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My child with cancer, being forced to help me publicize my memoir.

My child with cancer, being exploited to help me publicize my book.

So, the paperback of my memoir, Double Time, comes out just shy of a month from now. I’m quite excited about this. But I admit that I haven’t been as gung-ho about it as I probably would be if, you know, one of the stars of the book didn’t have cancer.

Clio was diagnosed less than two months after the hardcover was released last May. I was still in full-on publicity mode at that point. In fact, I’d done a bookstore reading in Maine two days before we ended up in the hospital with her. At that point, her symptoms had gotten pretty acute, and we were planning to see her doctor (yet again) a few days later. But we never got that far.

And can I tell you how bizarre it felt to have our family’s life turned completely upside down while having a book out there about the era which I’d already begun thinking of as B.C. (Before Cancer)?  Yeah. Pretty freakin’ bizarre. And heartbreaking. Honestly, I couldn’t have cared less about Double Time at that point. And the prospect of there being a paperback someday just seemed ludicrous. Even offensive.

But here I am, nine months later, and I feel like: Hey! Yeah! I still want people to read this book! It’s a good book, dammit!

So I’m doing what I can to get the word out, albeit on a more limited basis than I might if things were different in our lives, or I didn’t have a fairly demanding day job. And yeah, getting the word out is pretty much on me. Sadly, publishers — especially the big ones, like the one that publishes Double Time — don’t do a whole lot in terms of publicity and marketing these days, except for a very few, select books in whose metaphorical baskets they choose to put the the majority of their eggs. My book-basket has pretty much no eggs.

Le paperback!

Le paperback!

(And can you blame them? Look at my tortured metaphors!)

So, that sucks. I wish it weren’t so. I wish I were one of the lucky ones, who had a crack marketing and publicity team getting my book out there and singing its praises. Or that I could afford to pay for an all-out, major publicity campaign from a third party. Or even that there had been a way — in the packaging, or title, or something — to make it clear that the book isn’t just for mothers of twins. But so it goes. (Uh oh. I’m kvetching, as writers are wont to do. I should stop.)

Anyway, I came up with one sort of fun marketing tactic — I think it’s fun, anyway — which was to send early Mother’s Day cards to a whole bunch of independent bookstores, as nominated by friends and readers (thanks to those of you who gave me names of your favorite stores!) telling them about the book, and suggesting they put it on their Mother’s Day gift idea tables.

Will it work? I have no idea. But maybe one or two will get my card and think: What the what? A Mother’s Day card? How cool! I’ll check out that book, by golly!

My child without cancer, being exploited to help me publicize my memoir

My child without cancer, being exploited to help me publicize my book.

I adore independent bookstores, and the people who run them. So I enjoyed looking at dozens of indie store websites. It also was a great opportunity to exploit my children. They love “helping” and they love putting stickers on things, so I put them to work putting on stamps and return address labels. They were in heaven. Yes, some of the stamps are hanging halfway off the envelopes, but close enough.

Meanwhile, I will very soon be offering an opportunity to win free copies of Double Time, so like my page on Facebook, or sign up for email updates (over there in the right-hand column) to find out how. (See? My day job in advertising serves me well! Maybe.)

In other news: as I write this, Clio is attending her first full day of school in two weeks. Woo-hoo!!

 

12 Comments

  • April says:

    Congrats on your paperback! I already bought everyone I know with twins a copy of the hardback last year so I currently don’t need the paperback. I hope you sell a ton of them!

    We don’t really have any independent bookstores I know about around here. Maybe Downtown but I live in the suburbs so its all Books a Million and Barnes and Noble and Walmart and Target.

    Smart idea letting them help with stamps and return labels. My boys love stickers too. Eric has started writing letters that are legible! to family members so I help him mail them and he loves putting the stamps and everything on it and then putting it in the mailbox all by himself. I am totally using him to write all the thank you notes for his birthday party this year. MWahaha.

  • Gail Erdos says:

    How cool that it’s 9 months later that your book had its “gestation period” as hardcover and now birthed to paperback!
    Love the Mother’s Day idea!!!!
    And, exploit away. Cancer’s gotta do something helpful.

  • Kristen B says:

    I forgot to respond when you posted it on fb, but one of my favorites is RJ Julia in downtown Madison, CT (http://www.rjjulia.com/). Just in case you have any stamps leftover. 😉

  • Michele says:

    That is awesome news that Clio was feeling well enough to go to school! Adorable pics of the girls, isn’t it fun to have daughters old enough to “help” with things?

    I thoroughly enjoyed your book even as a long-time reader of your blog and I hope LOTS of other folks get to read it too! Great idea about the bookstores.

    If you might broaden the pool to children’s bookstores, there is an awesome one in my neck of the woods: littleshopofstories.com in Decatur, GA.

    Wishing you luck on all your endeavors!

  • Ewokmama says:

    Where is the best place to buy this online? And are you affiliate of anything?

    • Jane says:

      I am an affiliate of Indiebound — click on the book cover on in the sidebar and you can order it from an independent bookstore. (Yay!!) Many places will mail to you if you’d rather not pick up in store.

      I’m also an Amazon affiliate, because unfortunately that’s the best place to get my novel, Eden Lake. So if you go to the Eden Lake page here on my website, and click through the Amazon link there, I’ll get credit for whatever you buy on Amazon (including Double Time). Your call.

      Thank you in advance!!

  • I’d get the paperback if I didn’t already have a hardcover. I’m excited for you! And even more excited for Clio finally getting some time in school.

  • Maren says:

    Another good bookstore if it wasn’t already on your list: Children’s Book World in Haverford, PA. http://www.childrensbookworld.net/
    (They sell books for parents as well.) Good luck!

  • Nancy says:

    Book Passage in Corte Madera, CA is a wonderful store:

    http://bookpassage.com/

  • Jen in MN says:

    http://www.commongoodbooks.com/
    Above is a link to a fantastic independent bookstore in St Paul, MN. I don’t get there often, but I’ve been, and it is so cool. Worth a shot!

    I love the cover for the paperback edition! Love the look of it.

    I gifted my husband’s cousin, who is expecting twins (already has a toddler, too!), with your hardcover version. She loved it!

  • Hannah Rogers says:

    Hi Jane,
    If its nit already on your list Little Shop of Stories in Decatur, Ga where we live is a wonderful independent children’s bookstore but they also carry a lit of parenting titles. Sending good energy to Clio.

  • kathi cotte says:

    New England Mobile Books tries to highlight local authors. You might send a card to them.

    Thinking of all of you, kathi Cotte