From Power to Practice

The hardest moment in an author’s life is not writing the book. It is walking it to the door and letting it go.

I published a book by a man with a remarkable story. He was born outside the United States, educated in Europe, and earned his PhD at an American university. The book traced the full arc — the country he left, the classrooms he entered, the degree he earned against every expectation. It was an inspiring account of persistence, intelligence, and purpose.

The book died in our warehouse.

Not because it was poorly written. Not because readers rejected it. Because the author never told anyone it existed.

He was a highly educated man. He considered it beneath him to mention his own book. He did not tell his family. He did not tell his colleagues. He did not tell the community of fellow countrymen who would have seen themselves in his journey. He believed the book should speak for itself, and when it spoke to an empty room, he accepted the silence as confirmation.

His family will never know the story he carried. His countrymen will never read the journey he survived. The book sits in boxes, doing nothing, reaching no one.

This is what happens when an author treats the practical work as beneath the writing.

The Lie Authors Believe

He is not alone. I have sat across from many authors carrying the same unspoken belief. They will not say it directly, but it lives in the hesitation, in the half-finished marketing plans, in the release parties never scheduled. The belief says: if the book is good enough, readers will find it on their own. Promoting it somehow taints it. The pure thing becomes impure the moment you ask someone to read it.

This is a lie. A generous, well-intentioned, soul-killing lie.

A book sitting in a warehouse is not serving its purpose. A book listed on Amazon with no reviews, no launch, no human being pointing another human being toward it, is a message sealed in a bottle and dropped into an ocean with no current. Purpose without practice is silence dressed up as principle.

What Changes Now

For more than two years, these campaigns have built the foundation. Purpose before platform. Conviction before cleverness. The why before the how. Every piece has argued the same core truth: authors bear moral responsibility for their words, and the world needs what they carry.

Nothing about this changes. Everything about this deepens.

Starting next week, the campaigns turn toward the practical work of bringing a book to readers. The pitch. The media kit. The launch team. The review strategy. The release party. Social media, media outreach, events, and the long discipline of sustaining a book’s life across years.

The order is deliberate. The pitch comes before the media kit because you need to know what to say before you package it. The launch team comes before the review strategy because the people reading your book before publication are the ones crossing the five-review threshold in week one. The release party is planned during production so the books arrive into an event already built, not scrambled together after.

Each step builds on the one before it. Skip one, and the ones after it weaken. Do them in order, and they compound.

The Cost of Silence

The practical work is not separate from the purpose. It is the purpose in motion. Writing the book was the first act of courage. Getting it into the hands of the reader who needs it is the second. The second act is not lesser. It is the completion of the first.

A doctor who discovers a cure and never publishes the paper has not served the patient. A teacher who writes the lesson plan and never walks into the classroom has not served the student. An author who writes the book and never does the work of reaching readers has not served the reader.

The practical work is not selling. It is delivering. It is the last mile between the author’s conviction and the reader’s life.

The man with the PhD understood this too late. His book was an act of courage. His silence was an act of pride. And pride cost his story its life.

Somewhere in his home country, a young student is working toward an impossible degree, carrying the same doubts he once carried, needing exactly the book he wrote. The book exists. The student will never find it.

The foundation is laid. The building starts now. And the building is not a betrayal of the foundation. It is the reason the foundation exists.

The Power of Authors by Evan and Lois Swensen explores what it means to write with purpose — the foundation on which every practical step in the campaigns ahead is built.

The Power of Authors is available from Amazon or your favorite bookseller: http://evanswensen.com. If you’d like an autographed copy, you can order it here: http://bit.ly/4pgmzjM.

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