Thinking Beyond A (Mere) Book Launch

This is part of the Bittersweet Book Launch case study, where Dan Blank and Miranda Beverly-Whittemore share the yearlong process of launching her novel. You can view all posts here.


I usually make a big distinction between the idea of a platform for an author, and publicity and marketing for a specific book. In other words: I care less about someone giving you $12 for a product (in this case a book), and more about the connections that happen before/during/after that transaction that truly makes our lives more interesting.

So in her last post, Miranda touched upon this, that here we are nearly a year before the book launch of Bittersweet, and we are already thinking BEYOND the book. Like, what will all of this mean in 2 or 3 or 4 years? Now THAT is what I am interested in.

Too often, I think we focus on the wrong thing. A bestseller list or book sales comes to REPRESENT the things we really hope for, and over time, REPLACE those things.

So yes, I do hope that Bittersweet is widely read, well reviewed, and becomes a bestseller. But I’m also not pretending that those are THE goals. They are a means to an end: enabling Miranda to most powerfully connect with others based on stories, and the things underlying those stories and human connections. And of course, to ensure all of this is sustainable.

-Dan

The Emotions Underlying Friend Stories

This is part of the Bittersweet Book Launch case study, where Dan Blank and Miranda Beverly-Whittemore share the yearlong process of launching her novel. You can view all posts here.


by Miranda Beverly-Whittemore

As I mentioned before, I’ve been writing short pieces about my own girlhood friendships as a way to get closer to what the Friendstories project wants to be. My intention is that in writing about the best friends I had as a girl, I’ll be able to define the parameters of the project organically, and connect emotionally to the highs and lows of those particular relationships. I moved a lot as a kid, so I estimate I’ll be able to write about twenty of these, give or take; the experiences of those friendships run the gamut of funny to heartbreaking. I’ll use these twenty short pieces to provide examples to the early folks I’ll approach to contribute to the project, and, ultimately, on the website.

When I spoke to Dan a couple weeks ago about the Friendstories project, he asked me to talk again about how it connected, specifically, to Bittersweet. Bittersweet begins with a girl friendship—that of dowdy, bookish Mabel and glamorous, wealthy Ev; Mabel’s admiration of (and use for) Ev, and vice versa, is the backbone that holds up the rest of the novel. Many women who have either read or heard about Bittersweet have preemptively shared anecdotes about their own girlhood friendships. But what is it about asking others to explore their girlhood friendships that I believe will help promote my book? Of course, that’s not all that Friendstories has to do—I am also building my own brand, distinct from Bittersweet, and I want to create a community that stands on its own two feet. But it is worth asking myself that question again and again as I go on: how does Friendstories connect to Bittersweet?

Perhaps the answer lies in my own experience writing about S., my best friend and neighbor during my fourth and fifth grade years. Our friendship burned out fast and furiously, and perhaps because I moved right afterwards, it was buried deep. But in trying to write about her, I realized the memory of her—and the moment that ended our friendship—still touched a raw nerve. Some friendships burn out long and slow, but this was like quickfire, and it blindsided me. As I wrote about it, almost thirty years after the fact, I found my heart racing, my eyes filling with tears, my hands shaking on the keyboard.

That—right there—is how the Friendstories project connects to my novel. In writing Bittersweet, I have thought consistently about the honest emotion at the heart of Mabel and Ev’s murky friendship. They are each, from one minute to the next, competitive, loving, self-serving, needy, dishonest, loyal, generous, selfish; in a word, they are as close to human as I can make them. I believe that by inviting people to engage in true stories about friendships—both their own, and each others’—I will be building a readership base for Bittersweet that draws on something particularly deep in each of us, the expertise of friends we have loved, and lost, the nostalgia for that era in our lives when who we are is often defined by who we know. I love the idea of engaging future readers on that level.

On Redefining “Work”

This is part of the Bittersweet Book Launch case study, where Dan Blank and Miranda Beverly-Whittemore share the yearlong process of launching her novel. You can view all posts here.


by Miranda Beverly-Whittemore

Since turning in (what I hope will be) the penultimate draft of Bittersweet to my editor on June 21st, I’ve been up at my family’s cabin in Vermont. Not only is it a beautiful, lakefront retreat, it’s the only house that has remained constant since I was a child; for those, and many other reasons, I’m blessed to call it one of my favorite places on earth. And it also just happens to be the setting I borrowed for Bittersweet; all the people are products of my imagination, but the landscape rings true.
Before I knew I’d be spending most of June working on my novel revision, I had imagined that at least the first week of my time up here (before my son and husband and nieces and sister arrived) would be all about work: on the next book I’m sketching out, as well as this blog and the Friendstories project. I also planned to spend some time thinking about the big picture; what do I want my next year to look like for my career? what do I want to write next? What are some of the broad decisions I need to make vis a vis promoting Bittersweet? Etc.
By last Wednesday, when I had done far less strategizing and writing than I’d originally hoped, I felt profoundly frustrated at myself. Family was coming soon! I was spending far too much time staring out at the lake! But my frustrations were only making it harder to think creatively. Here, in no particular order, are a few realizations I came to when I decided to let myself off the hook a bit:

1) The month before this retreat was all about product—getting the revision on Bittersweet tighter and better and stronger. I questioned every thought, sentence and word in that book, knowing I’d probably just end up doing the same thing all over again once I’ve gotten my next set of notes. In contrast to the precision of this kind of production, process is much harder to quantify. But that doesn’t mean it’s not as important. It’s just much, much harder to see fifteen hours of thinking (daydreaming, scheming) than fifteen hours of sentence polishing.

2) Exhaustion does not allow for great creative work. But this truth is hard to identify when you’re experiencing it. Another way of saying this: sometimes downtime is just necessary, especially when your brain is involved.

3) Beating yourself up about not being productive is a sure way to guarantee you won’t be productive.

And you know what? With a little more perspective, I realize I actually have been productive, because I started this blog, and I did do some of the thinking I had planned, and I got some real recharging in, and, most important of all, I read all of Bittersweet aloud, which is (I found) a fantastic way to hear all the nitty gritty of what I want to change on the level of the sentence. Not to mention that I got to read all of Bittersweet aloud to my mother, who is a wonderful writer in her own right (not to mention a phenomenal support), in the place which inspired Bittersweet.

All in all, not so bad a retreat after all.

“I Don’t Want To Lose Myself In This Process…”

This is part of the Bittersweet Book Launch case study, where Dan Blank and Miranda Beverly-Whittemore share the yearlong process of launching her novel. You can view all posts here.


“I don’t want to lose myself in this process…” that is basically what Miranda said to me on her last call as we were auditing her existing author platform.

We have been reviewing her existing online presence, including a website that hasn’t been updated in ages, and a Twitter account that doesn’t even mention her first name. These are the small details that get overlooked for YEARS, but reflect cracks that are easily fixed.

As we look at the scope of her entire life as a writer, all of the extensions of it online and off, all of those “best practices” authors are told about marketing, and even how we describe our work… this naturally leads to a fear that you don’t want to lose:

  • Who you are, as a person.
  • The pure magical center of why you write and what your writing is.

These are often the reasons writers eschew digging into developing their platforms, or exploring the marketing and business sides of their writing life.

As I approach all of this with Miranda, to develop a platform that is both strategic and meaningful, we will be balancing two things:

  1. Crafting a human presence for herself, and the connection to readers.
  2. Understanding how to most effectively communicate what her work is, and why she writes.

Sure, that’s a delicate balance. Just as any craft is, which has been the driving mantra for my work: Platform Is Craft.
🙂

-Dan

Brainstorming Friendstories

This is part of the Bittersweet Book Launch case study, where Dan Blank and Miranda Beverly-Whittemore share the yearlong process of launching her novel. You can view all posts here.


by Miranda Beverly-Whittemore

I’ve never built an online project from the ground up. I’ve written novels, and yes, from the outset those always seem as though they will be infinitely difficult to accomplish (which is an accurate assessment of the novel-writing process), but at least I know what the end product should look like. This Friend Stories project is invigorating to imagine but also intimidating, mainly because I’m not even sure where it will want to go, who it will involve and engage, and how those who it engages will make the space their own.

Maybe the short way of saying this is novelist = control freak, and communal blog = control freak’s worst nightmare.

And maybe I’m being just a tad dramatic.

I realize that one way to keep my nervousness at bay is to think small, just as I do when I’m writing a novel. It’s the small blocks that (eventually) build something mighty. So I’ve started to think along these lines:

How long do I want each friend story to be? How should the friend stories be organized? What should the guidelines be to help each storyteller focus her story to what it wants to be? What kind of prompts should I provide to help each storyteller come to tell a story of her best friendship from girlhood?

There are a myriad of other unknowns, from design to submission process to editorial style, and I’m dipping my toe into those too. But for now, I think the best way to start to answer the questions I’ve listed above is to start to write my own friend stories. So back to the grindstone…