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“This is the greatest piece of combat writing I’ve ever read,” renowned publisher Morgan Entrekin of Grove Atlantic told me, as he placed a manuscript of Mark Bowden’s Black Hawk Down in my hands in the fall of 1998. I had just joined his team, which would launch the book in March the following year.
I would come to hear him utter that phrase like a mantra, laying the groundwork for the book to become an international bestseller. He repeated it with book wholesalers and retailers, his media contacts, reviewers, librarians and just about anyone who would listen.
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I had already been a book publicist for nearly 20 years, but working on this book under Morgan’s leadership taught me valuable lessons about publicizing military books. As it turns out, you can teach an old publicity dog new tricks.
I had two key roles: reaching the book’s core market of military personnel and convincing the media that this was a book that demanded attention.
At the time, the internet was in its infancy — but it proved to be a big element in the book’s success. In a move unheard of since Charles Dickens, the Philadelphia Inquirer, where Mark was a staff writer, decided to run his Somalia reporting as a 29-part serial. This was long before paywalls, so the content was free on the newspaper’s website.
Given its Cold War roots, the internet was an important tool for military personnel long before it became accessible to the general public as the world wide web. Word spread quickly in online military circles about this free story that finally told the truth about Mogadishu, and its author who “got it” when it came to what the soldiers on the ground were up against.
The serial also landed Mark a million-dollar movie deal with Hollywood producer Jerry Bruckheimer.
To stimulate interest, Grove Atlantic created T-shirts with the great jacket image and sent them to booksellers and media contacts. Judy Hottensen, the company’s publicity chief, then dispatched Mark on a multicity prepublication tour to meet with these same folks.
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