Today's
guest blogger is James Craig who was born in Scotland. A former
journalist
and TV producer he has lived in London for over 30 years. He is the
author(so far) of two books in the John Carlyle series. His character
owes much
to two Italian police detectives Venetian Guido Brunetti and Sicilian
Salvo Montalbano. He talks about launching a new detective
series, marketing and e-books.
February sees the formal launch of the paperback version of Never Apologise, Never Explain. The
digital edition of the book has already been on sale since Christmas.
Increasingly, digital considerations are dominating the production and
marketing schedules. With Amazon selling 4 million kindles in December
that is not really so surprising.
James Craig |
In terms of the book itself, the plot
revolves around the killing of an elderly woman called Agatha Mills. It
looks like a simple domestic argument gone too far; there is only one
suspect – her husband Henry. For Inspector John Carlyle, it
looks like welcome a chance for a quick win. But, much to the
Inspector’s annoyance, Henry refuses to confess. Worse, he
comes up with an alternative version of events that is almost
impossible to investigate. When a distraught Henry kills himself on the
way to prison, doubts begin to surface. Slowly, Carlyle has to face up
to the fact that the man may just have been telling the truth.
The trail leads all the way back to the
murder of a Catholic priest on the other side of the world and a
family’s forty-year fight for justice. Carlyle sets off on an
investigation that spirals out of control as he uncovers a killer
stalking the streets of London. How much more blood will have to be
spilt before the past can be put to rest?
So
far, so good.
But
are people reading it on their shiny new Kindles? Happily, yes.
What we’re selling here is
contemporary crime fiction; Carlyle is a new character from a new crime
writer so it aims to do what it says on the tin, if a potential reader
checks it out and reads it on the basis of the blurb at the back the
hope is that they won’t feel short-changed.Even
better, they will like it enough to check out the next one.
Never
Apologise, Never Explain is
the second in a series featuring Inspector John Carlyle, working out of
Charing Cross police station in central London. The first book,
“London Calling”,
was published in 2011.
I don’t know the precise
numbers but, overall, the vast majority of my sales are digital.
Is that an issue? No.
How people consume the novel matters
not a jot – you have to get the product (the book) to people
in the way they want it. If you can do that, then it’s a
question of getting the pricing right to that everyone – in
no particular order the vendor, the publisher, my agent, my SEO guy and
me - is kept happy.
The e-book edition ofLondon
Callingwas
published ahead of the paperback edition in June last year. This was
about profile-raising as well as
sales. When it reached #1 on the kindle chart (for an hour!) the
strapline “the No.1
e-book bestseller” was
added to the paperback before that went on sale August.
The Kindle launch was the (very good)
idea of Rob Nichols, the Marketing & Digital at my publisher,
Constable & Robinson. The other smart thing that he did was
price it at a quid, so that it would be competitive with other titles
hovering around the top of the kindle lists.
Another great thing that Rob did was
hook me up with Chris McVeigh at 451. Chris is a publishing and a
social media expert and he has been driving the online marketing for
both the first and second books.
It is an interesting time to be a
new(ish) writer in the publishing business – the world is
clearly changing, so my complete lack of experience is not necessarily
as much of a handicap as it might previously have been. I have been
extremely lucky to hook up with people who understand both the old and
new worlds and are hugely enthusiastic and innovative.
I have stirred the pot occasionally,
with book competitions on Twitter and promo videos to provide some more
content. However, I would say that all of the success on kindle has
been down to Rob and Chris. Rob had the foresight to try it and is
constantly working on the marketing. And Chris has the skills and
experience to make the most of what C&R are doing.
The key thing remains to get the books
out there and get some awareness and reaction. As you can see from the
Amazon reviews to London
Calling, not everyone is going
to love it but, ultimately, there's no such thing as bad publicity.
So far, the whole thing has worked
quite well. For the first couple of days, you get addicted to rankings
(it’s gone up to 56, hooray!; shit, it’s down to
82, what’s going on?) then you kind of settle down into
making sure you engage with the potential readership and make sure that
people who are reading similar titles get to know about your book.
In the first month, we sold 15,000
copies ofLondon
Callingon
Kindle. This gets you in front of the trade as well as the reader. It
gave book buyers a certain level of comfort as they calculated their
advance orders. It also helped sell the rights for the first two books
in Germany – the German translation of London Calling will
be published in May.
Like others, we are seeing that if you
can demonstrate good sales figures more deals will follow.
So, what next? The plan remains to make
sure that we try and put in the right effort in the right places at the
right time. Rob got Never
Apologise, Never Explain into
Amazon’s Christmas promotion and when it went into the top
100, London
Calling followed
it back in.
Digital is also impacting the print
publication strategy, leading to shorter time gaps between titles. Book
number three, Buckingham Palace Blues, which has Carlyle hunting down
child traffickers, should be out later in the year. Number four should
be out next year.
The online world never stops. Better
stop surfing and get writing.
Find
out more at
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