Some people are comfortable with public displays of
affection, some believe such behaviour is too personal to share. Keev and I
walk hand-in-hand, we lightly plant kisses, and we sit at the theatre with my
hand nested snugly in his on his lap. So, moderate PDA on our part, but we are
not offended by more effusive displays. I’ve seen anger erupt in public, and
that is far more disturbing than any PDA will ever be.
My YA novel has been out in the wild for five weeks. I
have no idea how sales are going and will not know until my royalty cheque,
based on percentage of sales, comes in. The first quarter ended yesterday, but
it will not be telling since it has not been out in the universe very long. From
what I understand, third party payments (e.g. Amazon, Chapters, etc.) take time
to come in, so will probably not make this first cheque. Not that any of that
matters, but sales are part of the equation of writing for me now and I look at
ways to increase them. Which has me pondering book reviews, which are proven to
boost sales.
As of this morning, Cutting
to the Chase has only been reviewed by one person on Amazon.com, one person
on Amazon.ca and no one at Chapters-Indigo. The insecure writer in me would
panic were it not for the emails and messages people have taken the time to write.
Without those, I would be in a fetal position sucking my thumb. So, thank you
for the wonderful words of support, for sharing your favourite parts, quotes,
and real-life stories that connect to the novel’s content.
I have tried to encourage review writing, not to
individuals as that is presumptuous and invasive, but by sharing how the algorithms
work on the online book sites. I certainly did not know how it worked before
getting into this process, only finding out about it a year or so ago. I read a
fair bit and it didn’t cross my mind that what I had to say might be important
to an author. I now make the effort to do so—and it is effort. Most of us spend
too much time online as it is. Heading off to a book site to leave a review is
one more thing to do in busy lives. It is why I cannot urge individuals to do
it. What right do I have to impinge on their time? I mean, they’ve already put
out money to buy the book and taken the time to read it. Without a doubt, that is enough.
Yet I continue to ponder sales and reviews and how to
generate both. In reflecting on reviews I have written, I realize that I have a
caveat. I will only review books I absolutely enjoyed. There is nothing wrong
with a three or four-star rating, absolutely nothing—good and very good.
Despite knowing that, if I can’t give it a five star, I tend not to review it
at all.
This all-or-nothing mentality is what led me to
thinking of PDA, and how it’s such an individual, personal choice. I’m
comfortable publicly showing affection for books I love, but am much more
reserved when it comes to books I liked. And that’s okay. Okay for me and okay
for my readers.