Sentences with phrase «readers go to bookstores»

When readers go to bookstores, they often look for a specific type of book.
In fact, many readers go to bookstores only to browse the inventory.
In conclusion, just like a potential reader goes to the bookstore or to Amazon.com to purchase a book, they search on line for blogs to read.

Not exact matches

This is important to understand because the information that goes into a book proposal is the very same information that literary agents use to sell books to publishers; it's the same information that publishers use to promote books to bookstores, readers, and the media.
Yes, an avid reader and the reason she loves her Kindle are exactly the 3 reasons you give, Anne: - big font - light - instant purchase when a book is finished without the hassle of going to a bookstore or a lending library (she has a hard time moving around — her brain is just fine, the body, well, so - so...)
I have a friend who is a huge reader who doesn't like to go into bookstores because they overwhelm her — she asks, «where is my iTunes for books?»
Reason: that bit about e-book readers going into the Harvard bookstore to buy the paper book resonates.
Not that long ago, there was only one way to get published: find an agent; hope he or she would represent you; pray they sell your book proposal to a publisher; trust the publisher to get behind the book and believe in the project; and hope that readers would go to their local bookstore and buy your book.
Should readers of ebooks be charged a fee that would go into a fund to subsidize bookstores that sell print books?
Once you are satisfied that this book looks like what you want on bookstore shelves and other readers are used to seeing... go ahead and pick your book's birthday (also known as a publication date) and celebrate.
I think publishers started to realize that it was price that was driving away readers to either give up on the format completely and go back their local bookstore.
Several years ago I went to a local indie bookstore which, according to the Kobo website at the time, sold Kobo readers.
They forget that Amazon is the one place where readers can go to find just about anything they want, unlike the local big box bookstore that is limited to what their corporate purchasing office says it should stock.
Readers of today want connection to the content that goes deeper than a bookstore telling them what to read!
So, without the stupidity of going to fifteen different cities and trying to do signings and sending useless bookmarks to five hundred stores or doing blog tours that take weeks of time and get you no readers, I'm going to try to describe some ways to promote and push your indie - published books to readers and bookstores in a sane manner.
More importantly, as authors and publisher look for ever more creative ways to attract the attention of readers who already have large amounts of content to choose from, books are going to have to have a way to stand out from the crowd on the bookstore shelves.
As it is, physical bookstores risk being made irrelevant because readers are increasingly getting used to not finding the title they want in stock so they just go to Amazon or BN.com and order it for home delivery.
Next, they partner with local bookstores because they want to go after hardcore readers, the types of people who devour books at an accelerated pace.
Many authors are glad to know that there are people out there who still love books and they are glad to go out and meet their readers at indie bookstores.
Your book genre is part of your book's identity, both to your readers and to the bookstores that are going to be selling it.
Interface issues such as these may go away with updates over time, but right now they make the Libre Touch a poor competitor to other readers offering wireless access to Web bookstores.
The vision is a bookstore where readers, pastors, youth leaders, parents can go to find vetted, excellent, powerful, transformational Christian fiction to read and to share with those people for which they're responsible.
Before, niche romance and erotica authors had to conform to their publishers» desired subject matter to get that coveted paperback on a bookstore's shelves — now, readers can barely keep up with the ever - increasing «girl - on - centaur» and «boy - on - merman» creations going on sale daily.
All the average reader knew was that a book by one of the authors they liked to read was no longer easily found for purchase and they'd have to either go to the library or to the second hand bookstore for a copy.
The bookstore is still an important way for readers to discover new books and authors and it is important for you to be where readers go.
Designing schemes and developing strategies that attract book readers and bookstores to buy books and titles from them is important to keep the spark going on.
The thinking goes: if our readers buy our stories in a printed format, we need to have our books placed in bookstores.
Publishers are scared and trying to cause a panic among booksellers and readers by saying these latest figures mean bookstores are going to suddenly disappear.
They can go for a broader search option, which would be akin to walking into a vast bookstore and heading over to the Science Fiction section, or they can narrow it down, which would be like having a personal shopper handing over only the books that contain all of the search options the reader is interested in.
Somehow, King's decision to encourage people to «stir their sticks and go to an actual bookstore rather than a digital one» caused a stir in the digital book world where readers have voiced their dissent.
Readers were going to bookstores to find their next read, so we needed to get our books into the major online ebook stores.
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