Some friends think there is a contradiction in my words that I wrote my books for the sake of God and at the same time I am promoting them so that many people will buy them. I excuse them because they do not know how the book trade is run. In short, so that you understand how this trade works. For example, the book you buy for 20 pounds, the cost of printing, description, cover design, and copying, for example, is 11 pounds, plus a profit for the author of 4 pounds, for example, and a profit for the library or publishing house of 5 pounds. For example, if a thousand copies are printed, the author gets a profit of four thousand and the publishing house gets a profit of five thousand for every thousand copies printed. This is an example.
As for my writings, I have dedicated them to the sake of God Almighty, meaning that I do not receive any profits from them. What remains is for those who buy my books to pay the cost of printing the book and the profit of the library. I have no hand in these costs, and all of this is done so that the book reaches the buyer at the lowest possible price and so that the largest possible number of people buy it.
As for promoting my books so that they reach the largest possible number of people, this is so that I may receive the greatest reward from God Almighty, not for the sake of obtaining more profits. It is possible that I may leave my books without advertising and in the end they may reach a small number of people, and in the end I only receive the reward of this small number, but I aspire to increase my reward from God Almighty, and therefore I want my books to reach the largest possible number. When a person dies, his deeds come to an end except for three: ongoing charity, beneficial knowledge, or a righteous child who prays for him. I hope that everyone who has misjudged me has understood through this article my goals in promoting my books.