NEW YORK, May 13, 2007

Taking Bookselling To New Heights

After Many Different Sales Techniques, Bill Geist Found Peddling His New Tome Is Not As Easy As It Looks

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  • After 20 years with <b><i>Sunday Morning</i>, Bill Geist</b> has written a book about his experiences. The hard part is selling it. Photo

    After 20 years with Sunday Morning, Bill Geist has written a book about his experiences. The hard part is selling it.  (CBS)

(CBS)  For 20 years Sunday Morning correspondent Bill Geist has been searching America for the wackiest and most wonderful people, places and things. Now that he's finished a book about his adventures, he finds that actually selling it is an even tougher job.


This is my 20th anniversary on "Sunday Morning" and I've written a new book, coming out this week, featuring some of my favorite stories. It's a great summer read!

Traveling this country for two decades, I've been to some far-out places and met some pretty unusual characters, like 92-year-old Hal Wright, America's oldest pilot and a small town newspaper publisher who delivered his papers by airplane to his far-flung subscribers.

And then there were these ingenious entrepreneurs who suck problematic prairie dogs out of the ground and resell them as pets in Japan.

But even with tales that good, it's tough to sell a book these days — what with tens of thousands of new titles coming out each year, you've got to be creative. So I decided to peddle my books in Times Square, using a wheelbarrow to hold my wares.

You've got to do whatever it takes: battling the crowds, dodging the cops, finding the right street-corner.

"With New York, it's location, location, location," a street vender told me.

Not to mention dealing with shoplifters — this isn't easy! One woman had the audacity to simply walk up and take a book without a second thought. Where are the cops when you need them? But I ended up selling my book to one guy for $15.

After all, who could turn down a book with a story about a headless chicken? It's an inspirational tale about a chicken who didn't squawk about losing his head and went on to enjoy a two-year career in show business. You'd think a book like this would fly off the shelf, but no, you've gotta get out there and sell it.

You have to think outside the box, so I tried selling from a toll booth on the New Jersey Turnpike. The toll would be $30, but you get a free book.

Motorists will enjoy chapters on the town where they celebrate the day the sun sets in the middle of the railroad tracks, and another town that celebrates a frozen dead guy kept on ice in a backyard shed where you'd normally keep the lawnmower.

Books can take you places you've never dreamed of. I met Rachel from Nevada who believed she arrived on earth via UFO.

"I am Ambassador Merlin from the Alpha Dracona star system," she told me.

That story is in the book. I also write about medieval wars, figure eight school bus racing, swamp buggies and the Nut Museum, which is a museum devoted to nuts.

Books can take you places you never dreamed of. Books introduce you to people you'd probably never meet. People with unusual pursuits — proud people, people like Kristie Reinbolt: 12-time watermelon speed-eating champion.

It's good stuff, but you have to saturate the market and make it available everywhere. I tried waiting tables at Sardi's Restaurant in Manhattan and along with the tiramisu and cheese cake, I offered my book.

An important part of any marketing scheme is promotional tie-ins and product placement, so I put my book in boxes of Cap'n Crunch.

And you have to have an audio book. My first chapter begins, "Waylon, Minn. is a bucolic little town."

You may remember that one. It was a town so small they have to hold parades where the crowds walk around the stationary parades, otherwise the procession would be over before it began.

Well, this trip down memory lane has been great, but now it's time to get out there and sell.

Bill Geist's "Way Off the Road: Discovering the Peculiar Charms of Small Town America" is available in hardcover from Broadway Books. Look for the author with a wheelbarrow at a bookstore near you.

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Add a Comment
by merlinmomcat May 13, 2007 12:01 PM PDT
When Mr. Geist mentioned taking the book "to the people," I had a brilliant idea! (Aren't they all?) My best friend and her husband have retired to Hillsboro, Ohio (a very rural area that is beginning to grow) and have started a quaint, small storefront bookstore there. Jim Hargis is retiring from upper management, first at BASF and more recently a company is Arkansas - therefore the bookstore was to be a write-off for him. However, it is taking off and becoming successful ... there is market there of people starving for books. I would love to see Mr. Geist do a book-signing there - it has all the small-town stuff and people he loves and would be a really fun thing to do. The store is big on humor books. Please let me know if there is any interest. I work for a chain of weekly newspapers that owns one in Hillsboro that probably would be interested in covering it locally and for the chain.
Marilyn McConahay 1-937-620-4044 (Cell)

Reply to this comment
by merlinmomcat May 13, 2007 12:05 PM PDT
When Mr. Geist mentioned taking the book "to the people," I had a brilliant idea! (Aren't they all?) My best friend and her husband have retired to Hillsboro, Ohio (a very rural area that is beginning to grow) and have started a quaint, small storefront bookstore there. Jim Hargis is retiring from upper management, first at BASF and more recently a company is Arkansas - therefore the bookstore was to be a write-off for him. However, it is taking off and becoming successful ... there is market there of people starving for books. I would love to see Mr. Geist do a book-signing there - it has all the small-town stuff and people he loves and would be a really fun thing to do. The store is big on humor books. Please let me know if there is any interest. I work for a chain of weekly newspapers that owns one in Hillsboro that probably would be interested in covering it locally and for the chain.
Marilyn McConahay 1-937-620-4044 (Cell)

Reply to this comment
by merlinmomcat May 13, 2007 12:14 PM PDT
When Mr. Geist mentioned taking the book "to the people," I had a brilliant idea! (Aren't they all?) My best friend and her husband have retired to Hillsboro, Ohio (a very rural area that is beginning to grow) and have started a quaint, small storefront bookstore there. Jim Hargis is retiring from upper management, first at BASF and more recently a company is Arkansas - therefore the bookstore was to be a write-off for him. However, it is taking off and becoming successful ... there is market there of people starving for books. I would love to see Mr. Geist do a book-signing there - it has all the small-town stuff and people he loves and would be a really fun thing to do. The store is big on humor books. Please let me know if there is any interest. I work for a chain of weekly newspapers that owns one in Hillsboro that probably would be interested in covering it locally and for the chain.
Marilyn McConahay 1-937-620-4044 (Cell)

Reply to this comment
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