Goodreads Authors/Readers discussion
III. Goodreads Readers
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Question for readers with to-read books
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I've actually been contacted by a writer whose book was on my to-read list -- I did a review on a book by an author we both admired -- who very kindly offered to send me a Kindle version of the book... no strings attached. I had no problem what-so-ever with it (and gladly accepted).
Perhaps it could be implemented in such a way that the reader could have the choice to opt in (give permission) to such a notification. That way there would be no invasion.

http://www.amazon.com/Looks-Great-Nak...


I do see your point but if you are on lots of lists it might get intrusive to have/send kajillions of emails.


Of course, if you go to an author's home page, they will often have (as I do :D ) a contact page where you could leave a message that you'd love to know about promotions. Might be nice to put it that way--not sure how I feel about someone saying "I'd love to read your book, but only if it's free."
You'd have to put up with being on a list to hear about new releases, etc.

I also have a few free chapters from my novel NORTHMAN on the blog for those who enjoy historical, thriller/horror with a touch of time-travel, eternal love and badly cooked lasagne :)
The full novel is available on Amazon.

I second this completely :)




And while, like everybody else I suppose, I'm always up for cheap bargains and free books, I am also all up for actually buying a physical copy (or ebook) of a book I've read and liked. I've even bought physical copies of books I had already bought as ebooks, so... :)

Thank you so much for this information!

I'm giving away one free copy per month of my eating disorder memoir in any digital format. To be in the running, you just have to leave a comment on the 'giveaway' page of my website, telling me why you'd like to read it.
Now ... would you be annoyed if I contacted you about this if you had my book on your to-read list? ...

Peggy, could I suggest that you go back to you product description for Southern Wicker. It simple says it is the first two books combined. I did go back to book one to check out what it was about but maybe some potential buyers/downloaders wouldn't bother and would pass the book by rather than check further. Hope you dont mind this suggestion. The book looks interesting, I have downloaded!


I'm running a promotion on amazon KDP and I stumbled upon a book that I would've downloaded and given a chance and I'd just missed the free days, and that got me thinking...
If you h..."
My eReader uses ePub, so I don't watch for Amazon free days at all. If there is a book on my TBR that comes up on a promotion at Smashwords, I'll sometimes pick it up. I'm more likely to get them from the library if possible, or just flat-out pay for them.


I've been wondering about this. There is a physical copy of the kindle book as well... Since I'm planning a giveaway for next month or so, I thought of putting in a comment in the giveaway that readers interested in being told of this book having free days on amazon please leave a comment or PM. Don't know if that would work, but at least that way, no one would get bothered by it.
What do you guys think?
Also, can we start a poll on this in the poll section? I've never messed with it, but I thought it would be one way to get more people's opinions.

I also use my to-read shelf like that, to store books that I already have and are still going to get around to.... but what I was talking about was a book that was recently released, and got into to-read shelves after a giveaway here on goodreads. After that, I made it into an ebook and had free promotion days. So in this case, people who had it on their to-read shelves couldn't possibly have bought the book, yet. In any case, I didn't contact anyone because I thought I might be offending people or being annoying. But it is still something I'm trying to see if we can't work out.
Mike and Rebecca are right, after all, the opting in thing would be an issue.

Of course, if you go to an author's home page, they will often have (a..."
That's a great idea. I'll try to do something like that. For now, I'd have no problem with people telling me they'd wait for a free promotion to get a copy of my book. I'm still starting and no one really knows me. Personally, sometimes I'll borrow a book to read and then I'll buy it if I like it. Doesn't make that much sense, maybe, but I figure there are others out there like me.

Of course, if you go to an author's home page, they will often have (a..."
So I tried your idea, Rebecca, and did a contact form, but I'm not sure if it's okay.
If anyone would care to check it out and give me their insight, please. I wrote it with my voice, which means it's not really professional-sounding. You can even click no to everything and you'll never have to hear from me again. :)
Anyways, I'm looking for suggestions, please.

All it did was tell people to leave me their email, or contact me through mine (I have one just for web page purposes).

I am hoping the humor will disguise the fact that it is enormous... :)
And there really is a kitten, haha.

https://www.smashwords.com/books/view...The Key

Sometimes you wonder how many of those people(who added it because they want to read it) after a giveaway and still look into it.
Good idea.




It also smacks of desperation. I'm pretty sure that authors with significant sales don't track stuff like that, let alone feel gratitude for every person who adds the book (and I ain't saying where I fall on that spectrum! :D )

I have had authors contact me when their book is on my wishlist with either a notice that it is on sale or free, or they offer to send a review copy. I think it's a great idea since it shows the author is active with their readers.

I have had authors contac..."
This is a great idea! :D

She was probably just being excited because she has amazing reviews, which is why I added the book in the first place. But it still didn't feel right. I would only contact a reader if I were offering them something.


I don't mind authors PMing me to offer a free pdf copy of what is on my wishlist. I prefer that to being part of a carpetbombing campaign for everyone who has the book listed on a goodreads shelf.
I'm running a promotion on amazon KDP and I stumbled upon a book that I would've downloaded and given a chance and I'd just missed the free days, and that got me thinking...
If you had a book in your to-read pile that was going to have free days on amazon, would you like to be told or would you consider that an invasion or an annoyance?
Personally, if I marked something to-read but haven't gotten around to it, yet, I wouldn't mind the head's up, but I'm not sure how others would feel. Do you just randomly mark books or are you really saying they are something you would read?
And should I tell the people who marked my book to-read that it's free for download? Or would that just be annoying?
Marilia