Wednesday, September 9, 2020
Authors And Book Donations A Tricky
I seriously debated posting this, since itâs a subject not often discussed. But heck, Iâm known for my honestly, so letâs giddy-up⦠How do authors handle being asked to donate individual book(s) to worthy causes? Honestly, theyâre all worthy, but letâs shed some light on an aspect of publishing most people donât realize: authors DO NOT get their books for free. Oh yes, we receive author copies, but a very limited number which are for our own collection or have already been promised to family and close friends. My author copies for THE MONSTORE were gone the week they arrived. I donât have any more. If I want my book, I have to buy it. This holds true for all authors. While we did write the book, the publisher edited it, printed it, warehoused it, marketed it and distributed it. And that costs money. Someone has to pay for it! Authors do receive a discount off the retail price, but itâs not a staggering discount. And, the copies we order this way are recorded as âauthor copiesâ and donât count toward our sales figures. And if you ask any author, if the Publishing Fairy could grant their most favoritest wish, it would be for higher sales figures. So if weâre going to buy our own books, we tend to buy them like any other consumer wouldâ"online or at a book store, wherever we might get the best price. Now letâs circle back to donations. When someone asks an author to donate their book to a school fundraiser, church tricky-tray or Elkâs basket auction, itâs not free to that author. True, the author might ask their publisher to donate the book on their behalf if itâs a really well-known cause, but otherwise, a small, local organizationâs fundraiser is not going to sway the publisher. So then the author must decide if they can spend about $15 to donate their book to the cause (the cost of a picture book, plus shipping, plus any SWAG). Imagine an author gets about five of these requests a month. Thatâs not an unreasonable number, especially if they have multiple books in print. If the author generously says âyesâ to all requests, thatâs $75 a month. Multiply by 12 months and itâs $900. Thatâs not an insignificant
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