CliqueClack » Kristin Sample https://cliqueclack.com/p Big voices. Little censors. Thu, 02 Apr 2015 13:00:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.1.1 Want a free, signed copy of Kristin Sample’s North Shore South Shore? https://cliqueclack.com/p/kristin-sample-signed-book/ https://cliqueclack.com/p/kristin-sample-signed-book/#comments Thu, 11 Jul 2013 14:00:22 +0000 https://cliqueclack.com/p/?p=11299 North-Shore-South-Shore-bookWe're giving away a signed copy of Kristin Sample's successfully-funded Kickstarter novel, 'North Shore South Shore', to one random commenter to this post!]]> North-Shore-South-Shore-book
We’re giving away a signed copy of Kristin Sample’s successfully-funded Kickstarter novel, ‘North Shore South Shore’, to one random commenter to this post!

Last October I posted a short piece here about friend and former co-worker Kristin Sample’s Kickstarter campaign for getting her novel, North Shore South Shore, funded. While so many Kickstarter campaigns fail, Kristin’s pulled through successfully, passing her goal by a couple hundred bucks!

Here’s a real cool bit of news about Kristin’s book: it’s being considered and soon shopped around as a TV show pilot. Wow, now I know two people shopping around TV pilots (shhh … I can’t say who else yet)! I can’t wait to hear how that process goes, whether successful or not. But I wish her all the luck in the world.

Kristin was nice enough to throw us a signed copy of her book to give away to a random CliqueClack reader. Just leave some sort of intelligent comment other than “me me me!” or “I want one,” and we’ll pick from the entries to receive the signed book. Only U.S. mailing addresses, please. We’ll pick the recipient in two weeks. Good luck!

If you dig (or dug) Kristin’s book, she’s got another one on the horizon, called Stagecraft, a thriller set in an exclusive performing arts school in Westchester County, NY.

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Photo Credit: Kristin Sample
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Publisher flustering: A book author turns to Kickstarter https://cliqueclack.com/p/book-author-kickstarter/ https://cliqueclack.com/p/book-author-kickstarter/#comments Wed, 03 Oct 2012 17:31:36 +0000 https://cliqueclack.com/p/?p=1631 North-Shore-South-Shore21One-time fellow editor of TV Squad Kristin Sample is taking to Kickstarter to help self-publish her novel, 'North Shore South Shore'. Here's a bit about her experience so far, and how you can help her reach her goal.]]> North-Shore-South-Shore21
One-time fellow editor of TV Squad Kristin Sample is taking to Kickstarter to help self-publish her novel, ‘North Shore South Shore’. Here’s a bit about her experience so far, and how you can help her reach her goal.

It was my husband who persisted, “Finish your book. You can self-publish.” And with that, a project that I started years ago (back when I blogged for Keith at TV Squad) was revisited and completed … finally. Writing a novel couldn’t be more different than blogging. The latter is a fast-paced process: draft-edit-tag-upload. And you get immediate feedback from readers via comments. Novel writing is much longer: draft-revise-draft-revise-stress out-revise. You get the idea.

But I finished North Shore South Shore this summer. I crafted a great query letter that resulted in positive feedback from agencies (both big ones and boutique agencies) and got me several requests for manuscripts. I thought for sure that I’d be agented and on my way to a book deal by Labor Day. I’m even toying with the idea of writing a pilot and registering my book with the WGA.

Because it can fit neatly, the agents felt that they couldn’t sell it. And if an agent can’t sell it, they’re not interested.

And then the responses started coming in. The writing is “excellent,” and “the story pulled me in,” and “I read this with real interest.” Clearly I had something but … not quite enough. No one knew who would buy North Shore South Shore. According to agents, the book falls between YA and Adult fiction. The book has too much adult content (don’t worry — it’s no Fifty Shades) to be considered appropriate for young adults. Yet, the characters are college-age, making them appealing to younger readers. Because it can fit neatly, the agents felt that they couldn’t sell it. And if an agent can’t sell it, they’re not interested. I was so frustrated. And it was hard to separate my confidence in the book’s quality from agent feedback about the book’s marketability. How could North Shore South Shore be well-written and compelling and yet no one wanted to try to sell it? It seemed to me like there was a strong opportunity to do something new that no one wanted to jump on. (This realization was also frustrating.) All the kids who grew up obsessing over Harry Potter were now entering their college years. Many of them still love reading and would probably love my book. The 20-something characters lead very adult lives but are burdened by leftover angst from their teen years. I felt like I had something special that was just waiting for a market (or a brave agent).

I felt like I had something special that was just waiting for a market (or a brave agent).

Labor Day came and went and I had no offer of representation. So I improvised. My blogging experience came in handy here as I embarked on an interactive marketing campaign. In a few weeks I had fans on my Facebook page, North Shore South Shore was being retweeted, my Pinterest page was filled with pictures of character’s clothing and cars, and I launched my Kickstarter project.

Kickstarter — aside from being a hot web property right now — provided a great platform for me as an author (and possibly as a publisher). I used the incentives application to create fun rewards for possible backers. And, thanks to my husband, I have a great video, replete with a guest appearance from my two-year-old son and a gag reel. Moreover, even if my Kickstarter campaign isn’t fully funded, I’ve harnessed a popular site to build awareness about North Shore South Shore.

The campaign ends this week, so go check it out. Check out the rewards. Pledges can be as little as a dollar but a thousand bucks gets your name in my book. Yes, you can be a character in North Shore South Shore! Contribute if you can. Kickstarter’s partnership with Amazon makes pledging easy and safe.

Photo Credit: Kristin Sample
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