Archive for the ‘Book Trailer’ Category

How to Write an Effective Book Description

January 4, 2013

The book description, one of the most crucial elements in selling a book, is often also the most difficult element for many self-published authors to create.

The main reason … they don’t want to leave anything out.

As the work’s creator, their natural instinct is to cram as much of it as possible into the synopsis. But too many details can render their description confusing and ineffective.

Here’s what I’ve learned through my personal trial-and-error efforts (and I’m by no means sure I have it right yet) … but these are the five main points to consider when writing a book description.

1. Don’t Include Subplots. When it comes to the book description, the only thing that matters is the main theme. That’s all you need to focus on. What is the primary action that drives your book?

2. Keep It Under 150 Words. Summarizing tens of thousands of words in less than 150 seems impossible, right? But here’s the rub … it isn’t (notice, however, I’m barely there yet with my own). Best advice: say in the simplest terms possible what your book is about and what will interest readers.

3. Write in Third Person, Present Tense. Describe your book as if you’re sitting face-to-face with the reader and they’ve just asked you what it’s about.

4. Use Emotional Power Words. You’re trying to portray the same emotions with your description that your book evokes. To convey these feelings, you need to use emotional power words like tormented, charismatic, passion, terrifying, etc.

5. You are Not the Author. Don’t write your book description as the author; write it as the publisher. Write with your head, not your heart. Remember, the book description is marketing material – not literature. It isn’t for you, it’s for your fans. Making a quick impact that will move the reader to want to buy your book is your principal concern.

Here’s an example of the latest iteration of the book description I’ve been kicking around for my award-winning self-published book “Reichold Street.” It has yet to appear on the book (or anywhere else for that matter), so consider this an exclusive:

“In 1964 Albert Parker, a distressed and troubled teen, arrives on Reichold Street. At fourteen, he has already endured the heartbreak of losing a parent and the anguish of living with a step-father tormented by mad visions. Responding in the only way he knows, Albert retreats ever deeper into himself, building a shell of aggression. On Reichold Street his only real friends are his step-sister Janice and Paul Barrett, the boy across the street. Coming-of-age in the turbulent Vietnam era of the 1960s, the story of how the neighborhood – and the rest of the world – reacts to him becomes a heart-pounding microcosm of life and death.”

I think this finally begins to get the description right. It is roughly 110 words. It’s told in third-person, present tense, and I count eight emotional power words (“distressed,” “troubled,” “heartbreak,” “mad,” “anguish,” “tormented,” “heart-pounding,” and “turbulent”).

It only tells you the main plot, but my hope is that people will open the book because of this description and want to own it.

What do you think?

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**01-05-2013 edit – version 2**
Based on some of the feedback I’ve already received, here’s a re-write of my “Reichold Street” book description. Is it stronger now?

“In 1964 Albert Parker, a distressed and troubled teen, arrives on Reichold Street. At fourteen, he has already endured the heartbreak of losing a parent and the anguish of living with a step-father tormented by mad visions. Albert retreats ever deeper into himself, building a shell of aggression. Coming-of-age in the turbulent Vietnam era, Albert’s only real friends are his step-sister Janice and Paul Barrett, the boy across the street. The story of how the gang of neighborhood kids, and the rest of the world, react to Albert … and adapt to each other … evolves into a heart-pounding microcosm of life and death.”

———-

 

A Writing Year in Review

December 28, 2012

book-pile1No writing advice today, just a few remembrances…

It’s been an interesting year.

In January 2012 we helped my remarkable father-in-law celebrate his 95th birthday. In a little more than a week, we’ll hopefully help him celebrate Number 96.

In June, my bride and I reached our 42nd Anniversary.

Last August, I drove in the annual Woodward Dream Cruise again. For aficionados of the muscle cars manufactured in the 1960s and 70s, it’s an event made in Heaven … or, at least in a Detroit that was a lot closer to one forty years ago.

Participating in my ’81 Corvette and with a brother-in-law who makes each new old-car sighting an event in itself (“Omigod, just look at that red Challenger, would ya!”), was as enjoyable as you can imagine.

In 2012 I finished, and published, three books. Two … “Zebulon” and “Tinker” … were each well-received collections of short stories.

My debut novel, “Reichold Street” was finished in March 2012, and I was surprised (and pleased) when it was selected as a 2012 Readers Favorite Gold Medal Winner. My wife and I traveled to Miami during the International Book Fair to collect it.

Just knowing reviewers actually liked it was a prize unto itself.

In October, based on the positive results I enjoyed with my writing earlier in the year, I was both flattered and honored to be asked to make a presentation on self-publishing at the well-attended 2012 Rochester Writer’s Conference at Oakland University.

During 2012 I also entered the National Novel Writing Month (Nanowrimo) event for the first time, with the full intention of writing the required 50,000 words in the month of November.

The fact I only managed 16,000 … and about two-thirds of those are so bad they’ve already been edited away … made me realize writing to word-count bores me to death. I won’t join the Nanowrimo 30-day marathon again next year, but at least I can say I tried.

On the negative side, my pension and healthcare underwent a radical change in the past year and it still upsets me enough that I don’t want to talk about it more than I have to.

Suffice it to say, my former employer shouldn’t count too heavily on my ongoing support in the retail arena. Loyalty is, after all, a two-way street and they just made the road in my direction practically a dead end. I’m definitely going to shop for the best deal from now on.

Instead of enjoying sandals and shorts in the sunshine, which would make all sorts of sense, we instead welcomed eight inches of snow here in the North yesterday, just as we have for years (I think ‘welcomed’ is probably too kind a word).

On the plus side, I’m in good health; still have an adequate home, food on the table, successful children, wonderful grandchildren and a beautiful wife who loves me in spite of myself. That’s not too shabby. In fact, it’s pretty damn good.

That’s why, as I ponder resolutions for the New Year, I know I only need to make a few:

(1) Keep writing and finish my next book (two in 2013, if I’m lucky); (2) Love my wife as she deserves to be loved; (3) Love and enjoy my children and grandchildren; (4) Be kind to my family, neighbors and friends; ditto that to people in need; (5) Be considerate to everyone; and … most of all … enjoy life.

That is, after all, what it’s all about.

Please Watch the Book Trailer for Ron Herron’s Gold Medal-winning “Reichold Street”:

 

Remember Why You Do “That Writing Thing”

December 10, 2012

my lucy alone in surfMy Lovely Bride … Alone in the Surf  © R.L. Herron

The Art of Promotion
If you self-publish, it’s really easy to get caught up in the “I gotta get out and promote my book” whirlwind. After all, there’s no one else who’s going to do that for you … but getting caught up to the point of ignoring everything else may be a mistake, particularly if you let it start to rule your life.

I know how easy it is to do. I’ve got the tense shoulders, aching back and throbbing headache to prove it. I’ve been spending so much time trying to figure out social media, and get the word out about my books (especially my award-winning novel REICHOLD STREET), I’ve done little else.

I’ve also got a wife who’s ready to throw things at me to get more of my attention … she’s upset with me and she’s absolutely right. I’m so caught up in all this promotepromotepromote nonsense that I haven’t paid much attention to her at all, and I haven’t written 500 words all week on my next book. I normally write more than that in a day.

I know what I have to do. Relax, and remind myself what’s important in my life. Like my bride of more than 42 years. I don’t have to do every promotional thing right away. Besides, I’m still not sure which things work. I’ve decide to slow down my pace, be myself, and discover the marketing activities I like (and therefore, will actually do).

It might also be time to remind readers (and myself) about promoting themselves and their writing:

Read
I’m the first one to say you can learn a lot from marketing blogs, newsletters, webinars and such … but it’s easy to get overwhelmed. Don’t make yourself crazy trying to do it all.

Remember What Promotion Is
When you come right down to it, promotion is just a conversation between you and other people. It’s speaking with them about something you love: your book. It’s not blasting hype out to everyone in cyberspace. Develop a way to talk with people and … more importantly … listen.

Create a virtual space where this conversation can occur. You don’t need to do everything the experts mention, but you do need a few basic tools:

Website
Your site is “you” online, a place where you are always present, where you meet and greet people (even when you’re asleep). You can include pages “About You” and for your blog.

Email List
This is something I’ve neglected, but it makes sense. Talk about your book(s) and offer an incentive (I’m creating a white paper on building believable characters) to entice folks to sign up for your email list. Maintain the list through services like Mailchimp, Constant Contact, or AWeber. It gives you a way to start conversations, and speak directly to those who have demonstrated an interest in your book.

Social Media
Also meet new friends and invite new readers through the outreach of social media, special interest sites and groups, and wherever else your people go (right now, I use Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook). These connections grow as you reach out to more people, and they reach out to their friends on your behalf.

Remember You’re Human
Treat yourself like a human being … not a promotional machine chugging out blog posts and tweets 24/7. Don’t be a slave to the millions of “shouldas” in the world of book promotion. Take time away to refresh yourself and enjoy life.

Write
It’s what got you started on this road in the first place and it’s what you love to do (at least it is for me). So don’t neglect it. I intend to write a lot more on my next novel tomorrow.

Right now, if you’ll be kind enough to excuse me, my wife looks like she needs a hug.

One last bit of shameless promotion … my “Master Storyteller” book trailer …