By Lindsey P. Brackett
There’s nothing quite like a small southern bookseller.
Often these cozy shops are tucked away in unexpected places.
Like any good bookstore, you’ll find teetering stacks of trade-in paperbacks
and the bookstore cat lounging atop the most recent display of bestsellers.
I’m convinced these creatures are waiting for the crawdads
to sing so they can pounce.
As an author with a small publisher, I’ve learned the best way
to get my book onto a shelf in a real bookstore is to simply ask, in person if
possible. Homemade treats make the request even sweeter. These owners usually
aren’t in the business for the money (are any of us?) and when an author comes
to visit, they’re happy to hear all about your story.
Less the one you’ve written and more the one you’re living
I’ve also found.
The local shop owner at Edisto Beach wants to know why I
write about this barrier island where there are no high-rise hotels or
putt-putt courses. These reasons and my family history are precisely why I
write about Edisto. She tells her regular customers, the ones she knows never
miss a Sunday in their pew, they’ll probably like my books because I go to
church, too.
She didn’t learn that from reading my books but from the
conversation we had one late Friday afternoon as a book signing wound down and
customers dwindled.
In my current hometown, our local bookstore is perfectly
categorized by the sign out front. “Inside, books. Outside, bears (maybe). Why
risk it?”
I’ve lived here for three years but haven’t yet made it over
to this store. For some reason, I had more fear about walking into the Mt.
Yonah Book Exchange then I did Fiction Addiction in Greenville, SC. When I finally
popped in the other week—after giving up that I would ever find the right time
in which I would be dressed in something other than workout clothes—the owner
laughed when I introduced myself. She knew how I was, told me people ask about
my books all time. She’d have ordered them long ago if she knew where she could
get them.
And I was left to wonder how many sales I’ve now lost
because I didn’t place enough value on the might of this small bookseller.
My books are on her shelf now, and I’m inclined to believe
they’ll be seen by more customers trickling through her bookstore than the ones
clicking by on the Internet.
After all, in the bookstore, the only distraction is more
books—and the cat who wants to know what you’ll be reading next.
Tips for working with booksellers:
·
Bring swag: bookmarks, postcards, sell sheets
with information on your book including ISBN and where to order.
·
Make a purchase.
·
Offer an ARC or influencer copy.
·
Don’t forget the treats!
·
Use your southern charm. We all know you sell more
books with honey.
Find my newest novel on the shelf at these southern
booksellers: Mt. Yonah Book
Exchange (Cleveland, GA), Books
with A’Peal (Cornelia, GA), Fiction
Addiction (Greenville, SC), and the Edisto
Island Bookstore (Edisto Island, SC).
I’m always up for a bookstore visit! Email me:
lindsbrac@gmail.com.
Lindsey P. Brackett writes southern fiction infused with her rural Georgia upbringing
and Lowcountry roots. Her debut novel, Still
Waters, inspired by family summers at Edisto
Beach, released in 2017. Called “a brilliant debut” with “exquisite writing,” Still Waters
was named an INSPY finalist and the 2018 Selah Book of the Year. Her second
novel, The Bridge
Between, released July 31, 2019. Download Magnolia Mistletoe with newsletter signup at lindseypbrackett.com or on Instagram
and Facebook: @lindseypbrackett.
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