How Writers Can Use CafePress

By Jason Boog 

rs23.jpg

In a bookselling world filled with memoirs, it requires some ingenuity and online work to make your work stand out from the pack.

In this encore edition of the Morning Media Menu, we spoke with Rachel Shukert about her memoirEverything Is Going to Be Great: An Underfunded and Overexposed European Grand Tour.  In this 2010 interview, Shukert explained how she used CafePress to promote her book:

I’m designing a CafePress site with themed merchandise–which is honestly more of a stunt than I think anybody will buy it. But I think it could be funny … there were a lot of funny phrases and things and thoughts I had in the book that I thought would be funny merchandise … there will be tote bags and buttons and underpants that will somehow reference funny scenes in the book.

Press play below to listen on SoundCloud…

Shukert concluded, explaining why she included inter-textual items like badges, boxes, and a photo in her memoir:

It’s important to keep reinventing the [memoir] form–because there is only so much you can do when you are in the confines of things that already happened to you… I had this idea of making it like a travel book, in a sense. That’s what I always loved about the Lonely Planet books–when there’s that little box that tells you something really odd over to the side. ‘By the way, 17 witches were burned on this spot where this bed and breakfast is now.’ I wanted to see how I could weave that into a fairly traditional narrative.