Week 5 Prompt Response
If you want to be successful in selling something, you need
to market it to the right people or no one will know how great it is. Somehow, books and literature seem like they
should be somehow excluded from this.
They aren’t however; and successful publishers and authors know
this. It is sad that some books get all
the attention while others, even if they are great books, languish. That is just the way society is. There is always the next big movie, book,
clothing item, vacation spot, etc. that everyone talks about. In some ways, it is like one big book club,
where everybody is discussing the same book for a while before moving on to the
next big thing.
The Billionaire’s
First Christmas is not a romantic suspense novel. The descriptions do not indicate any of the
romantic suspense genre elements such as a threatened heroine and graphic
details. It seems to be a straightforward,
holiday romance. I would purchase this
e-book upon request if it was available through Overdrive—although it is free
on Amazon.
The positive reviews for Angela’s
Ashes indicate that it will be an in demand book and several copies should have
been purchased for the collection at the time of publication. Our library purchases many copies of
bestsellers and also keeps a few “Express” copies that no one can hold or
renew. I have mixed feelings about
this. I understand that we want to get
books in the hands of people when they are wanted, but after the high demand
for that book has ended, we are left with many copies that are then taken out
of the collection. Further, it is not
always possible to predict what will and won’t take off so sometimes we have
multiple copies of books that were never in high demand.
I have mixed feelings about sources that won’t print
negative reviews. I think no review is
probably pretty negative. However, once
an author is established, I think readers should be able to get reviews of
their new works whether positive or negative.
If a source will only publish positive reviews, they are not giving
readers what they need to make informed decisions about what to read next.
I don’t heavily rely on reviews for my reading
decisions. I subscribe to a number of
reading related Facebook groups where I get reviews and recommendations. I look at Amazon and I read Library
Journal. Other than that, I rely on
reading my favorite authors new books, personal recommendations, and anything
that just looks interesting.
Great prompt response! I couldn't agree more!
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