Posts Tagged ‘books’

For 2 Hours I Outsold a NYT Bestseller

November 11, 2017

I’m sitting at a black square table just inside the front door of a Barnes & Noble book store in suburban Cleveland engaging in a ritual familiar to many authors. On the table is a stack of 19 copies of my latest book Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad.

I’m a niche author and not many people are interested in railroad history. Therefore I don’t have high hopes about selling all of those books.

Directly in front of me is a table piled high with books labeled “new releases.” One of them has an orange cover that catches my attention. Titled The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck: A Counterintuitive Approach to Living a Good Life, I’m hoping the book by Mark Manson won’t be a summary of how my book signing will go.

The railroad about which I wrote is known in Cleveland and last year carried a record 214,063 passengers.

Anyone who has visited the Cuyahoga Valley National Park probably has seen and/or ridden on a CVSR train. I’m hoping that that might help sell a few books.

A few people mentioned having ridden on the CVSR with some saying they had ridden several times. But they didn’t buy my book. Not today at least.

Twelve minutes into my book signing, a guy walked in, spotted me and immediately came over. In a matter of minutes he bought two of my books, one for himself and another for a friend.

I felt much better because at least I had made a sale. But he was more the exception than the rule.

As I expected, most who came into the store had little to no interest in me or my book. They walked past as though I didn’t exist, not making eye contact or saying hello. They were not subtle in not giving a . . . well you know.

This is my eighth railroad history book and I learned a long time ago how these book signings are often about learning the art of humility.

What I experienced at B&N I’ve also experienced at events filled with railroad enthusiasts. That was tough to take at first, but it comes with the territory.

The afternoon wore on and I made a few more sales. I had interesting conversations with a few folks. Interactions such as these make book signings worth doing even when sales success is modest.

One woman said she had seen a poster advertising my signing and came in to get my book, buying two copies.

There were some near-misses in which people expressed interest but didn’t buy. Maybe later.

A woman pointed at my table and said to her daughter, “look, there’s an author. He wrote a book. Isn’t that great! Maybe someday you’ll write one, too.”

The girl never looked my way, but I understood. Preschoolers have short attention spans.

I had plenty of time to keep an eye on those new releases, the Christmas-themed table to my right and the magazine racks slightly to my left. High on the walls were posters for such classics as Walden, The Maltese Falcon and To Kill a Mockingbird.

I wondered how many people come into bookstores and buy those books just to read them and not because the title is on a school reading list.

It was getting late. My publisher had said the signing was to be for two hours, but I stayed a half-hour longer.

As I was packing up my fliers and business cards while getting ready to leave, a B&N employee asked me to sign the unsold books. She placed a “signed by the author” sticker on each as soon as I finished signing. Sometimes that helps sell a book.

I don’t recall anyone even looking at Mark Manson’s book, but I might have missed it. He will sell far more copies of his book then I’ll sell of mine. It has been, after all, on The New York Times bestseller list.

I’ll never have Mark’s level of success, but for two hours on one afternoon in one store I outsold him.

Sanders to be at Buckeye Book Fair on Saturday

November 1, 2017

Akron Railroad Club President Craig Sanders will be appearing at the 30th Buckeye Book Fair to be held this Saturday (Nov. 4) at Fisher Auditorium in Wooster, Ohio.

Sanders will be among the 100 authors who will be signing their books and speaking about their work. He will have copies of his most recent book, Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad, as well as Akron Railroads (2016), Cleveland Mainline Railroads, Canton Area Railroads, and Akron Railroads (2007)

The event opens at 9:30 a.m. and closes at 4 p.m. Admission is $2.

Four author presentations have been planned for the auditorium. Between 11 a.m. and noon, Jeffrey Ebbeler will conduct a draw-along.

Between noon and 1 p.m., author Mary Kay Carson will discuss her book Mission to Pluto. James Willis will talk about Central Ohio Legends & Lore between 1 and 2 p.m., while Ian Adams will discuss his book Ohio in Photographs between 2 and 3 p.m.

More information is available from http://www.buckeyeBookFair.com

Sanders to do Book Signing in Westlake

October 27, 2017

Akron Railroad Club President Craig Sanders will be signing his new book Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad on Sunday between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. at the Barnes & Noble book store at Crocker Park in Westlake, Ohio.

The book store is located at 198 Crocker Park Boulevard

Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad was released earlier this month by Fonthill Media and is being marketed by Arcadia Publishing.

It features 175 photographs of which all but three are in color. Most of the images were contributed by Akron Railroad Club.

The book uses text and photographs to tell the story of the CVSR from its launch in June 1975 as the Cuyahoga Valley Line.

Sanders is also scheduled to do a book signing on Nov. 18 at the Akron Barnes & Noble store between 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.

Sanders Presents Program to Literary Clubs Event

May 28, 2009

Akron Railroad Club President Craig Sanders spoke on the history of railroads in his hometown of Mattoon, Illinois, at the ninth annual Literary Club Luncheon on May 22, 2009.

The event was held at the Mattoon Golf and Country Club. About 25 women who belong to one of four reading and book clubs in Mattoon attended the luncheon.

Sanders gave a PowerPoint presentation of photographs that appeared in his book Mattoon and Charleston Area Railroads, which was published by Arcadia Publishing in June 2008. The book is an historical overview of railroad operations in Mattoon, Charleston and surrounding communities.

Sanders was born and raised in Mattoon and graduated from Mattoon High School in 1971. He was a reporter and copy editor for the Mattoon newspaper, the Journal Gazette between December 1976 and August 1983.