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Plug Your Book!  
   97
Social networking
When 24-year-old Steven Oliverez finished writing his debut fantasy
novel, he faced the same predicament as most new authors. He wanted
to sell the manuscript, but couldn’t get a single publisher to read it, let
alone buy it. He spent two years writing query letters, and all he got was
a stack of form-letter rejections.
So Oliverez decided to self-publish and promote the book himself.
Fortunately, he wasn’t starting from scratch. He’d been active on the
wildly popular social site MySpace, networking with other fantasy
readers and authors. On his MySpace blog, he’d given away seven of his
short stories to anyone willing to read them. His stories prompted
hundreds of enthusiastic comments and attracted thousands of MySpace
“friends.”
So when Oliverez published Elder Staves in 2005, he asked for a
little help from his MySpace friends. He asked them to buy the book on
Amazon, and they did—pushing it to No. 25 on the fantasy bestseller list.
Then Oliverez started getting messages from book clubs around the
country, asking if he’d make phone-in appearances. After that came
some write-ups in publishing trade magazines. Few tools can attract and
bind an audience than a network like MySpace, Oliverez says:
Buzz creates more buzz. Since there’s no marketing
or publishing company behind the book, it really helps
to be online, able to connect with readers directly.
Being on MySpace makes you seem more approachable,
and that makes it a great tool for authors.
Next Oliverez printed 30,000 personalized bookmarks, and asked
his MySpace friends to pass them out at bookstores and coffee shops.
Immediately he got a few dozen volunteers. Then Oliverez found more
MySpace friends by joining several of its “groups” for authors and
fiction-writing.

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