How to Write an Effective Book Description
One
of the most crucial elements to selling a book is also probably the
most difficult element to create for authors. The book description is
your lead in, your chance to hook a reader and get them to crack the
cover and satisfy their curiosity. Even in an online environment, the
book description can bridge the gap between having just another title
among a sea of choices and a sellable book worth reading.
The
problem is that many authors have a hard time writing a good book
description. The main reason it can prove so difficult is because they
don't want to leave anything out. As the creator of the material,
there's a natural instinct to find a way to cram all or as much of that
material into the description. But too many details can render your
description confusing and ineffective.
Elements of the Book Description
As
someone who has failed and triumphed over book descriptions, here is
what I have learned through my personal series of trial and error. Call
them rules, suggestions or ramblings of an author gone mad, but I've
collected these tips by observing and consulting with other authors,
both self-published and traditionally published.
Those
are my five main points when it comes to writing a book description.
Another good practice when writing your book description is to read as
many book descriptions in your genre as possible. It's a great way to
figure out what the industry standard is. These descriptions become
industry standards for one reason: they sell books.
Here's an example of a book description that I believe gets it right. It's for Gil Adamson's novel, The Outlander, published by Harper Collins in 2007.
In
1903 Mary Boulton flees alone across the West, one heart-pounding step
ahead of the law. At nineteen, she has just become a widow-and her
husband's killer. As bloodhounds track her frantic race toward the
mountains, she is tormented by mad visions and by the knowledge that her
two ruthless brothers-in-law are in pursuit, determined to avenge their
younger brother's death. Responding to little more than the primitive
instinct for survival at any cost, she retreats ever deeper into the
wilderness-and into the wilds of her own mind.
From
the description, I know the book is a psychological thriller featuring a
young woman on the run from some very nasty people. I get a hint that
her husband may have deserved his fate, but I'm also led to believe that
Mary Boulton may be mentally unstable. The description is roughly 90
words. It's told in third-person, present tense, and I count seven
emotional power words ("heart-pounding," "frantic," "tormented," "mad,"
"ruthless," "primitive," and "wilds"). I only know the main plot: she
killed her husband, and now she's a fugitive running for her life. I
picked up the book because of its cover, but I opened the book because
of this description. I now own it.
You're
not just writing your description for your back cover. You're also
writing this for your social media network, as part of your bio
information for personal appearances, for flyers and other print
material, etc. This isn't just for you; it's for your fans. With a
concise book description, they are more likely to copy and paste it into
an email to friends and family or on their own social networking
accounts. Think of this type of description as being portable. It's easy
to share and, as a result, is a major tool in your spread-the-word
campaign.
I
will leave you with this: you may get it wrong the first time you try
to write a book description, and that's okay. It's just another part of
the process. As you go through various versions, don't delete those
earlier ones. I've found that by combining the elements of the latest
version with earlier versions, I hit pay dirt. Good luck, and happy
selling!
Written by Richard Ridley. A writer for
more than 20 years, Richard offers a unique perspective on book
marketing based on his own experiences as a self-published author.
Sam. O. Salau
(Africa's Leading Author On Campus Issues)
(Africa's Leading Author On Campus Issues)
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Great!
ReplyDeleteThanks sir
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