All my Inkpot posts are Writing Life posts, for
lack of a better phrase. This one is about the kind of stuff I find myself
doing for the launch of a picture book — in this case, A Fine Dessert, which was published by Random/Schwartz & Wade
and illustrated by Sophie Blackall. The subtitle is “Four centuries, four
families, and one delicious treat” — and the book shows four different families
in four different time periods, all making and sharing one of the oldest
desserts in western culture — a blackberry fool. Picture book launches are
tricky little things. You don’t go on a glamorous tour, there’s usually not a
party, and you wrote the book so long ago (given the lag time for illustration)
that you hardly remember what’s inside! So I am going to chat a little about
what I did on this one, and how it worked.
First, what I should have done
before the book launch: I should have updated my website with the book jacket
and flap copy and maybe some interior art. It should have happened a couple
months ago, when the F&Gs (early copies) started circulating. But I never
got to it. That is just lame. Anyway, my web design guy is on it now, and the
new pages should be up soon. In the case of A
Fine Dessert, the publisher also made some school activities for the book,
so those will go on my website, too — in the teacher resources section.
Second, what I did do: Before publication I
talked to my editor about the school connections for this book. I wrote an
author’s note about the ways it might be used in the classroom. Thinking about
curriculum uses is helpful for certain types of books, and in this case the
publisher responded by creating activities that are online and on the back of
the book’s poster — so teachers can easily use the book at school. I was glad I
had thought that stuff through, and glad they created such good materials with
the info.
Sophie's drawing from the store event |
Also, I pulled together two kinds of
presentations for the book. Just thought them through at home, really. One is
the bookstore presentation, which I do with Sophie, my illustrator. I read the
book, and she brings the twig whisk she built and some cards that show all the
dining room scenes for the book — so we do an activity where the kids notice
the differences from scene to scene. Then Sophie paints a character from the
book and talks about her techniques, and I take questions from the crowd while
she’s illustrating. Then we sign books and serve Blackberry Fool to everyone.
It’s always easy when there’s book-related food to share!
The other presentation is a school visit. That
visit is for younger grades and I talk about “noticing” things as an important
skill for a storyteller or poet. I get kids to notice things in their own
classroom, and invite them to notice things in both my older picture book Water in the Park and this new one, A Fine Dessert. I praise their noticing
and point out they have a skill that makes them strong readers and will make
them even stronger writers. They really do have excellent insights once they
focus their attention.
A picture book doesn’t get a tour. I mean, maybe
if you’re Mo Willems, it does. But I have never toured for one. I did attend
the National Convention for Teachers of English and did a presentation there
about picture books with classroom connections, and Sophie did a panel
somewhere on picture book illustration and research. Those were both
pre-publication, and useful to get teachers and librarians on the look-out for
the book. Then our publisher set up events at local bookshops — just three
different stores. There, we will do our planned bookstore presentation. For
myself, I set up a few volunteer schools — public NYC area schools. We didn’t
sell books, but I got a chance to hone my school material. Then when I do paid
school visits, I have a K-2 intimate-group presentation I know is strong. I
have yet to incorporate this book into my auditorium slide show — but that’s
something to work on in the next couple months.
Press: there usually isn’t much for picture
books. The publicist arranged an interview with a local paper, which was nice.
The interviewer had not even googled the book, much less read its 32 pages,
though. She asked me what the dessert was. It’s not uncommon for interviewers
to be under-prepped or uninterested in the topic, so …. deep breath. On the
brighter side, we had a lovely interview on conference call, me and Sophie
with Publishers Weekly. That was
totally great and the interviewer was on top of everything. There was one
tricky subject we discussed, and I asked the journalist to send me the
transcript of my quote on the subject — so I could make sure I’d said what I
intended to say. She did this graciously — and I wouldn’t have known earlier in
my career that I might ask for that — but it’s pretty usual, I’ve
learned.
Social media: Again, with picture books
there’s not so much to do. We do have a hashtag: #AFineDessert, and I made the
dessert and posted pictures on Twitter and Facebook, using the tag. But
probably only four people have ever used it besides me. Still, it allowed an
illustrator friend who came to our first event to post his photos, and allowed
me to announce the book in a way that was more fun for my readers than just a
plain announcement. I am hoping families and school groups will make the
dessert and use the hashtag — but I don’t know if that will work!
I used to find publication days anticlimactic, because nothing much would happen after all that time working and waiting. Arranging the volunteer events really helps me stay buoyant, because it reminds me that KIDS and BOOKS are what this is all about.
Emily, thanks for this how-to on launching a book.
ReplyDeleteEmily, you are just so dang smart and savvy about all this. We are so blessed to have you on the faculty. I learned some things from your post about the differences in promoting and launch picture books as opposed to novels. Thank you. Your book contains awesome research presenting in such an innovative way. Congrats.
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