. National publicity efforts targeting:
+Industry journals such as Publishers Weekly, Booklist, Library Journal, Kirkus, Bookforum, and ShelfAwareness
+Major newspapers and journals such as The New York Times, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, Time, Entertainment Weekly, and The New Yorker
+National blogs and podcasts such as Salon, Slate, The Rumpus, Buzzfeed Books, Huffington Post, Barnes & Noble Review, NPR
+Publications the author has written for, been featured in, or whose work has been reviewed in
+Other publications focusing on history, spirituality, and poetry
+Schools and organizations the author is associated with
. Marketing to bookstores, libraries, book clubs, and universities
. Author and book signing at the 2017 Association of Writers and Writing Programs conference
. Multi-city book tour encompassing New York (New York), Washington, DC, North Carolina (Davidson), Arizona (Tempe, Tucson), and California (Los Angeles, San Diego).
. Promotion online through the author's website
. E-newsletter promotion to several-thousand-plus contacts
. Promotion through social media to Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Goodreads, and Amazon
Autorentext
Cynthia Hogue has published thirteen books, including eight collections of poetry, most recently Revenance, listed as one of the 2014 "Standout" books by the Academy of American Poets. In June the Labyrinth (Red Hen Press, 2017) is her ninth poetry collection. With Sylvain Gallais, Hogue co-translated Fortino Sámano (The overflowing of the poem), from the French of poet Virginie Lalucq and philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy (Omnidawn 2012), which won the Harold Morton Landon Translation Award from the Academy of American Poets in 2013. Among Hogue's other honors are an NEA Fellowship in poetry, the H.D. Fellowship at the Beinecke Library at Yale University, a MacDowell Colony residency, and the Witter Bynner Translation Fellowship at the Santa Fe Art Institute. Hogue served as the Distinguished Visiting Writer at Cornell University in the Spring of 2014. She was a 2015 NEA Fellow in Translation, and holds the Maxine and Jonathan Marshall Chair in Modern and Contemporary Poetry at Arizona State University. She lives in Phoenix.