Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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Because people have asked: Where To Buy My New Book.

Okay, I want to lead off here by saying thank you. Thank you for caring about where book sales will be best for me, thank you for wanting to buy my books, and thank you for asking. I am so excited about Discount Armageddon, and I really want it to do well. I also want to note that I am making this post because I was asked, not because I'm trying to tell you "buy it like I want you to or it's butts to you, sir." Honestly, as long as you buy the book, I'm happy.

That said, here are the best ways to get a copy of Discount Armageddon while also helping my week one sales:

1. Do not buy the book until March 6th. If you see a copy on a shelf somewhere early, don't pick it up. Wait until the actual release date, because that's when sales will start to count against my first week. Anything before then will count toward my overall sales, but will vanish into the ether when it comes to calculating best seller lists. I know, it's weird.

2. Buy brick and mortar. If you possibly can, walk into a bookstore and take a copy off the shelf. Not sure your local store is going to carry it? Now would be the time to contact them and remind them that you'll be wanting to buy, since this way, they have time to place an order (they won't if you come in the day before release). There are a lot of reasons for this, but the two big ones are a) if they sell, they re-order, and that's good for me, and b) most brick and mortar stores report to the NYT list. And I'd love to get onto the list again.

3. If you need to order on the internet, consider Borderlands Books (physical only). Borderlands is my local store; they take international orders, as well as orders within the United States; I will be dropping by on release day to sign books for them, so you can not only get a copy of your very own, you can get it signed. That doubles the awesome factor, and makes up for needing to wait for the postal mail to reach you, right? Plus, well. My book events are big and chaotic, so I like driving business their way. Again, sooner is better than later, as they're going to be hosting my book release party, and need to know how many copies to get.

4. All eBooks are created equal. Sadly, right now, electronic and internet sales don't count against the NYT list, which is why this comes in so far down that list. That said, a sale is a sale, and my royalty rate is the same for all electronic editions, everywhere. So buy from whatever retailer best suits you, in whatever format best suits you.

5. Buy the book. This is the most important thing. My sales, especially in the first week, will tell my publisher what kind of a market they're looking at for the adventures of Verity and company. So please, if you can, buy the book. I want to stay in this world for a long, long time to come.

Thank you.
Tags: common questions, discount armageddon, incryptid
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  • 55 comments
Thanks for letting me know that ebooks don't count towards the NYT list. Fuck a duck, that's inconvenient.
It really is, and that's why, at the end of the day, you should remember that all sales count toward me earning out. If you prefer ebooks, go ebook. You having and enjoying the book is more important than me making the list, no matter how much I'd like to.
Ebooks have enough other problems that this might tip me over towards paper books in many cases, though. Chief among them is that I can't buy an ebook from my local book store, and I'd rather they have money than Amazon, B&N or Google.
Yeah--I wish it was possible to go into a brick-and-mortar store and buy it in electrons. They could have a kiosk or something where you hook up your own SD card or thumb drive, if they really want a physical connection.

Sigh.

Well, I will work something out. Going into Knoxville is a fun thing to do now and then for its own sake.
If you go through Indiebound.com, your local independent may be able to get credit. They're connected to Google Books. I know my local bookstore gets credit if I order an ebook through IndieBound.
Ooooh! Thank you soooo much for this! I will pass this information on to local retailers here if they don't already know.
Anytime! My local independent mentioned it when they were interviewed for the paper, and I thought it was pretty cool.
Some indies can partner with google directly for ebooks - I know nothing about the details, but my local store sells them through their web page - if they want an example, see http://www.avidreaderbooks.com/
... why wouldn't that be factored in 0.o You would think it would benefit the publishers if they did. I already pre-ordered Discount Armageddon for my Kindle (I REALLY want technology that lets me buy ebooks from independent bookstores :( I heard Google talking about it last year but no news) but I think I'll buy the physical copy at University Bookstore (Seattle)... I like having both anyway (and I pay for both... which is insane considering how little money I make but it's not like I buy much else)
The publishers don't control the list; the New York Times does, and they get to set the standards. Appearing on the list is a huge boost for an author, and a benefit to the publisher, but that's part of why the publishers don't get to control it—there'd be too much conflict of interest.

In other news, <3
Thanks for letting me know that ebooks don't count towards the NYT list. Fuck a duck, that's inconvenient.

It’s also no longer true; it was, but the NYT now counts ebook sales. Ebook sales do count toward the NYT combined list. They have separate categories for ebooks & print books, but they now lead with the “combined” list. Ebook sales count; they are not yet weighted by seller. (Weighted means: NYT samples data from a selection of general interest brick and mortar stores, and they assign the numbers received a “weight” per store/venue. So 100 copies from one store is not equivalent, for determining list positioning, as 100 copies from a different store).

Courtney Milan hit the NYT top 10 combined list by sales of her ebook-only novella. Until she self-published that ebook, she was off the top ten radar, but the novella was in the top 10 at amazon for weeks. As in, top 10 numerically of all books sold, not just romance.

So going forward, ebook sales do count in some fashion toward the NYT sales list.
I just took a look at the lists, and it is so cool, seeing the different lists for different media ( at least, for a data geek like me). Thanks for pointing this out. :)
I just took a look at the lists, and it is so cool, seeing the different lists for different media ( at least, for a data geek like me). Thanks for pointing this out. :)

You’re very welcome :).

Ebook sales, at one point, did not count toward the NYT list. I’ve seen some people assume that when authors say “ebook sales don’t count”, they’re deliberately trying to tank ebook sales, and I know Seanan is not trying to do that. I don’t think any of the authors are, fwiw - they’re relaying information that was entirely true, but has since changed.

We were told ebook sales didn’t count, and when we were told this, it was true. So sales “lost” to first week ebooks had a disproportionate affect on the genres for which ebook adopters are higher. (Romance would be the most heavily affected). Since the placement on the NYT list is relative, not absolute - i.e. you can be #1 selling 800k copies or #1 selling 200k copies - it depends entirely on the rest of the field’s popularity--it did make a difference.

But at this point, now that they’ve begun to merge them into a combined list, I don’t think it does, and Courtney Milan’s placement on the combined list certainly caught attention off of it.

Really? That's fantastic!

Do Amazon physical sales count yet, or are they still a non-reporting market? If they don't report physical, do they report virtual, or are we only looking at non-Amazon electronic sales?