Even Fiction Can Have News

Shel Horowitz’s Book Marketing Tip of the Month
Volume 1, Number 1, July, 2007

Welcome to the first edition of this newsletter and thanks for being one of my very first subscribers We’ve reached our minimum number of subscribers and we’re ready to go. I will publish every month on or about the 25th of the month, either with a tip of my own or guest tip. Sometimes it’ll be just a couple of paragraphs sometimes a full-length article.

This Month’s Tip: Treat Fiction as News

Since book marketers are often accused of neglecting fiction, let me start with a tip that especially applies to novelists and short story writers:

When you publicize your book, you can find a number of news angles to focus that can help you get coverage in the media. Here are three to start:

  1. The situation or problem your protagonist faces. As an example, I know a novelist who wrote a book featuring a woman who discovers her husband is gay. She gets tons of media coverage, positioning herself as an expert on the issues that straight spouses of gays face.
  2. The place where you the author live–but also the places your characters live in or travel to in your book.
  3. Any charitable connection or cause. I’ve done a couple of press releases for Imaginator Press, highlighting the funds its young adult fantasy novels raise for butterfly protection and research.

Shel Horowitz’s award-winning seventh book, Grassroots Marketing for Authors and Publishers, offers 280 pages of great book marketing advice. Click here for a detailed preview.

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Note: As is the case for most professional reviewers, many of the books I review on this site have been provided by the publisher or author, at no cost to me. I've also reviewed books that I bought, because they were worthy of your time. And I've also received dozens of review copies at no charge that do not get reviewed, either because they are not worthy or because they don't meet the subject criteria for this column, or simply because I haven't gotten around to them yet, since I only review one book per month. I have far more books in my office than I will ever read, and the receipt of a free book does not affect my review.