT FRED’S
OWN BLOG
You heard me right.
Querying for reviews
HTTP://FREDRAYWORTH.COM
WHY REVIEWS?
When we think of reviews, the first thing that usually pops into our head is
the star rating on Amazon. Right? Well, there are lots of other literary publications
out there that do reviews. Depending on what world you’re in, what genre you
write, and what magazines you subscribe to, there are publications that host
reviews of what their like-minded readers want to read.
CONTRATULATIONS,
FRED ON YOUR NEW
BOOK!
Your job is to break into this world and get your book one of those reviews.
You want those potential readers to see a review by one of your peers.
SHOULD YOU BE AFRAID?
There’s always the potential for people within your niche to be jaded,
jealous, or just plain bored with everything. It’s especially true with the short
attention span generations that have been developing over the past few decades.
However they can also be the litmus test of what readers want. If your story rocks,
a great review could be the boost you need to rock sales. If you get a terrible
review, it could just as easily kill your sales. It could also boost your sales from
people who either like what the reviewer doesn’t like, want to read it just to see if
the reviewer was right, or read it because they hate the reviewer.
BUY
Should you be afraid? Never. Not everyone is going to like your story, so
get over it. Besides, if you don’t get any reviews, nobody is going to know you’ve
written a book on word-of-mouth alone. What if they do find your book by
chance? How are you going to stop them from reviewing it on their own? Gotcha.
Gotcha!
WRITERS’ TRICKS OF THE TRADE
PAGE 3
NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2015