Ok, I have a confession to make. My name is Patrick Rothfuss, and I am addicted to Amazon.com.
Not for the reason you might think, while I do use Amazon to occasionally pick up cheap DVD sets and hard to find out-of-print stuff, I actually do most of my book buying from the local independent bookstore. It’s hard walking away from Amazon’s sexy, cheap books, but I feel better about shopping locally. I know the money is staying in the community.
No, I’m addicted to Amazon for another reason entirely: the Amazon Sales Rank.
For those of you who don’t know about it. The sales rank is how well your book is selling on Amazon compared to all the other books. As I write this, I can see my rank is at #1224 among all books. A very respectable ranking, especially considering that I’m a new author.
What you might not realize is that authors don’t have any way of finding out how well their books are selling. We can read reviews and take guesses, but for the most part, we don’t have access to any real factual information about how well are books are selling. Every six months we get a royalty statement and that’s about it.
What we do have is the Amazon sales rank. You want to know the maddening thing? It updates, like, every 15 minutes or so. That means that I am fucking compelled to keep a Firefox instance open to my book’s Amazon page ALL THE TIME. Then, no matter what I’m doing, I can hop over and click refresh. Again, and again, and again. Just to see if it’s changed.
Ooh. Now I’m at 1028! Someone must have bought a book! Maybe two! I am a tiny god!
Because I’m constantly refreshing on Amazon, I’ve also developed a secondary addiction to the Amazon reviews.
Generally speaking, the reviews have been good. People like the book, and they have been generous with their praise. Every time I saw another 5-star review I got a warm fuzzy, and for several months, I was powerfully proud of my unbroken 5-star average. Then a few people gave it 1-star reviews and my average dropped to 4.5 stars, causing a great wailing and gnashing of teeth on my part.
Still at 1028.
As a whole, I respect the concept behind the Amazon reviews. They’re like true democracy in action, everyone gets to chime in and let their voice be heard. PHD in English literature? You get 1 review. Fourteen year old boy who loves Nascar? 1 review. Benobo chimp addicted to methadone? Assuming you have a credit card, you get a review too.
Still 1028. Maybe it doesn’t update every 15 minutes.
While I respect the egalitarian nature of the Amazon reviews, it does tend to occasionally remind me how really low the lowest common denominator really is. A couple days ago some choad posted up a 1 star review because the book was 900 pages (which it isn’t) and because he’ll have to wait for book two to come out. I can respect a bad review if the person makes a few salient points, but my suspicion is that this guy hasn’t even read the book.
Nooo! I’m at 1375 now. I suck. The Karma gods are punishing me for defaming some poor anonymous reviewer’s character. And perhaps for the gratuitous use of the word ‘choad.’
Okay. Another confession. I just bought a copy of my own book to see if it would make the Amazon rank go back up. It didn’t (I expect there must be a delay.) But when I made my order, I saw that right now they’re selling my book for less than fifteen bucks. How cool is that? I’m all about shopping locally, but 40% off is a significant chunk of money…. Maybe I should buy a few more… Is it tacky to give away your own book as a Christmas gift?
Okay, I’ve rambled long enough. I should get back to revisions of book two….
Later,
pat
P.S. Still 1375.
Edit:
P.P.S. In the comments below, RoseNeko posted a link to an article so perfectly relevant to this that I wanted to LINK IT HERE for all of you to see. Bless you Neko, and the person who wrote this article. Maybe now I can start letting my obsession go.
Y’know… using ‘P.S.’ Doesn’t make much sense anymore. For one, it was a convention that came about when you wrote letters longhand, so the P.S. was necessary in case you left something out. Nowadays there’s no reason to leave anything out. Since I’m typing everything out, I could just go back and add it into the original post.
What’s more. P.S. stood for ‘post script.’ But I’m not scripting anything, I’m posting a blog. So really, it should be P.P. for ‘post post.’
But somehow I don’t think that’s going to catch on…
P.P.P.S. 1087
43 Comments
If you return your book, will the rank go down? ; )
You ARE a tiny god!>>:::skips out of thread giggling:::
i know how it is. i have a widget that i created on the Yahoo! Widgets gallery, and i check it OBSESSIVELY to see how many downloads i have . . .>>1,504 in 2 weeks! w00t!!!>>(http://widgets.yahoo.com/gallery/?search=super+deluxe&x=0&y=0) by the way :D)
Well, I’m happy to have contributed to your rank by buying my copy through Amazon.>>Enabling addiction is a hobby of mine.
Too funny, Pat. I really do enjoy your posts.>>By the way, you can give me a copy of your book for Christmas if you like. :)>>(Actually, I have it on reserve at the library – I got them to buy it – and aim to get a paperback copy when that comes out because it is withing my budget.)>>There’s a thought. Will you have to go through this all over again with the paperback release?
I guess we all have our vices. Think of it this way: would you rather be addicted to your Amazon sales rate, or an illegal substance? And I hope the sales rate goes up, just for your happiness. After all, more happiness equals more imagination, which equals more books. Which, in return, equals another sales rate for you to check…
Hey, I’m right there with you. If I had a book published, you bet I’d be constantly checking the sales rank. Back in my fanfic-writing days I used to obsess over page views with equal fervor. >>Have no fear, in a couple weeks I’ll be buying a few copies for presents, all from Amazon. Just doing my part. =D
Oh, almost forgot. Here’s a link to an article on the four-and-a-half star phenomenon, which the author has named (appropriately) the “Tyranny of the Twits”. It likely won’t help with dealing with said twits, but I figure you might like to see that you’re in fairly good company. ;)>>http://abcnews.go.com/Business/Story?id=87158&page=2
Funny thing the 4.5-theory. I even have a friend who only buys 4.5-rated objects and wouldn’t touch 5s. Don’t know if he’s read the article or if he figured it out himself but it seems as if the opinion is quite widespread.>>On a completely different matter: Did you really need 15 minutes for the passages between the selling ranks? If that’s the case I’m really worried about new books of you within my lifetime ;-p.>>PS: The german interface tells me to do a “Wortbestätigung” (might be translated as “confirmation of a word”) to make sure I’m no bot. Now I should confirm that “wpitd” is a word!? These tests are getting too hard for me. Now I even ned a dictionary to check… ;-)
Call me an enabler, but there’s a Firefox add-on called “ReloadEvery” so you can feed your addiction without having to manually click “refresh”.>>Check it out:>>https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/115
Rank 1135>I never realized Amazon had a ranking system on the page…>Now you are going to have me addicted to checking too!>Still 1135
“Confessions of an Amazon addict”- sounds like a title of some cheesy E channel expose. Don’t read to far into it though, personally I don’t know anyone that uses amazon. Most people I know shop at Barnes and Noble or local used book shops. If B & N had some kind of rating system that would be more accurate then amazon.> I’m the new Neil Gaiman reader and now I have to thank you again for recommending Mistborn. Which is as original as your book and just as refreshing. Especially after reading some of the crap out there. > Its ludicrous that someone would not like your book because of the length. Length is actually one of the features I look for when looking at new novels. Sometimes it takes a couple hundred pages to really get immersed into the universe of a book.>>chris
It is definitely not tacky to give your Quill-award-winning, phenomenally-reviewed, destined-to-be-a-classic debut novel as a Christmas gift.
Rank #1111>>Quick, make a wish!>>Choad is an awesome word, btw.
This talk about reviews always reminds me of the reviews that end up on the books themself.>>You can’t really tell if a book is bad by reading the reviews on it. You won’t find ANY criticism, or something that isn’t whole-heartedly praise.>>I saw “Name of the wind” same thing, awesome praise bla. bla.>>Then I read about the author: “Practices civil disobidience” & “Refuses to dance”>>I was like:”Cool!” this reminded me to check out the book on the net later that day. That biography Mr. Rothfuss has on his site is perhaps the best sign I’ve seen of a good author yet. One that doesn’t take him/herself too seriously. It’s bloody brilliant.
How long have you been checking this? ‘Cause in early April it was at 580 on Amazon (and 403 on Barnes & Noble). I think that would have made you a full-fledged medium-sized god.
Nooo, #1582!! I must buy as many copies as my paycheck will allow and throw them at friends for the holidays! (or, um… give them copies… like a civil human being.)>>This reminds me of DeviantART pageviews. It’s addictive, man, especially with the day-to-day breakdowns they give. And the month-to-month. Whyyyy?!
As your Official Hamstringer I feel I must say the following: Dude, 1082? What’s <>wrong<> with you? If you were any sort of author at all you’d be at #1.>>And now: Cool. 1082 is some serious rankage. I did the same thing for <>Pandora’s Closet<> for like two days–people don’t really buy anthologies that much, and when the numbers didn’t really move, it sort of tarnished the polish on the publication giddiness, you know?
Wow! I just looked at Amazon, and you’re at 756!
oh yeah. forgot to mention – for some quality entertainment, go look up “Tuscan Milk” on amazon and read the product reviews . . . there are some masterpieces of humor in there!
Huh. Now your rank is 569. I wonder if it’s like the reverse of your credit rating; the more it gets checked, the higher it goes.
Or look at it this way, R.A. Salvatore, the author of the incredibly popular and best-selling Drizzt Do’Urden dark elf series, only has 22 reviews on his lasest book. YOU have 160…
Does it also count copies bought through other Amazons (as in .de .co.uk or .fr)?
Just checked and your sales rank is at #393.>>Thought you might like some proof of this über-godlike ranking, so here’s a screenshot:>>< HREF="http://i29.photobucket.com/albums/c268/thewindow/Various/3cfed3ac.jpg" REL="nofollow">screenshot<>>>Nowadays, I use “ETA” (edited to add) when changing a blog or message board post after the fact. I feel awkward using P.S., just like using cc: for “carbon copy” on emails–does anyone even know what carbon paper is anymore?
you should know you also have a great review on npr’s webpage which is sending me to the bookstore on the way home…maybe you can figure that into your amazon ranking somehow? a theoretical sales counter, if you will.
Hi Pat, >Ive looked at the UK one and you come in at 2581. >>Incidently Im an obsessive reviewer. LOL So Im checking a lot to see how Im doing on that ranking list now that Im top 1K. LOL>>Other than that is it bad form to give your book as a gift? Dunno, are you planning to personalise it to each person?
Hey Arevanye,>>I work at a library and I cannot remember exactly what bogus workshop that I was attending but it was to do with computers and the “expert” explained that cc in email stands for <>courtesy copy<>. I cannot guarantee that the dude didn’t make it up though… :-)>>>Rank #356>>Witness the mighty power of the minions! >>Also, Kelly->I have <>Pandora’s Closet<> on my reading shelf right now!
Mary J:>>*grins*>“Courtesy copy” if that’s what they want to call it now, I’m fine with that. But for those of us born long ago enough to have learned to type on an <>actual typewriter<>, cc will always mean carbon copy. >>Now where did I put my cane? ;)
Mary J: cool!
#321!
Hey, it may be #330 in books overall (fantastic, but it should be better), but it’s #6 in the the scifi/fantasy category.>>the universe is ruled by tiny gods, tiny and mighty.
And congrats on the NPR review. Check you out, making < HREF="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=16159971" REL="nofollow">national news<> ‘n’ shite.
One point to you, good sir. Though I’m a busy college student with nary a moment to devote to leisure reading, your witty blog entries have obliged me to do my part in raising your Amazon Sales Rank. I have no idea what this book is about, but I can’t imagine it won’t be an improvement over the fantasy trash I normally read. That’s correct, I am in fact that guy who’s read all the Diablo books.>>P.C. (Post Comment) I haven’t started the checkout yet, so wait a few minutes before hitting refresh.
#285!
Rank #244!!!
P.S. on Amazon.com for NOTW>#4 in Books > Science Fiction & Fantasy > Fantasy > Epic>#41 in Books > Literature & Fiction > General > Contemporary
P.S. on Amazon.com for NOTW>#4 in Books > Science Fiction & Fantasy > Fantasy > Epic>#41 in Books > Literature & Fiction > General > Contemporary
I am addicted to methadone (I am on a program) but I am no monkey. I liked the book! BTW, it has already been posted to many many torrent sites as an ebook, a PDF I believe. I suppose there is no way to stop piracy when it is ubiquitous as it is now. Just thought I would let you know.
Rank #199!
After reading The Tyranny of Twits I am moved to suggest that we have entered the Opinion Age where all opinions are thought to be created equal.
I’ve had to pull my amazon page off my firefox toolbar links because it was so addictive, and my book isn’t even out yet!>>Don’t forget to check tasty foreign amazons. Go to the “.com” spot and replace it with “.de” or “.co.uk” or “.ca” to find your rank in foreign places.>>I discovered that I, like David Hasselhoff, am far more popular in Germany than I am in America.>>I always wanted something in common with the Hoff.
My name is —–, and I am addict to your blog.
Think of it this way: Would you be addicted to your Amazon sales rate or illegal substances? And I hope the sales rate goes up, just for your pleasure. After all, more happiness equals more imagination, which equals more books. If I had a book published, you would bet that I would keep checking the sales rank. In the days of my fanfiction writing, I used to watch Page Views with equal enthusiasm. Don’t worry, in a couple of weeks I’ll buy some copies for gifts, all from Amazon. Just doing my part This discussion of reviews always reminds me of reviews that end on the books themselves.