AWKWARD HOLIDAY GATHERINGS! When Relatives Say They Bought Your Book (But They Didn’t) by Angela Hoy, WritersWeekly.com, BookLocker.com, Abuzz Press and PubPreppers.com

AWKWARD HOLIDAY GATHERINGS! When Relatives Say They Bought Your Book (But They Didn’t) by Angela Hoy, WritersWeekly.com, BookLocker.com, Abuzz Press and PubPreppers.com

It’s the gift-giving time of year again! If you’re like me, you’re promoting your books online, on an ongoing basis, through sites like Facebook and Twitter (as well as your own website and email newsletter). Of course, your friends and family see your frequent pitches, and want to encourage your talents!

On Thanksgiving, your Nana Mary may pull you aside to a quiet corner of the kitchen, and sweetly tell you, “I bought copies of your book, dearie! I ordered a copy for Grampie and I also ordered a copy for your cousin, Suzie! They’re going to love it! Yes indeed, sweet cheeks! I started early this year. Did all my shopping in October! The books already arrived and they are beautiful! And, they’re already wrapped and under the tree! You’re such a talented writer and we are all soooo proud of you! What? Oh, yes, I ordered from your publisher directly, just like you told us to on Facebook. Yes, what’s their name? I can’t recall. Yes, that’s it! That’s the website I went to…”

After you stumble home in a turkey coma, you login to your author account on your publisher’s website, excited to see your royalties…but there are no new sales for your book. Zilch. Nada.

Your first reaction is anger…toward your publisher, of course. How dare they rip you off?!?! You immediately fire off an email to your rep there, saying, “My Nana Mary says she bought two copies of my book from you but those sales aren’t in my author account! What gives?!”

It’s Black Friday and your rep (let’s call her Angie – yes, that’s me!) is working the holiday weekend because it’s their busy season. Angie immediately responds, confirming that, unfortunately, there are no new sales of your book. Angie is sad because she’s seen this happen countless times over her 18-year career in book publishing. She’s also tense because she knows this conversation is going to go one of two ways. Either you’re going to believe her, and approach Nana Mary (which will be a very awkward exchange) or you’re going to get very angry with Angie for even suggesting that Nana Mary would ever lie to you about buying your book and you may even fire off a reply that will threaten Angie with legal action for not crediting (non-existent) sales to your author account.

Angie begins by gently telling you that the website is working just fine and older sales of your book have been credited correctly. The site is working. She tells you that, unfortunately, there’s a good chance Nana Mary didn’t buy your book after all. She also refers you to the company’s Author FAQ, which coincidentally has a section titled: “My Aunt Bertha says she bought a copy of my book last month and it’s not showing up in my author account. Why not?!” 

Angie asks you to confirm that Nana Mary purchased your book by requesting a copy of the email receipt that was sent to her. Angie explains that every buyer receives an instant receipt via email when purchasing a book from your publisher.

You pick up the phone, and call Nana Mary. She answers, and says she’s home sitting by the fire, and playing World of Warcraft on her laptop while watching the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade on TV. You tell her that your publisher is ripping you off and that they didn’t credit you for the books she bought. An awkward pause fills the ear piece of your phone. Nana Mary coughs. “Oh no, Dearie. I definitely bought your book! Remember, I got a copy for Grampie and, yes, the other one was for Cousin Joe.” You briefly remember that, as of yesterday, the other copy was for Cousin Suzie, and that the books were already wrapped (and, you assume, also already labeled correctly to each recipient). Nana Mary’s story is starting to crack a bit but you persist because you REALLY want to believe Nana Mary bought copies of your book. She wouldn’t lie to you, would she? And, she’s getting up there in years. Perhaps she forgot which company she bought your book from…

Since Nana Mary is on her laptop, you ask her to pull up a copy of her email receipt for the books, and to forward it to you. Nana Mary stumbles again, saying she never got an email receipt. You thank her, tell her once again how delicious the turkey was, and hang up.

You fire off an email to Angie, telling her that the company never sent your Nana Mary an email receipt. You give Angie your Nana Mary’s full name, address, phone number, and email address. Angie responds quickly. They have no record of that person in their database. She gently tells you that Nana Mary has never purchased a book from them. You’re embarrassed, but still hopeful that the sale will eventually end up in your author account. You decide to wait a few weeks to see if that will happen. Perhaps Nana Mary actually bought copies from Amazon.com instead? Those sales are processed by the book distributor, Ingram, and there’s a 3-4 month delay with Ingram sales being paid to your publisher. You’re confident that there really are two copies of your book wrapped up under Nana Mary’s tree.

You push it out of your mind until Christmas Day. You show up at dinnertime at Nana Mary’s and the smell of honey baked ham is wafting through the house. Grampie is sitting in his recliner, reading a book. You remember the book sale fiasco, and waiver from happiness that Nana Mary really did buy your book to frustration with your publisher. You greet Grampie and ask if he’s enjoying the book. Later, you can ask to take a photograph of the book so you can send that to Angie the next day to prove the sale really occurred.

Grampie responds, “Yes, it’s good. I just love John Grisham! Have you seen his latest?”

Grampie holds up the book. Your spirits are dashed. It’s not your book. But, Grampie is an avid reader. Perhaps he got other books for Christmas as well. You humbly ask, “Grampie, where’s the copy of my book that Nana Mary bought you?”

Grampie looks confused. “This is the only book Nana Mary gave me for Christmas.”

You suddenly realize what happened. Nana Mary was just trying to make you feel good. She didn’t buy your book. She had no intention of buying your book. She lied because she wanted to make you happy, just like she lied about how good you looked with that new perm in the 80’s.

The next day, embarrassed, you write to Angie, and tell her what happened. Angie responds with kindness because, like I said, Angie has seen this scenario play out in numerous ways, time and time again, for the past 18 years.

Over the years, in every case where a sale from a relative was never reported by Ingram or us, it has been the result of the relative fibbing to the author about buying their book so as not to hurt the author’s feelings.

I was surprised when I first heard of this happening, but then it happened again and again…and again. It’s very sad. If this does happen to you, don’t feel alone. That’s what relatives do. The lie to save us from hurting. They lie about buying our books, they lie about liking our writing (NEVER ask a family member for an honest assessment of your writing – you will rarely get that!), and they lie about perms, jeans making us look fat, and so many other things.

If this happens to you, remember to not fire off angry emails and warnings to your publisher, Amazon, or any other firm. Instead, gently ask your relative for a copy of their receipt. If you don’t have a copy of the receipt from your relative, that sale very likely did not occur. And, without a receipt, it’s impossible for your publisher to track down a sale.

On a personal note, I avoid this scenario altogether now by simply offering free copies of my books to my family members, but only if they express a true interest in receiving a copy. It doesn’t hurt my feelings when a relative doesn’t buy a copy of my book but it does irk me if they request a free copy, but then don’t bother reading it. Ask for permission to send them a copy and tell them you’re doing it so they can read the book, and then, if warranted, tell their friends about it, online and off. Let them know that it’s okay to refuse the free copy because you can only send copies to people who have the time to help you get the word out about your book.


Angela Hoy lives on a mountain in North Georgia. She is the publisher of WritersWeekly.com, the President and CEO of BookLocker.com and AbuzzPress, and the author of 24 books.

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4 Responses to "AWKWARD HOLIDAY GATHERINGS! When Relatives Say They Bought Your Book (But They Didn’t) by Angela Hoy, WritersWeekly.com, BookLocker.com, Abuzz Press and PubPreppers.com"

  1. She Writes (@shewritesyall)  November 27, 2016 at 4:47 am

    This was “hilariously” sad but true! Loved it! Thanks for sharing. Happy Holidays?

  2. KL Snyder  November 22, 2016 at 10:00 pm

    Comment on Awkward Holiday Gatherings: It isn’t just books that relatives don’t read. I write short articles (they get published), and they aren’t difficult reads. Except they must be downright ponderous. My late husband never read them; my sons and daughter-in-law, who all tell me they love the way I write, never read them either.

    Others compliment me — perhaps I’m not entirely hopeless.

    Does this familial ego-busting happen to others?

  3. Logan Harbaugh  November 22, 2016 at 1:37 pm

    Unless the book was really specialized, like “The Annotated History of the Dinkley Family in Eastern Ohio from 1880 to 1930”, I’d be really disappointed if a couple of books bought by relatives had even a small effect on overall sales!

  4. pamelaallegretto  November 22, 2016 at 12:31 pm

    As always, an entertaining read. Thanks! Happy Thanksgiving!