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An Indie Call To ActionMost of us indie authors talk a good game about how there are plenty of quality indie books available, and how there are plenty of terrible mainstream books. We also like to complain about the lack of variety and originality in mainstream book offerings as compared to indie books. Such musings generally lead to the conclusion that if people would just give indie books the same chance they give to mainstream books, if they would just put indie books to the ‘fifteen minute’ or ‘first ten pages’ test, the frequency with which they’d find books they would want to keep reading would be on par with that for mainstream books, and indie authors and readers everywhere would rejoice. It’s time we stop all the hand-wringing and blind hope, and make this happen. Yes, we have the power. Every indie author is also a reader, and every one of us has a circle of influence. So if you’re an indie author or small imprint owner, I issue the following challenge to you: 1) Find an indie book you LOVE, from an author to whom you have no connection. The lack of a prior connection or relationship is important, since it will eliminate any possibility of a conflict of interest. Finding the right book will require you to put a few likely candidates to the fifteen minute/ten pages test, but if you’re not willing to do it, why should any prospective reader out there do it for your book? 2) Write positive reviews of your chosen book on every site where the book can be bought (e.g., Amazon, Smashwords, Scribd, Lulu store, Authors Bookshop, etc.; most allow you to enter reviews whether you bought a given book on their site or not) and on any reader community sites to which you belong (e.g., Goodreads, Shelfari, LibraryThing). 3) If you’re on Twitter, tweet about the book and author, and include a link to a page where the book can be purchased. Use the hashtag #indieaction, to make it easy for everyone to find these indie action tweets (and some great indie books!). 4) Add the author’s site to your blogroll or links page on your own site. 5) If you were already planning to buy books as holiday gifts and your chosen book is available for sale, include it in your gift mix. 6) If you typically review books on your blog or website from time to time, review the book there as well. If you don’t typically post full reviews, just add a one- to two-liner about the book and author at the end of another blog post. Link back to this post if you feel you need to put your remarks into context. 7) Recommend the book personally to family, friends and coworkers. 8) Spread the word about this campaign to every indie author and indie supporter you know. Here’s a handy link you can share for this post – This is not a shady scheme, and this is not a mutual back-scratching society. This is the many thousands of indie authors flexing their collective influence as readers for the benefit of the indie author movement overall. Maybe you’ve never actively sought out indie books to read, and don’t know where to start. I’d suggest you begin by checking the top-selling, most-downloaded, and/or top-rated books at any of the sites listed below. Most of the bookseller sites listed allow authors to post a free excerpt (for your 15 minute/ten pages test); for other books, try looking up the author’s website to see if you can find an excerpt that way. Again, some time and effort will be involved here but you can gain a lot of insight into the typical book-buyer’s experience with indie books by going through this exercise. Web Fiction Guide *These sites offer both indie and mainstream books, so you'll need to check the publisher name to see if you're dealing with an indie/small imprint book, or a mainstream release I’m going to get the ball rolling by recommending an excellent indie book from an author who’s a complete stranger to me. The book is called The 6th Seal, and it was written by J.M. Emanuel. It’s an excellent, and truly scary, supernatural thriller set against an archetypal good vs. evil backdrop. If you enjoyed The Da Vinci Code but wished it had more depth, if you enjoy books by Straub and Stephen King, or any of the darker works of Neil Gaiman, if you like fictional explorations of Armageddon, mysteries, or stories built on biblical revelation, you really ought to give this book a try. You can read the first few pages of it using the Look Inside! Feature on Amazon.com, where it’s available in both print and Kindle editions. In the coming week I’ll put my keyboard where my mouth is by tweeting and posting reviews of this book everywhere I can. Now get out there and become part of the solution! This is a cross-posting from April L. Hamilton's Indie Author Blog.
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I'm In!
An excellent idea. Let's all do it.
I think this is wonderful
I think this is wonderful April, however, Indie review blogs should be doing this already. I know we here at the Pod People blog, the oldest and longest running Predators and Editors recommended SP review blog, cross post our reviews. We also feed our blog into Goodreads and Facebook, and we cross post our reviews to various groups we belong to at other sites. We also give our review books away each month, providing we have hardcopy. We post the contest to various reader sites. We haven't had a month go by since we started this that we haven't had dozens of readers interested in one of our reviewed books. Depending on the subject matter, we get more some months than others, but even one new reader can make a world of difference.
Just Added POD People To The List
Cheryl - I was wracking my brain to remember the name of your site when putting together the link list, but I just couldn't place it (dealing w/ a kid with the flu this week, so a little distracted). So glad you commented, so I could add it to the list!
- A
Your welcome April. I spent a
Your welcome April. I spent a lot of time over the last year linking our blog feed to various reader sites. Any exposure for the reviews is exposure for the author, and the contests really go over big with readers. Who doesn't love a free book, and more readers are apt to sample an Indie author if the content is free. Of course, we can only do this with ARCs.
Genius! So simple a
Genius!
So simple a strategy.
Thank you
Fantastic idea!
I just love this idea. It's the essence of a indie approach to publishing!
If possible I would suggest Feedbooks.com to add to a list. There is a tremendously growing catalog of original self-published books here: http://www.feedbooks.com/original
Something that coincides with your Call to Action:
Dovetailing with your idea is my proposed selfPUBreview.com project. A 5-minute podcast review of self-pub and super-small press books and an accompanying blog. For more details, please click on over to the site. The abstract should be completed later this week, and will outline the entire plan.
Thanks for the great post, April. And thanks all for PUBLETARIAT.com
Great idea, April. And half
Great idea, April. And half the fun might be the "shopping" for that special title. I'll buy into your plan, and post back here with my pick. Thanks for taking the initiative!