As I write the first draft of this post, I’m on a plane
heading home from North Carolina, where I did readings from my debut book, One Size Fits None: A
Farm Girl’s Search for the Promise of Regenerative Agriculture. Now
that I’m somewhere in the middle of my self-imposed tour, I’m glad Mary
Sheffield-Gentry asked me to pause and reflect on what is a brand new
experience for me.
Here are some things this amateur-hoping-to-become-a-pro has
learned:
Make a plan and start
early. Unless you are a proven best-selling author, your press will not
send you on a tour (bummer). That means you’re in charge, which can be daunting
or liberating. I’m choosing to see it as liberating because I can set my own
schedule and embrace my tendency to want to control/plan everything
book-related anyway.
Think about how much traveling you can afford, how often you
can handle appearing in public, and how much time you will be able to devote
not only to the readings, but also to the much heavier workload of securing,
planning, promoting, and preparing for those readings. I did not anticipate how
much time I would need to spend just on sending and answering emails involved with
my book tour, for example.
Contact bookstores three to six months before you want to
read there. Universities require more lead time; if you want to read sometime
in the fall 2019/spring 2020 school year, for example, start reaching out in
early 2019, preferably before. Applications for literary festivals and book
festivals are due anywhere from a year to six months before the actual
festival.
Another thing: a book tour doesn’t have to be a line-up of
back-to-back readings that takes you away from home for weeks at a time. I
scheduled two to four events per month for the first four months after my book
appeared, and I am working to arrange a few more for the rest of the year. A
book tour also doesn’t have to be travel-oriented. You can do a blog tour
(asking prominent book bloggers to review the book) or a radio tour, and
arrange for author interviews on important book-related sites, like I did here.
Partner with someone
local. Bookstores want to know your reading will bring a crowd, and
inviting someone from the community to participate will help make that happen.
For my Asheville event, I asked Dr. Mary
Saunders Bulan, professor of environmental studies at Warren Wilson
College (an institution just outside the city), to join me “in
conversation.” She interviewed me about the book in front of a live audience,
and I also did a quick reading. Look to local writers, professionals, and other
people whose work coincides with yours somehow. Ask bookstores about their book
clubs, too; you might be able to get a club to read your book and host you for
a discussion, as I’m doing at The Book Cellar in
Lake Worth in April.
Another option for partnerships is community organizations.
When I wanted to put something together in Tampa, for example, I reached out to
The Sustany Foundation,
a local group working to advance sustainable agriculture initiatives. They
agreed to make my reading an official Sustany Foundation event, invited their
members, and did much-needed promotion. In Greensboro, I put dual strategies to
the test by being in conversation with local environmental writer Lee Zacharias
and asking Green Drinks Greensboro,
a group of environmentally minded people, to have the event serve as one of
their monthly gatherings—and I ended up with an engaged group of 15-20 people,
which I’ve learned is a decent turnout for a relatively unknown new writer.
Whether or not you partner with a person or organization,
always reach out to local groups, institutions, universities, and the like to
inform them about your event. Do some research to find out who is likely to be
interested in your book.
Think outside the
bookstore box. Yes, bookstores are great places to read—but they aren’t the
only venues. People love the option of enjoying a drink or some food while you
talk, so consider places that offer one or both. I held my book launch
party at a brewery with a history of supporting the arts, and it was
amazing! Think, too, about places that tie in with your writing somehow—a
store, a public place, anywhere that makes sense. In Tampa, I read at an
independently-owned wine shop specializing in organic and natural wines, which
connected with my book’s argument for regenerative agriculture. Don’t forget
about libraries, too.
University readings are a bit more difficult to land, but
definitely try because they help you establish and maintain important
connections with writers who also teach. Approach your alma mater first, but
also write to other universities with a reading series or programs that complement
your work. In the coming weeks, I plan to identify and then reach out to
university English departments that focus on research writing, environmental
writing, and literary journalism and see if they would be interested in
bringing me to their campus. Wish me luck!
Be prepared for
rejection. For every “yes” I get, I have received at least ten “no’s.” Most
people you query about a reading either won’t answer or will decline. That is
normal, so do not get discouraged. Another thing: be prepared for readings that
go horribly. By that I mean no one shows up. This, too, is normal, even for
writers who are well known.
That said, do your best not to set yourself up to fail. Do
readings in places where you have connections and people you know, and promote
the heck out of events in places where you lack these advantages. If you have a
few spare bucks, consider doing some advertising on social media. Share
everything you schedule with your publicist so he/she can alert local media.
In closing and in the spirit of continued promotion, I
humbly invite you, dear reader, to come out to one of my events
in the coming months—and let me know about yours!
Stephanie Anderson is a writer living in Boca Raton,
Florida. She holds an MFA from Florida Atlantic University, where she currently
serves as an Instructor of English. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Rumpus, Flyway, The Pinch, Hotel Amerika,
Midwestern Gothic, Grist Journal, The Chronicle Review, Sweet, and others. Stephanie is proud to have grown up in South Dakota, and her work
often centers on the prairie and rural life. Her debut book titled One Size Fits None, a work of literary journalism
focused on regenerative agriculture, appeared with University of Nebraska Press
in January 2019.