Entries Tagged as 'What's New for Book-Lovers'

The Nimble Books Marketing Playbook v 3.0: “4 + 4″

This is the latest in a series of periodic updates of the Nimble Books Marketing Playbook.

When I think about marketing books online, I often think of principal components analysis, which is a mathematical technique that is used to reduce the dimensionality of a data set. When you have a phenomenon that is described by a large number of factors, PCA is a tool for identifying the smaller number of variables that account for most of the variance. PCA is often surprisingly effective, sometimes reducing dimensionality from hundreds to single digits. The same concept works for marketing books online: although there are a great many variables, just a handful seem to explain most of the variation.

There are four major variables that you can influence before publication:

  1. Get the positioning right. Are you providing a substantial benefit addressing specific interests of a well-defined audience that likes to buy books?
  2. Maximize keyword discoverability. Discoverability = the intersection of strong keywords with few competing titles.
  3. Maximize quality.
  4. Take a strong point of view.

There are four major variables that you can influence after publication:

  1. Get as many readers as possible to write “real name” reviews on Amazon. Anytime anyone says something nice to you about the book, ask them to repeat it in a review. Reviews appear to every prospective buyer at the point of sale and are free.
  2. Update your email signature, your byline, your blog, and your webpage to point to the book’s Amazon.com detail page.
  3. Sign up with Amazon Connect, Amazon’s marketing service for authors, and create an Amazon blog for your book. But only do one post to the blog, and update it as needed. Knock yourself out on that post, because it’s the only place on your book’s detail page where you can speak directly to the customer and where you can modify your message in near real time.
  4. Send as many review copies as you can to prominent journalists and bloggers who are actually likely to review the book. When there is a good review, plug it in your blog entry (see item #3). I can also incorporate pull quotes in the “editorial reviews” section of the detail page, but I am limited to 20 (!) words, which usually requires severe, Rex Reed-like truncation.

That’s it! This relative handful of activities seems to explain most of the variation in the efficiency of online marketing for Nimble Books.

In a future post, I will list just a few of the dozens of demonstrably cost-ineffective marketing tools that have been devised to separate authors and publishers from their money.

BB-67 MONTANA gets a 5-star review

Amazon.com: sdae102’s review of BB-67 MONTANA, U.S. Navy Battleship: Why S…

5.0 out of 5 stars outstanding, March 10, 2008
By sdae102
A unique volume that depicts USS Montana as if the ship had been completed The photos of the model work are excellent. And the artwork of the ship by noted naval artist wayne scarpaci is outstanding.

It’s really heartening that this guy liked what I did.

I am a best-selling battleship author. Go figure!

Blindsight by Peter Watts

wfzimmerman's review: "The blurb on the cover of the paperback edition that calls this "one of the best sci-fi books I've ever read" is not far off the mark."
Tor Books (2008), Edition: First Edition, Paperback, 384 pages

Gary Gygax, Brilliant Book Publisher, Dies at 69

Gary Gygax, ‘Father of D&D,’ Dies at 69 | The Underwire from Wired.com

Gary Gygax, one of the co-creators of the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game, died Tuesday morning at his home in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, according to Stephen Chenault, CEO of Troll Lord Games.

First off, I have to say that having the person who reports your death be the CEO of Troll Lord Games is pretty cool.

Next, I have to say that Gary Gygax had a profound impact on popular culture. I doubt if he ever made very many Top 100 lists, but he should have.

Finally, I have to say that from my perspective as a book publisher, Gary Gygax should be remembered not just as the guy who invented D&D, but as a brilliant author and book publisher.

His Dungeons and Dragons books sold like hotcakes and (appropriately) spawned dozens of new editions and spinoff titles. He did what every publisher dreams of.

Tip of the hat to Murdoc Online for spotting this story.

David Brin’s THROUGH STRANGER EYES

This is one of the better days in the history of Nimble Books. Today we have reached a final agreement with Hugo and Nebula-award winning science fiction author, futurist, and commentator David Brin, and we will be publishing his THROUGH STRANGER EYES, a collection of “Reviews, Introductions, Tributes & Iconoclastic Essays” in the U.S. and U.K. We will be working in partnership with Robert Stephenson of the fine SF publisher Altair Australia who be publishing a simultaneous edition for his markets. THROUGH STRANGER EYES will include essays on figures as diverse as J.R.R. Tolkien, John Brunner, George Orwell, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Charles Sheffield, Richard Feynman, and Ayn Rand.

David Brin

More to come …

STAR DRAGON by Mike Brotherton (Tor)

4
Review of: Star dragon by Brotherton, Mike

I started reading this once and stopped part way through because I thought the idea of a dragon living inside a star was too silly for belief. I came back to this book after reading the author's second book, SPIDER STAR, and made it all the way through this time. It was worth it. There was a satisfying science fictional explanation for everything.



The one weak spot that still remains is the premise that a corporation would send a hunting party to capture a "star dragon" and start casting nets and firing off photon torpedoes right away. It seems a lot more likely that super smart people in the 26th Century would start the same way we would start today, i.e. with a couple of years of careful, passive observation. After all, they flew 250 light years to find this thing, what's the hurry?

Famous Assassinations in Today’s Emergency Room

BillingsGazette.com :: Famous assassinations: Who could doctors save today?

Would Julius Caesar or John F. Kennedy have survived if they were attacked in Billings today?

Dr. Terry Housinger, a general surgeon at the Billings Clinic, tackled the topic of famous assassinations at a meeting of the History of Medicine Club, offering his audience of medical students and doctors a chance to reflect on the evolution of trauma care.

After describing the circumstances surrounding each famous assassination, Housinger offered his opinion on whether modern medicine could have saved those high-profile victims if the attack had occurred in Billings today.

A terrific article by Donna Healy of the Billings Gazette. Must read if you are a history buff.

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About Cool Maps of France’s Overseas Territories and Departments

Dear readers,

I am fond of  Cool Maps of France's Overseas Territories and Departments because I love exotic places.  This is a sort of companion volume to

  Cool Maps of France: Paris and Beyond






I say "sort of" because the business case for doing this book was pretty tenuous compared to the case for Cool Maps of France.  France is one of the most heavily touristed (sic?) countries in the world, and a quick Amazon search reveals that books on "France maps" sell well.  I can't say the same about "maps of St. Pierre and Miquelon" or any of the 20+ other French overseas territories illustrated in this book.   Nevertheless, I felt impelled to do this book, simply because I think the places shown in it are cool.

This book includes the following 48 figures and tables:

Figure 1.  France's overseas territories and departments

Table 1. Status and population

Table 2.  Uninhabited islands

Figure 2. Martinique 1632 (Library of Congress)

Figure 3.  Martinique (Central Intelligence Agency 2006)

Figure 4. Fort-de-France 1984  (U.S. State Department)

Figure 5.  French Guiana shaded relief 1992 (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 6.  French Guiana political 1992 (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 7.  French Guiana vegetation 1972 (Central Intelligence Agency)  The territory is mostly rainforest.

Figure 8.  French Guiana economic activity 1972 (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 9. French Polynesia 1989 (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 10. Guadeloupe (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 11.  Île Saint-Barthélemy (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 12. Île Saint-Martin (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 13. Mayotte  (Central Intelligence Agency). The Comoros Islands are to the west.

Figure 14. Location of Mayotte (WikiMedia Commons, 2008)

Figure 15.  New Caledonia (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 16.  Réunion (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 17. Réunion – the day after the volcano erupted, January 16, 2002 (NASA).  Red, indicating patches of active lava, is just barely visible at the volcanic cone on the southwestern  island.

Figure 18.  Île Saint-Pierre and Miquelon (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 19. Saint-Pierre and Miquelon (NASA)

Figure 20. Îles Wallis and Iles de Horne (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 23.  Île Alofi, to the southeast of Futuna (NASA).

Figure 22.  Futuna Island (NASA)

Figure 21.  Uvea, one of the Wallis Islands (NASA).

Figure 24. Île Amsterdam (WikiMedia Commons)

Figure 25. Île St. Paul (WikiMedia Commons)

Figure 26.  Bassas da India  (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 27. Bassas da India from space (NASA)

Figure 28.  Clipperton Island (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 29. Clipperton Island from space (NASA)

Figure 30.  Crozet Islands (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 31. Crozet Islands eastern group (NASA)

Figure 32. Ile Europa (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 33. Île Europa land use (WikiMedia Commons)

Figure 34. Île Europa (NASA)

Figure 35. French Antarctic and Southern Lands (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 36.  Îles Glorieuses (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 37.  Îles Glorieuses (NASA)

Figure 38.  Île Juan de Nova (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 39.  Île Juan de Nova (NASA).

Figure 40. Île Kerguelen (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 41. Île Kerguelen (NASA)

Figure 42. Landsat infrared image of Kerguelen (NASA)

Figure 43.  Baie du Morbihan, Kerguelen Islands (NASA)

Figure 44. Map of Kerguelen drawn during the expedition of Captain James Cook (WikiMedia Commons)

Figure 45. Île Tromelin (Central Intelligence Agency)

Figure 46. Île Tromelin (NASA)


If you are like me, you will love flipping through these beautifully printed color maps of some of the world's most isolated and unusual places.

Enjoy!

Cordially,

Fred Zimmerman
Publisher, Nimble Books LLC

P.S. Check out the other books in the Cool Maps series:

The Berenstein Bears Change Lives

Precocious 6-Year-Old Claims Berenstein Bears Book Changed Her Life | The Onion - America’s Finest News Source

Since reading The Berenstein Bears Get The Gimmies last month, 6-year-old Melody Johnson has lived a changed life, the above-average reader reported Monday.Enlarge Image Precocious 6-Year-Old Claims Berenstein Bears Book Changed Her Life

Johnson reviews an underlined passage in her copy of The Berenstein Bears Get The Gimmies (below).

“The Berenstein Bears Get The Gimmies is my favoritest book ever,” said Johnson, hugging the dog-eared book to her chest with both arms. “The Berenstein Bears taught me about not being greedy. I used to have the ‘galloping greedy gimmies,’ but not anymore.”

Johnson received the life-altering 32-page book, one in a series of more than 50 written and illustrated by Stan and Jan Berenstein, as a gift from her grandmother.

Great stuff!

William F. Buckley is dead

William F. Buckley Jr. Is Dead at 82 - New York Times

William F. Buckley Jr., who marshaled polysyllabic exuberance, famously arched eyebrows and a refined, perspicacious mind to elevate conservatism to the center of American political discourse, died Wednesday at his home in Stamford, Conn.

A loss for literacy. Of all his books, the one I’d most like for my personal collection is a first edition of God and Man at Yale.

The Trillion Dollar Meltdown: Easy Money, High Rollers, and the Great Credit Crash by Charles R. Morris

wfzimmerman's review: "Disappointing -- a potted version of modern financial history. No unique sources or perspectives."
PublicAffairs (2008), Hardcover, 256 pages

Isaac Asimov: The Complete Stories, Vol. 1 by Isaac Asimov

wfzimmerman's review: "A Valentine's present from Cheryl, very much appreciated. I started with re-reading "Nightfall...""
Broadway (1990), Edition: 1st ed, Paperback, 624 pages