Amazing Bounce of
‘The Rabbit Who
Wants to Fall Asleep’
G'day folks,
Here is a great success story for you self-published authors, courtesy of Publishers Weekly.
It’s been quite a week (or two) for Carl-Johan Forssen
Ehrlin. The author of a heretofore unknown Swedish picture book, which
mysteriously shot to the top of Amazon’s U.K. print bestseller list on August
13, now has a bona fide hit on his hands. The question that remains, though, is
how Forssen Ehrlin’s 28-page book, The
Rabbit Who Wants to Fall Asleep, became, literally, an overnight
success.
Forssen
Ehrlin self-published through Amazon’s CreateSpace, releasing an
English-language edition of the book in the U.S. in April 2014. Rabbit’s quick rise to
international attention seems to have been sparked by an August 14 article in
the U.K. newspaper the Daily
Mail. The article credited the book’s success to
Forssen Ehrlin’s claim that the title could ease parents’ bedtime routine; its
headline referred to the “book that’ll send your kids to sleep.” The Mail article also noted that
Rabbit had
accomplished a remarkable feat, becoming the first self-published book to hit
#1 on Amazon’s U.K. print list.
The Mail article then begot
other coverage, with stories about Rabbit
following in Forbes,
the Guardian, PW, and NPR, among others.
Fewer than seven days after the Mail
story, with sales of the book skyrocketing, Forssen Ehrlin signed
with the Salomonsson Agency, the powerful Swedish literary agency that
represents such authors as Jo Nesbø. By the end of last week, PW learned that Random House
paid seven figures for world English rights to Rabbit and two sequels. (At press time, no one
at Random House would confirm the deal, though.)
There’s little question that the press
attention the book has received—much of it seizing on the fact that the author
self-published, and questioning whether the book really is the literary
equivalent of pediatric Ambien—drove recent sales. In the U.S., Nielsen
BookScan, which captures roughly 80%–85% of print sales, reported that Rabbit had sold 24 copies in
the week ended August 16. By the following week, ended August 23, the title had
sold more 29,000 copies. (Prior to August 23, BookScan shows the book sold
roughly 300 copies in the U.S.)
In
the U.K., print sales of the book picked up earlier, but show a similar
trajectory. According to BookScan (which also tracks sales in England), the
title had sold 1,150 copies in the week ended August 8. By the end of the
following week, on August 15, BookScan reported that Rabbit had sold 4,119 copies. Ben
Spencer, a medical journalist with one of the bylines on the Daily Mail story about the
book, told PW a
source tipped him off to the fact that a self-published book was perched at the
top of the Amazon list.
Rabbit’s
rapid rise, on Amazon’s U.K. list—without seemingly any major marketing
effort—has led to speculation that sales of the title may have been
manipulated. (So-called manipulation of bestseller lists is something that
authors and industry members are aware of, but there are few documented
instances of the practice being successful on a large scale.
Nonetheless it is
possible for someone who is willing to buy a large number of copies of a title
over a short period to drive a book up a bestseller list, especially one like
Amazon’s, which is updated hourly. In the case of Rabbit, it hit #1 on Amazon’s U.K. print list
after a week in which its sales tallied just over 4,000 copies.) Amazon flatly
denied this scenario, though.
“All
sales activity around The
Rabbit Who Wants to Fall Asleep was organic,” an Amazon
spokesperson said.
The spokesperson credited the book’s sudden popularity to U.K. parents talking
about it on social media over the course of the summer, adding that this online
chatter was the thing that “seems to be at the root of the book’s initial debut
on the top 20 print list in the U.K.” Then, according to the spokesperson, once
the book hit Amazon’s list, marketing and publicity efforts coordinated by the
author caught the attention of the U.K. press.
According
to research performed by social analytics platform Crimson Hexagon, the book was getting very little
attention on blogs and social media outlets before the Mail’s August 14 story. The
real jump in online mentions of the book came in the days immediately following
the Mail story.
Since the book became a media sensation,
Forssen Ehrlin has kept a low profile. A request made by PW, through the Salomonsson
Agency, to interview the author was declined, with the explanation that Forssen
Ehrlin has been overwhelmed by recent events.
Regardless
of how Rabbit’s
sales were initially generated, what the book’s meteoric rise proves once again
is that the right kind of press attention can turn any book into a massive hit.
In some ways Rabbit
is reminiscent of Fifty Shade
of Grey. E.L. James’s novel, which was released by a publisher so
small it was considered self-published, also rode a wave of early press
coverage. Both cases prove that, regardless of how the press machine gets
going, once it does, it has the ability to turn a book into a phenomenon.
Clancy's comment: Mm ... You just never know, eh? I guess the secret is to hang in there ... And pray!
I'm ...
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