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How To Train Your Cat To Promote Your Book: Have Fun With Your Feline, Go Viral In The Social Media, And Sell More Books (Writer's Craft) Kindle Edition
When I say that I trained him, the reaction is inevitably “What?!” and “You can't train a cat!”
Oh yes, you can train a cat.
When I say, “Sulu, shake hands” he places his right paw in my right palm.
When I say, “Sulu, scratch” he walks to the scratching post and scratches.
When I say, “Sulu, read” he lies down by the open book, places his paw on the page and 'reads' while I take pictures.
Sulu is an ordinary cat, a black moggy from the cat rescue shelter whom nobody else wanted. You'll meet Sulu in photos throughout this book, showing off what he can do.
The star of your book, however, is your cat. I haven't met her, so I'll assume she's an untrained but intelligent kitty who has a mind of her own. I'll call her Catsy.
Adapt my strategies so they meet Catsy's approval. She'll probably love the training, but it has to be on her terms. Catsy won't be ordered about!
I'm not a professional animal trainer. I'm simply a writer who loves cats and has books to promote. Maybe this description fits you, too. If Sulu and I can do it, Catsy and you can do it as well. For a professional perspective, veterinarian Dr. Pippa Elliott MRCVS shares expert tips.
This is a guide for authors and publishers with books to promote. If you promote different products, or if you simply want to spend quality time with your cat, teach her to perform tricks, and take cute photos for the social media, this book will give you enjoyable ideas but you need to adapt them to suit.
Now let's get started. Tell Catsy we're going to have fun.
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateAugust 16, 2015
- File size7.2 MB
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Product details
- ASIN : B00YNYT1ZE
- Publisher : Rayne Hall (August 16, 2015)
- Publication date : August 16, 2015
- Language : English
- File size : 7.2 MB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 160 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,424,443 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #910 in Advertising (Kindle Store)
- #1,307 in Authorship
- #2,416 in Advertising (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Rayne Hall MA is the author of over 100 books, mostly Dark Fantasy and Gothic Horror, e.g. The Bride’s Curse: Bulgarian Gothic Ghost and Horror Stories. She is also the acclaimed editor of Gothic, Fantasy and Horror anthologies (e.g. Among the Headstones: Creepy Tales from the Graveyard) and author of the bestselling Writer’s Craft series for advanced-level writers, including and the bestselling Writer’s Craft series e.g. Writing Gothic Fiction Writing Scary Scenes, Writing Vivid Settings, Writing Vivid Dialogue, Writing Vivid Characters, Writing Deep Point of View.
Born and raised in Germany, Rayne Hall has lived in China, Mongolia, Nepal and Britain. Now she resides in a village in Bulgaria, where men perform the annual demon dance, ghosts and sirens beckon, and abandoned decaying houses hold memories of a glorious past.
Her lucky black rescue cat Sulu often accompanies her when she explores spooky derelict buildings. He delights in walking across shattered roof tiles, scratching charred timbers and sniffing at long-abandoned hearths. He even senses the presence of ghosts… but that’s another story.
Rayne has worked as an investigative journalist, development aid worker, museum guide, apple picker, tarot reader, adult education teacher, belly dancer, magazine editor, publishing manager and more, and now writes full time.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book provides practical tips and suggestions for cat owners. They describe it as charming with humorous pet anecdotes. Readers appreciate the clear, professional prose and pacing. Overall, they consider it a good read.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers enjoy the advice in the book. They find it humorous and practical, with tips for cat training and insights into feline behavior. The book is described as cute and a must-read for cat lovers.
"...development of that idea and on the way the reader is presented with insights into feline behaviour which may already have been observed but not..." Read more
"This is a cute book filled with advice and suggestions for cat owners!" Read more
"...love cats and expect a great deal of enjoyment, and/or two 2)..." Read more
"...humorous pet anecdotes with practical tips for cat training—yes, cat training. I’ve always had dogs and know how difficult even they can be to train...." Read more
Customers find the book charming and humorous. They appreciate the unique blend of pet anecdotes with practical tips. The book provides a comprehensive and clear look at how cats are likely to behave.
"...to Train your Cat to Promote your Book" gives us a comprehensive and clear look at how cats are likely to respond to their human friends in certain..." Read more
"...It is a unique blend of charming and humorous pet anecdotes with practical tips for cat training—yes, cat training...." Read more
"Cute book......" Read more
Customers appreciate the book's pacing. They find the prose clear and engaging, with an approachable style. Overall, readers describe it as a good read.
"...its response to training for a specific purpose is without doubt a very good read and one I would highly recommend to anyone who cares about the..." Read more
"...Hall writes clean, entertaining, professional prose...." Read more
"Awesome Aurthor..." Read more
Reviews with images

Training Your Cat to Promote Books!
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2015"How to Train your Cat to Promote your Book" - Rayne Hall
One might think that Rayne Hall's book "How to Train your Cat to Promote your Book" will only attract a limited readership. How many people are there who write books, and how many of those writers have a cat companion? Actually, quite a few; the book tells us that black cats in particular like to live with writers. But don't be deceived. This book does much more than send useful messages to authors. Beginning with the dawning of an idea, the pages deal with the fascinating account of the development of that idea and on the way the reader is presented with insights into feline behaviour which may already have been observed but not completely understood.
Written in Hall's very approachable, clear and fluent style, the book reveals aspects of the world according to Sulu, the author's black feline companion. Through her account of this animal's amenability to training and his willingness to participate in his human's life, Hall opens a door onto the wide field of cat behaviour. In her dealing with a specific case of animal/human cooperation, she presents the general condition.
This can only be useful. There are many of us who deeply appreciate the enjoyment and the consolation of animal companionship and want to understand as much as we can about our friends from another species. Many of us also have a sneaking suspicion that cats know exactly what they are doing and in the scratching order, they are the ones with the claws, so it is in our interests to understand what may be going on.
"How to Train your Cat to Promote your Book" gives us a comprehensive and clear look at how cats are likely to respond to their human friends in certain circumstances. In response to the author's assurance that feline training is a careful, committed and long-term process, I began to try her methods on my own cat, with little expectation that I would see a great deal of change. The author's cat is young, full of the joy of life (or catnip), enthusiastic and interested in the novel events of his day. My companion is much older, staid, friendly and a creature of great habit. However, within two weeks of following some of Hall's training suggestions, I can see that my cat's interest has been engaged. A new experience has come into her life and I believe that she is beginning to enjoy it. Whether it will produce the results which appear in the pages of this book remains to be seen but I have hopes.
In the chapters dealing with the practicalities of preparing and capturing the images which form the basis of a creature-assisted promotion, the author lays out the process in necessary detail, revealing the personal experience from which the book has emerged. As well as the many images, notes from a veterinary doctor also appear through the book, adding even more substance to the well-prepared material.
The author never goes too far in interpreting animal behaviour in human terms, although she does sketch out parallels in human thinking and feline responses. She points out, a little startlingly, that cats vocalise because they have worked out that we humans need sound to communicate meaning. She also suggests from time to time that Sulu's mind harbours certain improbable intentions, but that is just an enjoyable extra to the main line of her argument which is that if you want to, you can shape your cat's behaviour. It would not happen to a cat in the wild, but in the domestic setting training is something which probably makes the cat's life enjoyable and interesting and possibly will be helpful, not only to a book-promoting author but also to a gardener who doesn't want feline fertiliser in the vegie patch. It will take time and commitment but, according to Hall, it can be done.
Rayne Hall's book about her cat and its response to training for a specific purpose is without doubt a very good read and one I would highly recommend to anyone who cares about the quality of their animal companion's life - and, of course, of their own.
Judith Rook
- Reviewed in the United States on June 6, 2016This is a cute book filled with advice and suggestions for cat owners!
- Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2015Rayne Hall's How To Train Your Cat To Promote Your Book is a waste of money if you expect to read the book and transform your cat into a miracle working wonder overnight. Cat wrangling requires more work than marriage and maybe more commitment.
You will, however, reap many benefits if you 1) love cats and expect a great deal of enjoyment, and/or two 2) commit to fifteen minutes or more a day to train your cat. The methods Hall describes focus on the art of book promotion, but with a little imagination book fans can adapt them to more mundane (or, as Carol would say more fun) tasks.
(I speak from experience when I review Ms. Halls Book. My wife Carol and I rescued more than three hundred abandoned, impounded and even—occasionally—feral cats, mostly siamese, over the last twenty years. Since they lived with us in our home we observed them close at hand, making us the Jane Goodalls of felines.)
Carol reads, and, when I beg her and make boundless promises, proofreads my manuscripts. She doesn’t write and she absolutely refuses to market for me. She would never stoop to posing with my books. You'll be pleased to learn cats cooperate far more willingly than spouses.
In case you doubt me, Hall begins by offering numerous incentives to entice kitty cooperation, from basic ear scratches to snacks and prawns (shrimps to those of us on the other side of the ocean). Once your cat agrees to cooperate, and they will, Hall leads readers step-by-step through basic training exercises, advanced poses and even the ever popular canine hand-shaking trick.
She combines her program with tips from veterinarian Dr. Pippa Elliot. She also recruited a team of beta testers (or trainers) to try her methods on their cats before releasing the book.
The final sections include advice on finding a good pet for authors looking for a cat to promote their own books. Hall focuses on identifying the right match and she stresses the value of rescues and shelters. She pairs that advice with a warning (which I also share): never adopt a pet simply for something as shallow as social media or book promotion. When you adopt, you adopt for your pet's lifetime, and your pet forms a strong emotional bond you shouldn't carelessly break.
Hall writes clean, entertaining, professional prose. More to the point, she illustrates the book with dozens of photographs of her own cat Sulu, who was trained to promote the many books she wrote. She trained Sulu so well, in fact, that he steals the book from under her. Many fans will think of this book as Sulu Saves the Writer's Career rather than How To Train Your Cat To Promote Your Book.
Hall claims Sulu carved out his own space in the Twitterverse, and she’s right. People love to share his photos and Tweets and I suspect many readers will follow suit once they finish. (I've attached photos of Sulu posing with Hall's books but you will find many more when you buy).
How To Train Your Cat To Promote Your Book belongs on every cat lover's book shelf, whether they write and sell their own books or not. You may think the title is a joke, you may imagine the book is a lark, but you’d be wrong. Cats think for themselves, and you can train them.
Phillip T. Stephens is the author of Cigerets, Guns & Beer and Raising Hell.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2018I discovered Rayne Hall on Twitter through another writer’s tweet. When I saw the tweet about this book which featured two subjects I care about—pets and book marketing—I knew I had to read it.
It is a unique blend of charming and humorous pet anecdotes with practical tips for cat training—yes, cat training. I’ve always had dogs and know how difficult even they can be to train. But she includes tips that can help cat parents engage positively with their kitty kids. Also, featured are many cat training tips from a veterinarian to help keep these activities fun and stimulating, but not stressful.
And the activities are geared for helping authors showcase their cat’s antics and talents to connect with potential readers in a friendly way. Certainly a good example of how authors can build an audience and community for their work via social media, without constant "buy my book" promotions.