Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Libraries are amazing!
Posting on an author's announcement that you can't wait to get the book from the library is a bit tacky. Like posting on a movie theater's announcement about a new movie "I can't wait until I can get this on a streaming service." Nothing wrong with DOING that, but perhaps that wasn't the compliment you thought it was.
Wth this is a bad take. Not everyone has disposable income (or not enough disposable income to buy all the books we potentially want to read).
Back when Twitter was real, I think Neil Gaiman tweeted about how much he appreciates his books being checked out from the library.
Anonymous wrote:Libraries are amazing!
Posting on an author's announcement that you can't wait to get the book from the library is a bit tacky. Like posting on a movie theater's announcement about a new movie "I can't wait until I can get this on a streaming service." Nothing wrong with DOING that, but perhaps that wasn't the compliment you thought it was.
<-- Exactly.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Authors make a living by selling their books for money.
You told an author you would read the fruit of their labors for free without giving them money.
That was terribly rude of you. Authors know that people use libraries all the time, or borrow from their friends, but you do not TELL THE AUTHOR THAT!
I mean, even my socially-challenged autistic teen knows not to step in it like this. This goes beyond a metal health disorder.
I hope you're a troll.
PS: libraries are not tacky.
Libraries buy books.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed, I wouldn't go on an author's social media and say you are waiting for your library hold. Authors are far more dependent on actual retail sales rather than how many books libraries buy.
I would just say you're looking forward to reading. Then wait for it to come in at the library.
I disagree. Libraries are wonderful resources and there’s nothing wrong with waiting for the book for the library and nothing wrong with saying so.
Anonymous wrote:
Authors make a living by selling their books for money.
You told an author you would read the fruit of their labors for free without giving them money.
That was terribly rude of you. Authors know that people use libraries all the time, or borrow from their friends, but you do not TELL THE AUTHOR THAT!
I mean, even my socially-challenged autistic teen knows not to step in it like this. This goes beyond a metal health disorder.
I hope you're a troll.
PS: libraries are not tacky.
Anonymous wrote:Also, in case there are folks who don't know, you can always request that your library purchase a particular book that they don't already have. That's a great way to drive attention to an author (even a--gasp!--z-list author like someone mentioned above).
I did this recently with a fairly new cookbook author whose book was getting a bunch of attention in social media circles, but my major regional library system (Prince George's County) didn't have the book. I requested it, they ordered it, it showed up about a month later, and then it was checked out twice in a row before I could get my hands on it!
Anonymous wrote:Authors usually love libraries the most.
It's tacky to not like libraries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, in case there are folks who don't know, you can always request that your library purchase a particular book that they don't already have. That's a great way to drive attention to an author (even a--gasp!--z-list author like someone mentioned above).
I did this recently with a fairly new cookbook author whose book was getting a bunch of attention in social media circles, but my major regional library system (Prince George's County) didn't have the book. I requested it, they ordered it, it showed up about a month later, and then it was checked out twice in a row before I could get my hands on it!
Another reason why people don't understand how libraries work. Many people buy other books from an author they enjoyed reading through the library, or from word of mouth based of a book someone read at a library. It's advertising.
Anonymous wrote:Ha!! Just shows that those folks know nothing about publishing! Authors love library adoptions! Authors outside the NYT Bestseller lists make most of their money from library adoptions. And checking out the library's copy of a book (whether ebook or physical book) might inspire the library to buy more copies of that book or future books.
But buying the book is also good. Making fun of people for how they get books is not good.
Anonymous wrote:Also, in case there are folks who don't know, you can always request that your library purchase a particular book that they don't already have. That's a great way to drive attention to an author (even a--gasp!--z-list author like someone mentioned above).
I did this recently with a fairly new cookbook author whose book was getting a bunch of attention in social media circles, but my major regional library system (Prince George's County) didn't have the book. I requested it, they ordered it, it showed up about a month later, and then it was checked out twice in a row before I could get my hands on it!
Anonymous wrote:Also, in case there are folks who don't know, you can always request that your library purchase a particular book that they don't already have. That's a great way to drive attention to an author (even a--gasp!--z-list author like someone mentioned above).
I did this recently with a fairly new cookbook author whose book was getting a bunch of attention in social media circles, but my major regional library system (Prince George's County) didn't have the book. I requested it, they ordered it, it showed up about a month later, and then it was checked out twice in a row before I could get my hands on it!