Member Giveaways: Early Reviewers for everyone

Member Giveaway is built on top of our Early Reviewers program, which invites publishers to send LibraryThing members pre-publication copies of upcoming books. It has been a huge success, often giving out more than 1,500 books per month. But Early Reviewers has strict rules on participating, quantity and release dates, to keep up quality and encourage publishers to send out as many copies as they could spare.
Member Giveaway differs from Early Reviewers in a couple of ways:
- Any LibraryThing member can participate.
- There are no quantity restrictions. You can post a single book or a hundred.
- Books do not need to be pre-release or even new.
- Members are encouraged to review Giveaway books, but not reviewing them cannot hurt you.
- Giveaway selection is random, not based on a similar-books algorithm. To discourage sockpuppetry, requesting members must have cataloged at least fifty books or be a premium (ie., paid) member.
- Early Reviewers has a bird, but Member Giveaways uses squirrels. As you know, squirrels are lovely, sociable animals who share books readily.

- If you've signed up for Early Reviewers, you are ready for Member Giveaways. The two programs have the same sign-up.
- When you post a book you have a lot of options, including length of time it will last and where you're willing to send it.
- The sending member is responsible for all shipping. If you request and receive a book, the sending member will get your shipping address.
Publishers and authors aside we wanted to give regular members a chance to send good books to good homes. We have long pondered whether LibraryThing should enable book-swaps. But our friends at BookMooch do that so well already, and swapping is very hard to get right. But many members still wanted a simple way to get their old books to new homes. So, we set up a system to do that too.
We've started Member Giveaways off with seven great books.


Released this Fall, both have already drawn great reviews from LibraryThing members and others. LibraryThing member skrishna wrote of Cancer Is a Bitch: "It’s funny, witty, sarcastic and will have you laughing out loud. Read this book. That’s all I really have left to say." Of Beef, a microhistory in the tradition of Salt, the Boston Globe praised its "bovine evolution is riveting stuff." Eats.com called it an "eloquent, poignant and influential account of man’s historical relationship with the cow."





The books consist of Japanese text and English translations of hundreds or thousands of short Japanese poems—haiku and senryu on various topics. The publisher, who is also the author, sent LibraryThing a huge box some time ago, in anticipation of such a program. Abby and I, custodians of the books for so long never got around to reading them, but we will sorely miss people's reactions at finding tall stacks of The Woman Without a Hole and Rise Ye, Sea Slugs!.
Three cheers for Mike! Memeber Giveaways was developed by Mike Bannister (LTMike) after I rather blithly tossed out the idea of opening Early Reviewers to everyone on a separate page. It took a while, but i is a beautiful, and solid piece of code.
Its completion frees Mike up to concentrate on Facebook full time, while Chris and me (but my programming time is somewhat hobbled by everythin else I do) continue work on collections.
Come talk about it here.
Labels: early reviewers, new feature, new features
14 Comments:
Wow, this is really great! Thanks for continuously coming up with great ideas and ways to get books out to voracious readers.
This is an exceptional idea and quite creative. I suspect this program is going to take on a 'life of its own' and it's going to be a winning proposition for everyone who enjoys reading and the author community as well. Once again, Library Thing demonstrates a unique perspective in capturing the ideas of its flourishing membership and running with them.
Can you fix the Member Giveaway icon on the profile pages? It currently says Givewaway.
I LOVE the squirrels!!!!
I'm wondering if "number of books given away" could also be made to influence the algorithm that selects the winner. I'm excited to share my under-appreciated books this way, but I'd like to get some kind of benefit in paying to ship books to others, even if it's just increasing the odds of getting the books I request.
(Er, to clarify, I am neither author nor publisher, just someone who's interested in finding new homes for some titles.)
Perfect. Wonderful. Thank you!
I've added 3 copies of Knight's Fork for readers who are interested in funny futuristic romance.
Rowena Cherry
Is this only for paperbacks or can you offer e-format (PDF) books.
Keta Diablo
I love the squirrels, too!
A suggestion: could the offers be listed in order by date closing? That way the ones closing soonest would appear first so people don't have to scroll and scroll to see what offers are the most time sensitive.
This is a great idea but when I click on a book that says beneath it "all countries" I get a message saying sorry, this can't be sent to your country! it is not fair, the Switzerland flag never shows up, and it doesn't cost any more to send a book to Switzerland than to Germany or France.
What prevents people from getting free copies and then selling them on Amazon or eBay?
The traditional marking of books as "Review Copies, Not for Resale" might help, but the system of random distribution works against the publisher or author attempting to find genuine reviewers, especially those with the intellectual equipment for the particular genre or subject.
Correlating those who request copies with their past performance and rewarding those who actually review books makes the most sense, though sometimes people might refrain from requesting to review books, month after month, because the fare may not be to their taste. An "algorithm" or link to the potential reviews LT profile, allowing the publisher or author to evaluate the reading interests of the individual, would result in more suitable matches and be a logical way of screening out those just looking for free books.
There should be a separate system for those who just want to give their books away, a single copy at a time. THAT, qualifies as "Member Giveaway." Mixing that up with people serious about selling their books fails to pay them the respect they deserve.
Half the writers of Western civilization worth reading were self-publishers or published through small presses, consistently or at one time or another. Publishers, authors, and others, who fully understand the implications of the Post-Gutenberg Age we have entered, and have embraced Jason Epstein's model of the Espresso Book Machine, Lightning Source, Internet booksellers, as well as ebooks, merit a Room of Their Own, away from the dinosaurs of the traditional publishing industry, mega-chain booksellers, the gatekeepers of ALA, their indentured reviewers, and all others who are working to control, filter, and manipulate the communication of writers directly with readers.
In my view, THAT's the logic of the Post-Gutenberg Age. The same as what's largely already happened with the music industry. See my profile for further details. I want to sell books, not give them away. I am only willing to provide review copies to people who are truly serious, possible reviewers.
While I applaud Library Thing and the "Member Giveaway," I think both are still small steps, but in the right direction. The latter needs further serious consultation, reflection, and development. The major publishers, all of whom belong to the past, should not be allowed to control or prevent Library Thing developing into quite possibly a truly new and exciting part of moving publishing and reading towards, and into, Post-Gutenberg forms and models.
Frederick Glaysher
http://www.librarything.com/profile/fglaysher
Although this appears mainly aimed to self-published work or books being offered by the authors themselves rather than any publisher, it seems that it could be helpful for people like me who sometimes forget what books they already have and buy another copy of an already-owned book - would single copies like that be included in this giveaway set-up?
Definitely. Although you should put all your books into LT, and get an iPhone so you can check what you have while standing in the bookstore ;)
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