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In June, 2007, I launched my first novel,
Annabel, Again. My publisher helped out by printing invitations
and giving some general advice, but the rest was up to me. Given the
expense, and the organising, I hemmed and hawed for a long time over
whether it was worth it. It was! Here are some tips and notes I wrote
for the children's writers' newsletter
Pass It On.
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"Launching Yourself (or, what I learned at my DIY launch so you don't
have to)"
1. Advance
Planning
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Have a range of possible dates and look into any
other events that might be on around the same time. If there’s a
festival or similar event, you may be able to piggyback your launch
on this, sharing costs and publicity. On the other side of the coin,
you might end up clashing with another launch or important
book-related event that will affect turnout to yours.
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Work out what you want from your launch. There’s
symbolic value, a kind of punctuation, in a first-novel launch,
drawing a line of sorts between your pre-published life and your
sparkling new career (heckling to a minimum, please!), but it can
also serve a number of important functions. I wasn’t able to make
any decisions with regard to who/what/when/where/how until I’d
worked out what those were for me. In my case, the goals were:
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Celebrate the book! Mark the occasion with
friends, family and colleagues. Kick back and grin. Say
‘huzzah’.
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Show my face. As a first-time author with a
well-developed inner hermit, I didn’t really know anyone in the
industry, and no-one knew me. I needed to raise my profile, let
people know who I was and what I was about.
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Let your goals determine the logistics. Once I knew
why I was doing this, I was able to make decisions
about how. Since the celebration element came first for
me, I chose a venue that had a relaxed ambience – a live-music venue
in downtown Fremantle, rather than somewhere more formal like a
bookstore or library. I’ll probably go with something like this for
subsequent launches, but for the first one, I wanted wood floors,
overstuffed couches, and a bar in the corner. I also weighted my
guest-list very heavily towards friends, family and writer-buddies,
with just a sprinkling of industry movers and shakers. That was the
right balance this time around, but next time, I imagine things will
skew the other way (call me, movers and shakers! We’ll do lunch!).
2. Logistics
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If you’re serving food, organise friends/family to
help. Don’t imagine you will manage this yourself and that it will
be a handy way of getting around to talk to people. If things go
well, you will be stuck in a corner all night signing books and
never even see a slice of the gourmet pizza you so carefully chose.
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When the gourmet pizza guy tells you no problem,
he’ll deliver, just for you, darling, because it’s such a
special event, get it in writing. That way your husband and
chief person-in-charge-of-everything-else won’t have to rush out at
the last minute, leaving you trying to serve food, sign books, give
out drink tickets and conduct intelligent book-related conversations
with movers and shakers.
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Enlist a few people to take photos for you. You will
be unable to find your camera or remember how to work it. At any
rate, your hands will shake so hard that any photos will be
irretrievably ‘arty’, their subjects unrecognisable blurs.
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Do not put your nine-year-old daughter in charge of
handing out ‘one per customer’ drink tickets. At least not for more
than five minutes. At minute six, her attention will be diverted by
shiny gew-gaws and she will leave the tickets on a table where they
may be peeled off and exploited at will by gleeful friends. At some
point, one of your friends may attempt to trade them as currency.
It’s all in good fun!
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Take the pen you most like to write with as a signing
pen. Make it a pen which does not require a firm grip and a lot of
pressure. You will be signing for a long time. You will wish you had
heeded the admonitions of your third-grade teacher to grasp
the pen loosely, as you would a delicate flower. When you later
find fingernail semi-circles etched into the palm of your hand, you
will have no-one but yourself to blame.
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Plan a few pithy sayings with which you can
personalise front-of-book messages. Relate them to your book if you
can. For Annabel, I ranged from, ‘Always be on the
look-out for secret tortoises’ to ‘Remember to never, ever listen to
your mother’.
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Prepare a defence of said pithy lines that will
assist you in fielding next-day phone calls from irate and largely
humourless mothers.
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Decide in advance how you are going to sign your
name. I am told you should not sign with your credit card signature.
Given the behaviour of certain friends with the drinks tickets, I
believe this is sound advice.
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Stay up late the night before making book-based
activities for a kids’ table. Think long and hard about placement
and set-up of said table. You are well-prepared. You are a
children’s writer, in perfect step with the needs and interests of
your audience.
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Watch kids run around the balcony all night; pack
away kids’ table and console yourself that the activities will come
in handy for school visits.
3. Random Musings
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Low lighting is excellent for atmosphere and very bad
for photographs.
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Digital cameras are evil. They enable people of
questionable loyalty to you to take lots of photos in rapid
succession, making it harder for you to denounce unflattering shots
as the work of a bad angle, an awkward moment. The evidence will be
incontrovertible, your protestations rudely mocked.
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Digital cameras do not click loudly enough. Clicks
are the universal code for ‘photos being taken. Arrange features
suitably.’ Writing this, it occurs to me that I am old.
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If you throw your arms back hard-arch-style to make
an obscure skydiving metaphor during your speech, you will look
remarkably like a television evangelist. One hundred and
twenty-seven poorly lit, unflattering photographs will be circulated
amongst your friends to confirm this (see below).

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First-book launches are marvellous. If you’re
thinking it’s a lot of hassle, you’re right. If you’re thinking it
probably isn’t worth it, you’re wrong. At least that’s what I
reckon.
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Second-book launch musings to follow, May 2008. See
you there!
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