Congratulations! You’ve written a book! Not everybody can say they’ve done that!
Now you’d like the Library to buy your book. Okay, first read this article about library supply companies.
Got it? Right, now let’s have a look at what the librarian is thinking about when they’re deciding about purchasing your book.
The number one thing they’ll want to know is ‘will people who come to the Library want to read this?’ A library generally only holds onto books that people want to take home and read. So you want to make your book attractive to someone who’s browsing. Make sure it has a good cover. (You’ll find a blog post about covers here.) A snappy blurb. A great first sentence, etc.
Make sure you know what genre you’re writing in. Perhaps even go to the library to find books similar to yours. That way you can tell the librarian where you think it fits. Where it will get the most usage.
If you’ve written a thriller novel for adults but printed it in A4 size, your book will quite literally not fit in the collection. The Fiction shelves are spaced for novels of a certain size range.
If you’ve written a children’s picture book with 100 words per page, you might have written a chapter book by mistake. Again, go to the Library and see what other books are similar to yours, and how they are presented.
All set? Great. Now, read this article on how to approach the Library about your book, or go to the Local Author Resource page for more.