[identity profile] peggy-2.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] queensthief

Talk of book tours raised a bunch of questions in my mind, and I was hoping the comm could help answer them.

1)  Book Tours.  Who has a say in where  authors go on a Tour?  Is there a way for fans to influence this?

2)  Book Purchases.  Of course buying books from a "brick and mortar" store supports the specific bookstore, but is there an advantage to the author in doing so?  Does purchasing from a specific store encourage the store to bring the author in?  Along the same lines, I buy a lot of books - my available time for reading is to sporadic, and books go out of print and off the shelves too quickly, to use libraries effectively - and for a favorite author, I would like to do what I can to maximize my purchasing powers.  Are there tips to enhance purchasing power?

3)  Helping Out.  What are ways the adoring fan base can help out a favorite author (aside from initiating and maintaining a fabulous live journal comm)?

Date: 8/7/06 07:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rowana.livejournal.com
I'm afraid I can't think of much. I'm sure that publishers are eager to respond to fans' views, but I can't think of any way we can directly influence them. That is, assuming it's publishers who decide on the tours. Authors' agents maybe?

On Book Purchases and Other Methods of Helping Out, I'm afraid I've got nothing. Other than distributing free copies of the books on your own money. :D Or some kind of publicity stunt - have you guys heard of Fathers for Justice? ;D

Date: 8/8/06 10:23 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] allthingevil123.livejournal.com
i remember them, the ones who climbed up buckingham palace or the house of parliament or something with a huge banner dressed as superheros...

though i do love the thief books i'm not quite that dedicated :)

Date: 8/8/06 11:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rowana.livejournal.com
Yes, they're the ones. :D You have a point, some people might think it a bit shallow to put on a stunt like that for a series of books instead of father's rights.

Date: 8/9/06 10:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] allthingevil123.livejournal.com
true true....and we'd look like copycats anyway

Date: 8/8/06 02:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dh684.livejournal.com
If you want to support a favorite author, you can write a review at Amazon. I sometimes look at the reviews at Amazon to get a sense of reader reactions to books before purchasing. Additionally, I found the MWT books based on a recommendation on another readers' list. As I belong to a number of reader/author lists, it seems only fair to pass on recommendations for good books.

Date: 8/8/06 10:20 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mandasarah.livejournal.com
The publishing company decides to send authors on tours. According to Tamora Pierce (I belong to the message board she started) you can write the author or the publishing company to request that the author be sent to your city or on a tour in general.

Afraid I can't help with the other questions.

Date: 8/8/06 11:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rowana.livejournal.com
I used to read her, but it was impossible to get her books in England for a while. Do you have that problem too?

Date: 8/9/06 10:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] allthingevil123.livejournal.com
not really, but ordered i load of them off amazon so i didn't have to hunt for them, and they were cheaper

Date: 8/10/06 11:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mandasarah.livejournal.com
A MAJOR Tamora Pierce fan. Dude, seriously. She's been my favorite author since I was about thirteen. Plus, she's adorable. You should totally join her message board (www.sheroescentral.com) if you already haven't. My screen name on Sheroes is Amanda. Creative, I know.

Date: 8/10/06 11:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] allthingevil123.livejournal.com
i didn't know she had a message board...i will go and look

yeah, i'm a major fan as well, i have all the books (except one cos my friends lost it when i lent it to her) and have been reading them since i was about 12, i then gave them to most of my friends as well...

Date: 8/9/06 01:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nutmeg3.livejournal.com
I'm not a PR person, but I've played one on TV, so none of this is gospel, but here are a few thoughts.

Yes, the house (or a freelance PR firm in tandem with the house) sets up the tour, and unfortunately, signings aren't the main factor in deciding where to send an author, since there are bookstores everywhere and signings are relatively easy to book. *groan* The big focus is on getting media coverage, so a market has to be big enough to offer decent media options but not so big that no one there will care that Adelaide Author is in town. NYC and LA are terrible markets for getting media coverage for anyone who isn't huge (Dan Brown, anyone?) or who doesn't have some talkworthy hook, like the kid who wrote Eragon, who was a big deal simply by dint of being a kid who made his own weapons and yadda yadda.

To save costs and get the widest possible coverage for the best price, a lot of tours are done via satellite media now. The author sits in a studio and does on-camera interviews (live and/or taped) for stations all over the country. That pretty much means no signings at all, or maybe one or two in the general area of the studio.

That said, signings sometimes get set up around events in the author's life (visiting cousins in Kamloops, attending a writers' conference in Your Town, USA) or just because there's A Reason, a trade show where the author can connect with a large number of fans/potential readers, a Ren Faire where a historical novelist would be a big draw, a quilt show for a writer who features quilting in her books, or just a huge outpouring of fan support with a local focus. Those signings, especially the fan-oriented ones, are often initiated by the author, who gets the house to throw in its support.

It also doesn't hurt to let your local bookstore know you'd sure love to see Adelaide come and autograph. Stores can sometimes pull strings to get an author in, and if you know a local specialty bookstore, they're a great place to push to arrange an autgraphing, because publishers know they'll get a lot of bang for their buck sending an author to a store that knows her genre inside out and can draw the right kind of crowd.

As for how and when to buy, velocity gets a book on the bestseller lists. If a book is coming out on September 10th, buy it that first week. Where to buy is trickier, because the different lists canvas different stores for their info. I'm not entirely sure how the on-line stores figure into the lists, but amazon, in particular, makes it easy to see a book's ranking, and trust me, publishers check that out. Ditto for pre-orders, which can move a book way up in the rankings before it's ever been printed. And don't buy used books to save a few bucks (unless the book is out of print and you have no choice), even though used books show up on-line at the same time as new. Not only doesn't the author get a royalty on that sale (ie: you'd be depriving MWT of money she could use to pay a babysitter so she'd have time to write), those sales won't count toward getting the book on the lists.

Other ways to help out? Write to the author c/o the publisher (snail-mail or e-). People do notice. Talk her up to your local bookseller. They pay attention and will rec the book to others or tell the company's sales reps, who'll report back that buzz is building.

I can't think of anything else off the top of my head, but if I do? You'll be the first to know.

Princess Nutmeg *g*

Date: 8/9/06 01:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nutmeg3.livejournal.com
LOL! I was really just goofing on that "I'm not a doctor but I play one on TV" commercial. But I've done PR and gone on TV, so...it's sort of not a lie.

Date: 8/9/06 02:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] checkers65477.livejournal.com
Very, very interesting, O Princess.

I would say that good reviews in library journals can help an author a great deal, too. I depend on journals and selection aids to help me decide what to buy for the library. In order to make the best use of the funds I have, I concentrate on purchasing the most highly recommended books I can find.

My public library bought 13 copies of KoA (11 of which are checked out right now). Even before the copies were in, lots of people put the book on reserve. Supply and demand. When all the copies of a title are checked out and kids are chomping at the bit to get the book, I order more copies.

Date: 8/10/06 03:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nutmeg3.livejournal.com
Very true. Library Journal and Publishers Weekly are both influential that way, but not, unfortunately, anything a reader can affect. Of course, if a publisher knows there's already a growing fan base for someone, they might buy an ad, there or elsewhere.
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