Not exact matches
That's to be expected, considering that the source is a Clive Cussler
novel aimed squarely at the pulp -
fiction market, but if the origins were so uninspiring, it probably shouldn't have been made in the first place.
If you need to learn how to promote your
novel but prefer to study at your own pace, then the affordable «Book
Marketing 101 for
Fiction: How to Build Book Buzz Basic E-course» is for you.
She also represents a range of women's
fiction, from literary to upmarket commercial, to romance, as well as crime
fiction (mysteries, thrillers), and the occasional literary or commercial
novel not aimed at a female
market.
Whether you're closing in on a final draft or about to launch your
novel, you will need clarity about what makes your
novel stand out from other
fiction on the
market.
She now devotes one day a week to writing
fiction and despite having little time to
market her
novels, the high margins on e-books mean she gets a nice income to supplement her other earnings, all from doing something she loves.
As a new author of
fiction, I needed a place that could provide me with essential tools as well as inspiration for taking on the task of
marketing my
novel, In The Shadow of The Water Tower.
Check out Chris's first military science
fiction novel, Destroyer, on Amazon, or pick up his latest non-
fiction title, Launch to
Market.
Previous works of
fiction, including novellas, and regardless of
market, disqualify the author from the Debut
Novel category.
As a nonfiction and historical
fiction publicist, Stephanie is a publishing specialist who knows the best ways to promote a book and how to
market a first historical
novel.
While being
marketed by the publisher as a work of
fiction, the «
novel» is based on a true story.
GoodEReader.com posted an article in April 2011 that explained the frustration that graphic novelists and their audiences feel with digital self - publishing, specifically a lack of e-titles compared to the
fiction market and difficulty in trying to self - publish comics and graphic
novels to tablets and e-readers.
Similarly, like Sarah Hutchison commented to this article, I had some great feedback from several agents about my
novel but the general consensus was, my
novel «The First Sense» was not commercial enough for them to
market in today's competitive publishing industry (its genre is future
fiction / sci - fi).
Ray currently has four
novels on the
market: vampire satire; coming - of - age mystery, speculative
fiction, and science
fiction.
Given the limitations of the modern reading public and publishing companies towards Catholic authors, do you think modern Catholic
novels that headline under «Catholic
fiction» will ever be able to reach that block - buster level of popularity one sometimes sees in the Christian
fiction market?
Still, in the throes of working the room to
market and promote my second
novel, my imagination is conjuring a third
novel in the genre of Contemporary Women's
Fiction.
And I am no author just a common reader of quality
fiction, who happily reads both conventionally published and self published
novels from Wolf Hall to By Loyalty Divided, a cross mix of highbrow his lit fict and Indie mass
market hist romance.
- Publishers Weekly «This is a positive
novel about hope and strength that should find a
market with those who appreciate contemporary women's
fiction and readers who either are coping with brain disorders or have family members with these conditions.»
The mass
market format is the standard size for
fiction novels, and is cost effective for anything over 1000 books.
Chris is the best selling author of 5,000 Words Per Hour, Write to
Market, and numerous science
fiction, fantasy, and thriller
novels.
Filed Under: Agents,
Marketing tips, Query letters, Suzanne Hartmann, Writing Resources Tagged With: agent, castle gate press, christian
fiction, editor,
fiction, Get Published,
novel, publisher, Query Letter, suzanne hartmann
Book
Marketing 101 for
Fiction: How to Build Book Buzz Basic E-course helps you learn how to promote your
novel at your own pace.
Filed Under: Agents,
Marketing tips, Proposals, Suzanne Hartmann, Synopsis, Writing Resources Tagged With: castle gate press, christian, christian
fiction,
fiction,
novel synopsis, proposal, suzanne hartmann, synopsis, writing resource, writing tip
Filed Under: Agents,
Marketing tips, Proposals, Suzanne Hartmann Tagged With: fiction, marketing, novel, one - sheet, proposal, suzanne hartman
Marketing tips, Proposals, Suzanne Hartmann Tagged With:
fiction,
marketing, novel, one - sheet, proposal, suzanne hartman
marketing,
novel, one - sheet, proposal, suzanne hartmann, writer
Tags: book awards, book giveaways, book publicity, historical
fiction, Kindle giveaway, literary publicist, online book
marketing, Texas book publicist, Western authors, Western
novels, Western Writers of America
A short story can be distributed as easily and at roughly the same cost as a
novel, so suddenly there was a
market for short
fiction again.
All Acting Vs. Writing Advertising Apps For Writers Art Author Collectives Banning Books Blogging Blog Tours Book Cover Design Book
Marketing Booksellers Branding Character Development Character - Driven
Fiction Christian Erotica Clichés In Writing Co-Authoring Construction Coping With Anxiety Coping With Rejection Letters Copyright Copyright Infringement Copywriting Creating A Business Plan Dealing With Fear Defining Success Depression Developing Setting Drug & / or Alcohol Abuse Editing Vs. Writing Editors Education Entrepreneurial Skills Ethical Issues In
Fiction Evoking Emotion Expat Writers Fame Fantasy Finding Inspiration Finding Your Voice Follow Your Dreams For Aspiring Writers For Indie Authors Gender Issues Genre Getting Published Ghostwriting Grief Handling Critique Historical
Fiction Horror Stories In Publishing Interdisciplinary Art Karma Lit Killing Off Characters Learning From Mistakes LGBT LGBT Literature Literary Adaptations Literary Journals Lyrics Mailing Lists
Marketing Memoir Metaphysical Lit Multicultural
Fiction Music Music Vs. Writing Nonfiction Nonfiction To
Fiction Nurturing Creativity Packaging Advice Perfectionism Photography Playwriting Plotting Poetry Political Art Pornography Protagonist Development Public Speaking Publishing Religion Research Romance
Novels Self - doubt Selfpublishing Setting Goals Social Effects Of
Fiction Social Media Social Networking Spiritual Lit Staying Motivated Stereotypes Success Taking Care Of Yourself Taking Risks Target Audience Thrillers Time Management Time Travel Traditional Publishing Trilogy Trust Your Instincts Truth In
Fiction Twitter For Writers Typesetting Websites Work / Life Balance Writer Quirks Writer's Block Writers» Conference Writer's Life Writing Advice Writing A Series Writing As Therapy Writing Book Reviews Writing Craft Writing Dialects Writing Erotica Writing For A Living Writing For Children Writing (General) Writing Groups Writing In A Foreign Language Writing Playlists Writing Sequels Writing Vs. Medicine Writing Workshops Writing Yourself Into Your Characters Youth Arts Youth Education
She seeks Christian romance
fiction (fresh stories within the romance
novel framework); commercial or general
fiction that 1) has a place in the Christian Booksellers Association, and 2) has romantic elements; general
market (secular)
fiction that involves a clean story and disrespectful elements toward faith, and nonfiction from writers with an excellent platform.
Tags: BBAW, book giveaways, coming of age
novel, historical
fiction, literary publicist, online book
marketing, Texas book publicist
Filed Under: Ebook Promotion Tags: content, book review - target readership, google,
marketing book, book review and intended audience, book tarjet audience,
fiction novel, email, books, crime thriller
We will publish your
fiction,
novel or short story in E-book and paperback format completely free of charge, with no fees at any point — we earn our interest by
marketing your book worldwide.
Today we conclude our two - part feature on
marketing your self - published historical
fiction novel.
Pulp
fiction was where authors started out because it paid less than «traditional»
markets (they were mostly short stories), but with indie
novels, I think (some) authors are making more money than comparable traditional publishing contracts (and I see some trad - pub authors supplementing their income with self - pub, which is also similar to some of the pulp
fiction writers of the past).
The Gertrude Threshold falls mostly within the genre of science
fiction, although both when writing and
marketing it, I never really considered it to be primarily a science -
fiction novel.
According to the Romance Writers of America ®, the romance
fiction industry is worth $ 1.08 billion dollars a year, * which makes it about a third larger than the inspirational book industry, and about the size of the mystery
novel genre and science
fiction / fantasy genre
markets combined.
Marketing and Promotion
Marketing your book News Flash Non
Fiction Tips On Being a Writer Plotting Your
Novel Point of View Publicity is the Author's Job Too: Restoring Faith in Your Freelance Writing Business Romance Q&A's Slicing Up More Profits by Cutting Up Your eBook!
In: blog post, Book Cover Designers, Book Covers, book trailers, Cover Design, From the Editor's Desk, Graphic Design, Lachesis Blog,
Marketing and Promotion,
Marketing your book, romance books, romance
fiction, romance
novels, romance publishing industry
In this workshop you will learn what young adult
fiction is, how it's more than just stories with younger characters, and how to successfully craft a
novel aimed at the young adult
market.
Tags: book
marketing, book publicity, book reviews, historical
fiction, historical
fiction marketing, historical
novel society, historical
novels, historicals
I know the graphic
novel categories were experiemental, but to drop the mass -
market fiction bestseller list?
Tags: BlogFest 2010, book giveaways, book publicity, coming of age
novel, creative nonfiction, debut author, historical
fiction, memoir
marketing, The Sixties
Any self published author promoting a
novel, self - help or non
fiction title knows that, after the work of writing, the real work comes when you're
marketing your book.
Tags: alinka rutkowska, amazon, amazon books, amazon ebook, author, author interview, bestsellre, beta read, book, book cover, book launch, book
marketing, book review, book sales, books, copy editing, ebook, ebooks, edit, editing, editor, fantasy, fantasy book review,
fiction, goodreads, how i sold 80000books, indie, indie author, interview, kindle, kobo, launch team, literature, love, magic, manuscript,
marketing, media, mystery, NaNoWriMo, nook,
novel, planning, publishing, read, reader, reading, review, reviews, romance, sales, sci fi, science ficiton, science
fiction, science
fiction book review, short stories, small press, stories, thriller, urban fantasy, war, women, write, writer, writers, writing, YA, young adult
Tags: Austin publicist, author bio, author interviews, author study, authors, blog tour, book blog, book giveaways, book marketers, book
marketing, book review, coming of age
novel, historical
fiction, Texas book publicist
As mentioned in other posts, I didn't
market my
fiction series at all until I had three published
novels in place — and trust me, my book sales for the
fiction series were nil before this.
For an interesting look at actual first
novel advances in a very small segment of the book
market — science
fiction and fantasy — see Tobias Buckell's advance survey.
People have said that mass -
market paperback sales are the most susceptible to being replaced by e-book sales, since they are generally
fiction novels that people read once and then discard or donate — as opposed to hardcovers that people like to display on their bookshelves.
In the conclusion of a two - part feature, Author's Digest offers more tips for
marketing your historical
fiction novel
Print This Post Filed Under: CRAFT,
Marketing, PR Tagged With: Flannery O'Connor, Henry David Thoreau, Janet Burroway, JIm Fusilli, Laurie R. King,
novel writing, Peter Riegert, short stories, Steven James, Story Trumps Structure, Writing
Fiction
August 31 — Stephanie Barko, Literary Publicist — how to
market fiction Giveaway: paperback of A Matter of Honor by William C. Hammond (historical
novel)
Eddie Wright discusses artistic collaboration, why he adapted his novella into a graphic
novel,
marketing straight
fiction vs.
marketing comics, and more.