How do they choose book launch dates?
At this point, “22 Murders” comes out a month from now. Does that mean the book is
completely finished, and the publisher is simply waiting for the optimal time to release it,
or there’s still some work to be done on it?
Basically, I’m asking how does a book’s release date get determined, and how far in advance?
Mario
It’s totally finished. Publishers usually schedule about ten months in advance, in my
experience. About half of that is for editorial things like rewrites and copyediting. But
that leaves a big chunk of time when the manuscript is done but there’s no published book yet.
They figure out the release date like this:
It has to be on a Tuesday.
No-one knows why.
But everyone expects books to be published on Tuesdays, so, what, you’re going to be the maverick coming out on a Thursday? Come on.
It has to be in the summer (northern hemisphere), because I am a summer author. I’m not
totally sure what this means, but I’ve heard it said. Most of my novels have been published
in the summer. Providence wasn’t, and look what happened. That’s right: a global pandemic.
Luckily The 22 Murders of Madison May is scheduled for July 6.
It has to leave enough time for all this:
Cover design. I’m a fan of this cover. At first, I wasn’t sure about the running
woman, because I was like, “Could that not be a little more subtle and intriguing?”
So I mocked up a few ideas, which were way worse. It’s quite a static cover without
the running woman. You need the running woman.



Flap copy. My brilliant editor Mark came up with some really solid copy to put on the
book flap, then at the last minute, I was like, “Hey, the first paragraph is about the Felicity
character, but doesn’t it make more sense to start with Madison, since people will pick up
the book wondering about her?” And Mark was like, “Good catch,” while
wondering why I couldn’t have mentioned this before five minutes until deadline. Then it got
changed. I like to be helpful.
Sending advance copies to authors so they can provide a juicy quote, like, “Better than the Bible,”
or “Something something Harry Potter.”
Sending advance copies to reviewers so they can schedule their hit pieces to run at launch time.
Sending advance copies to influential readers so they’ll write GoodReads reviews and build up
word-of-mouth. You can
get a whole lot of free books by being a prolific GoodReads reviewer. You can be
swimming in books. Then one day you wake up and wonder when reading became a chore, not
a fun escape. Like when did THAT happen.
Booking online events. I will be doing a couple of these, and they are the closest you and I are
going to get to being in the same room for a while, so look out for dates.
Creating the audio edition. I used to stay away from these, because listening to people
read my books made me want to curl up and die. Not because of the narrator, you understand. Because
of the words. But now I’m better and only get, like, slightly nauesous.
Madison May will be read by
Helen Laser,
who I’m proud to say I hunted down personally, not literally, and I think she’ll be fantastic.
Aside from that, there’s marketing, which is trying to figure out how to make
people notice you have a book out. It’s all fine and well to have a good book. You also have to make
sure people notice it.
This is a challenge for me at the moment, as
I’m trapped on the other side of the world to most of my readers. I basically have to be extra
obnoxious online. So apologies in advance for that.
Fun Fact: You can pre-order The 22 Murders of Madison May right now! And not just for yourself! You can
give it to people! Like for birthdays! Or just because they’re special! Here are some links!



