Sentences with phrase «stories about book sales»

Not exact matches

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Ebook sales are not falling, the print book is not roaring back into vogue and the trend of stories about their perilous future is just a passing one, to be forgotten as soon as the full story can be told.
The Bridge by Karen Kingsbury (S&S / Howard Books; S&S Audio; Thorndike Large Print) is a Christmas story about a Tennessee bookstore named The Bridge that struggles to survive declining book sales and the rise of e-books.
Consider: A friend of mine told the story about how he had a radio interview and got over 100 book sales from that interview, so he thought, Hey, why don't I buy an ad on this radio station — they're obviously my target audience.
This is another great round - up post from ALLi, featuring lots of members» stories about why blogging has been worthwhile for them (though not necessarily in terms of book sales).
But shouldn't the piles of stories AND the author's admissions about the book's speculative content prompt the publisher to pull this book from sale?
It's a cash - in, a quick attempt to trade Tyrese's fame for sales of an amateurish comic book about a walking, talking cliche in a cliche of a story fighting cliche villains.
I gave away 4942 books over 3 days, picked up 5 reviews on Amazon, more than a dozen ratings on Goodreads, a few additional subscriptions to my newsletter, and had about a dozen immediate rollover sales to the next story in the series.
Bella and Hugh Howey particularly talked about the book itself as marketing — the brilliant story, delivering on the promise to the reader, a consistent production schedule, covers that evoke the emotion of the story, the author's name, the title and sub-title, the sales description and keywords, email and newsletters.
Writing good sales copy (the description of the book on your amazon page) is an art and a science — most authors are very bad about summarizing their story into an attention grabbing, intrigue building lead - in (without giving too much away).
There have been case studies and there are plenty of online stories about people who had their book online for over a year and barely sold any copies, then one day they changed their book cover and sales skyrocketed.
As numbers come out and we learn at least enough about the big success stories to determine how little of the cash pool was available for other authors to divvy up, we should be able to get a clearer picture of how well somebody can expect to do through this program, After all, even if you were only making $ 1 per book sold on each of your hypothetical 30 annual sales through Barnes & Noble, that's better than getting nothing at all from a lending library for Kindle owners.
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