Tag: tools

New Lessons: eBook to Print

New Lessons: eBook to Print

How many of you publish eBooks only (Kindle or iBook editions…)? That’s me. For now. But…

Now I’m thinking all things paperback publishing. No hardcovers for now, and that’s okay. 

In fact, more seriously than ever, I’m considering embarking on the tree-killing phase of my independent publishing journey.  

That translates into “Fear of Commitment.” Once on paper, no more easy revisions!

I flirted with starting down this path well over a year ago, and shared what I learned at that time in an article about one print-on-demand (POD) vendor, KDP, or Kindle Direct Publishing, an Amazon company. FYI, if you were familiar with CreateSpace, it has been absorbed into KDP. I posted some good info in an article you can find here

You can see I’ve learned more since then, but rather than repeat much of that material, see that article for good questions self-publishing authors of print books should research on cryptic topics such as book format, spline width, full-bleed, text boundaries, etc. Not for the feint of heart, but essential questions all. Fortunately, Print-on-demand (POD) vendors are helpful navigating this morass. 

Here’s what I’m learning today:

  • Scrivener remains my overwhelming author software of choice; however, I need to learn even more new terms and why they are important as I set my sites on print. For example:
    • What is the difference between mass-market and trade paperbacks? See Joseph Kunz’s excellent article explaining the difference. I’m aiming at mass-market for lower unit cost (and price).
    • What precise formatting dimensions are expected for each, and how does that influence my design (my “copy,” or text; and graphics) for a front cover, the spine (the narrow edge that shows when the book sits on the shelf), and the back cover?
      • I suggest studying the detailed specifications of each POD vendor before spending time creating your own format and design. Don’t waste time redesigning, like me.
      • For example, guidelines for KDP can be found here.
    • I design my own cover art using Canva which offers some nice basic designs from templates, especially after I add my own artwork, which is optional. If you hire the services of a professional cover designer for several hundred dollars or more for each project, you need not worry so much about this part of the process other than paying your artist. A few ideas for you:
      • Use your favorite search engine (my favorite is duckduckgo.com because they don’t micro-market to me like the big boys) to locate “book cover designers” and roll the dice! Or,
      • Consult with successful authors to discover their favorites. Joanna Penn has made a name for herself writing and publishing both fiction and non-fiction. Take a look at her extensive list of book cover designers here.
  • Scrivener continues to be my amazing all-in-one writer’s studio. All of my formatting, even for paper, can be achieved within this single program. As I discover I need them (e.g., for print), I’m finding useful features in the Compile (format/export) feature of Scrivener:
    • The “Print” function in Compile, for example, doesn’t mean I need to print to paper. Rather, I will format for print, and save my output in a PDF file format, or some other type of file, to pre-flight (inspect) the results,
    • Heretofore unimportant (to me) formatting and ID options, such as:
      • Margins. They now need careful consideration. New terms, such as guttering are now important. These are the margins closest to the center of the book, where the rightmost margin of the leftmost page is closest to the leftmost margin of the rightmost (facing) page. The gutter. Why? Well, the thicker (as in more pages in) the book, the wider the guttering margins must be. Huh! Who knew?
      • Page Count. Too many pages means too high a book price required by the printer (they charge by the page). If the book costs too much, that impacts my sales. Artificially lowering the price (a tighter profit margin) leaves fewer pennies left to drift into this author’s bank account. And my CFO claims it’s not enough to justify a year’s worth of effort. Huh. Alas, what is a poor scribe to do. Is not every word I pen precious? The truth is it ain’t worth a plug nickel if nobody buys the darn book because it costs too much!
      • Scrivener Compile for Print: This may require a good deal of experimentation, but this article is helping tweak my freak. And remember, experimentation with the look of the book can be achieved without killing a single tree. Select Print formatting in Compile and then export your format to a PDF file instead of to a printer. I will spend the time to get it right!
      • ISBNs: A comprehensive discussion of ISBNs can be found in this article. ISBN is an acronym for the all-important International Standard Book Number. This article is a must-read for all self-published authors!
        • While I haven’t needed an ISBN to self-publish an eBook within a single channel (think only Kindle Edition only on Amazon, for example), a unique ISBN is required for each:
          • Print book,
          • Audiobook,
          • Language.
        • ISBNs for use in any sales channel are not free. I’m saving my pennies to buy 100 ISBNs for $575 (better deal than $150 each!). Why? Well…
          • I’ll have 4 books published by year-end x 3 (eBook + audiobook + paperback) = 12 ISBNs I require now, and,
          • I’ll require 3 additional ISBNs for each new book (potentially).
          • Each revision requires an additional IBSN for each format
          • If I should choose to publish other authors’ books (unlikely), I will have some ISBNs to spare.
          • Plus I have several shorter projects like short story anthologies and novellas in the wings.
  • I’m discovering new resources on the Internet for exploring features I had yet to learn within Scrivener, and will be useful as I commit to print. Some features ease the task of writing, while others ensure a consistent look and feel across all my books once printed. Very cool stuff. Such as:
    • Keywords. Here’s why. I assign a keyword to each scene or chapter within which a certain character appears. Then I can search on that keyword in my 100,000-word novel to see how many scenes or chapters in which that character appears. Or I assign a different keyword to all the scenes or chapters relevant to one storyline, and a different keyword to another. That helps me understand the balance and distribution across the storylines. 
    • Templates. Let’s say I don’t want to recreate dozens of settings for each new book. I only publish one book a year. Remembering all those settings for that long is a pain, and if dozens of options are not precisely duplicated, the latest book doesn’t look quite like the last one. This is particularly problematic for a series. Using the same template for each project simplifies matters. I discovered some wonderful articles for future projects that you might find useful in structuring your own work. My advice? Study Scrivener templates! Create your own! Or modify someone else’s for your use to keep your projects consistent! Examples:
    • Page Formatting Options for Print:
      • I’m in the process of crafting my fondest page and book formatting dreams within Compile in Scrivener. And not just for Fractured Dreams, but for all my projects. With quality and consistency. But this will take some work on my part unless I want to spend money. Here are the options:
        • This Page Formatting Tricks article includes some clever ideas on how to use Scrivener Collections to track different versions of the same project (ePub or iBooks, Print, or Kindle). I like these ideas because it keeps me from needing external tools,
        • Alternatives to focusing on Scrivener Compile include spending money formatting your manuscripts with other products like Adobe InDesign (free trial, then $21 monthly!) or the ease-of-use-per-dollar value, Vellum ($250, one-time charge for eBook & Print), but those are still additional significant expenditures and learning curves of other tools. 
        • Or you can spend even more (thousands across multiple projects) hiring one of the countless professional book formatting services to do the work for you. All are reasonable choices with different price points, but the choice is yours.

So it occurred to me that even after spending a few years using just the Scrivener features I needed, I’m still learning more this amazing tool can do for me. 

Sally 6/5/9 126

Now that my manuscript (final draft) for “Fractured Dreams” is out for beta readers to pick apart (thank you, all!), I’m spending some time learning all this print stuff before I start work on the next project.

You get the idea. Thinking paperback requires different considerations than thinking eBook; however, Scrivener continues to keep this author from straying.

That pleases me because I SO dislike jumping between two or more tools.

Put this in your “for what it’s worth” department.

With pen in hand, and Scrivener on the screen,

Gene

Author of Dangerous Dreams, UpLife – Reality 2.0, and A Narrow Painted Road.

Look for the sequel to “Dangerous Dreams” entitled “Fractured Dreams” late 2019.


New Lessons: eBook to Print

New Lessons: eBook to Print

How many of you publish eBooks only (Kindle or iBook editions…)? That’s me. For now. But…

Now I’m thinking all things paperback publishing. No hardcovers for now, and that’s okay. 

In fact, more seriously than ever, I’m considering embarking on the tree-killing phase of my independent publishing journey.  

That translates into “Fear of Commitment.” Once on paper, no more easy revisions!

I flirted with starting down this path well over a year ago, and shared what I learned at that time in an article about one print-on-demand (POD) vendor, KDP, or Kindle Direct Publishing, an Amazon company. FYI, if you were familiar with CreateSpace, it has been absorbed into KDP. I posted some good info in an article you can find here

You can see I’ve learned more since then, but rather than repeat much of that material, see that article for good questions self-publishing authors of print books should research on cryptic topics such as book format, spline width, full-bleed, text boundaries, etc. Not for the feint of heart, but essential questions all. Fortunately, Print-on-demand (POD) vendors are helpful navigating this morass. 

Here’s what I’m learning today:

  • Scrivener remains my overwhelming author software of choice; however, I need to learn even more new terms and why they are important as I set my sites on print. For example:
    • What is the difference between mass-market and trade paperbacks? See Joseph Kunz’s excellent article explaining the difference. I’m aiming at mass-market for lower unit cost (and price).
    • What precise formatting dimensions are expected for each, and how does that influence my design (my “copy,” or text; and graphics) for a front cover, the spine (the narrow edge that shows when the book sits on the shelf), and the back cover?
      • I suggest studying the detailed specifications of each POD vendor before spending time creating your own format and design. Don’t waste time redesigning, like me.
      • For example, guidelines for KDP can be found here.
    • I design my own cover art using Canva which offers some nice basic designs from templates, especially after I add my own artwork, which is optional. If you hire the services of a professional cover designer for several hundred dollars or more for each project, you need not worry so much about this part of the process other than paying your artist. A few ideas for you:
      • Use your favorite search engine (my favorite is duckduckgo.com because they don’t micro-market to me like the big boys) to locate “book cover designers” and roll the dice! Or,
      • Consult with successful authors to discover their favorites. Joanna Penn has made a name for herself writing and publishing both fiction and non-fiction. Take a look at her extensive list of book cover designers here.
  • Scrivener continues to be my amazing all-in-one writer’s studio. All of my formatting, even for paper, can be achieved within this single program. As I discover I need them (e.g., for print), I’m finding useful features in the Compile (format/export) feature of Scrivener:
    • The “Print” function in Compile, for example, doesn’t mean I need to print to paper. Rather, I will format for print, and save my output in a PDF file format, or some other type of file, to pre-flight (inspect) the results,
    • Heretofore unimportant (to me) formatting and ID options, such as:
      • Margins. They now need careful consideration. New terms, such as guttering are now important. These are the margins closest to the center of the book, where the rightmost margin of the leftmost page is closest to the leftmost margin of the rightmost (facing) page. The gutter. Why? Well, the thicker (as in more pages in) the book, the wider the guttering margins must be. Huh! Who knew?
      • Page Count. Too many pages means too high a book price required by the printer (they charge by the page). If the book costs too much, that impacts my sales. Artificially lowering the price (a tighter profit margin) leaves fewer pennies left to drift into this author’s bank account. And my CFO claims it’s not enough to justify a year’s worth of effort. Huh. Alas, what is a poor scribe to do. Is not every word I pen precious? The truth is it ain’t worth a plug nickel if nobody buys the darn book because it costs too much!
      • Scrivener Compile for Print: This may require a good deal of experimentation, but this article is helping tweak my freak. And remember, experimentation with the look of the book can be achieved without killing a single tree. Select Print formatting in Compile and then export your format to a PDF file instead of to a printer. I will spend the time to get it right!
      • ISBNs: A comprehensive discussion of ISBNs can be found in this article. ISBN is an acronym for the all-important International Standard Book Number. This article is a must-read for all self-published authors!
        • While I haven’t needed an ISBN to self-publish an eBook within a single channel (think only Kindle Edition only on Amazon, for example), a unique ISBN is required for each:
          • Print book,
          • Audiobook,
          • Language.
        • ISBNs for use in any sales channel are not free. I’m saving my pennies to buy 100 ISBNs for $575 (better deal than $150 each!). Why? Well…
          • I’ll have 4 books published by year-end x 3 (eBook + audiobook + paperback) = 12 ISBNs I require now, and,
          • I’ll require 3 additional ISBNs for each new book (potentially).
          • Each revision requires an additional IBSN for each format
          • If I should choose to publish other authors’ books (unlikely), I will have some ISBNs to spare.
          • Plus I have several shorter projects like short story anthologies and novellas in the wings.
  • I’m discovering new resources on the Internet for exploring features I had yet to learn within Scrivener, and will be useful as I commit to print. Some features ease the task of writing, while others ensure a consistent look and feel across all my books once printed. Very cool stuff. Such as:
    • Keywords. Here’s why. I assign a keyword to each scene or chapter within which a certain character appears. Then I can search on that keyword in my 100,000-word novel to see how many scenes or chapters in which that character appears. Or I assign a different keyword to all the scenes or chapters relevant to one storyline, and a different keyword to another. That helps me understand the balance and distribution across the storylines. 
    • Templates. Let’s say I don’t want to recreate dozens of settings for each new book. I only publish one book a year. Remembering all those settings for that long is a pain, and if dozens of options are not precisely duplicated, the latest book doesn’t look quite like the last one. This is particularly problematic for a series. Using the same template for each project simplifies matters. I discovered some wonderful articles for future projects that you might find useful in structuring your own work. My advice? Study Scrivener templates! Create your own! Or modify someone else’s for your use to keep your projects consistent! Examples:
    • Page Formatting Options for Print:
      • I’m in the process of crafting my fondest page and book formatting dreams within Compile in Scrivener. And not just for Fractured Dreams, but for all my projects. With quality and consistency. But this will take some work on my part unless I want to spend money. Here are the options:
        • This Page Formatting Tricks article includes some clever ideas on how to use Scrivener Collections to track different versions of the same project (ePub or iBooks, Print, or Kindle). I like these ideas because it keeps me from needing external tools,
        • Alternatives to focusing on Scrivener Compile include spending money formatting your manuscripts with other products like Adobe InDesign (free trial, then $21 monthly!) or the ease-of-use-per-dollar value, Vellum ($250, one-time charge for eBook & Print), but those are still additional significant expenditures and learning curves of other tools. 
        • Or you can spend even more (thousands across multiple projects) hiring one of the countless professional book formatting services to do the work for you. All are reasonable choices with different price points, but the choice is yours.

So it occurred to me that even after spending a few years using just the Scrivener features I needed, I’m still learning more this amazing tool can do for me. 

Sally 6/5/9 126

Now that my manuscript (final draft) for “Fractured Dreams” is out for beta readers to pick apart (thank you, all!), I’m spending some time learning all this print stuff before I start work on the next project.

You get the idea. Thinking paperback requires different considerations than thinking eBook; however, Scrivener continues to keep this author from straying.

That pleases me because I SO dislike jumping between two or more tools.

Put this in your “for what it’s worth” department.

With pen in hand, and Scrivener on the screen,

Gene

Author of Dangerous Dreams, UpLife – Reality 2.0, and A Narrow Painted Road.

Look for the sequel to “Dangerous Dreams” entitled “Fractured Dreams” late 2019.


A Traveling Author’s Best Bets

A Traveling Author’s Best Bets

Ride with me on a journey. Together, let’s explore the experience of wandering North America while learning, writing, editing, teaching, and publishing. In this article I offer you a fanciful overview of my best practices for the itinerant author of fiction or non-fiction, on land or at sea. And we will examine how such a lifestyle compares to that of you stationary authors. If you’re a “roadie” too, you already understand. And we’ll talk best writing tools. 

Your Tiny Rolling Home 

Imagine your home is tiny, odd-shaped, less than three hundred square feet, maybe much less. And that little house moves with you from one place to another, anywhere you see a road wide enough and possess the desire to drive it. 

How would your life as a writer remain the same or differ from sticks ’n bricks on a cul-de-sac in Hometown, USA? How would you survive and thrive rolling over strange byways to set up camp—not as a vacation, but as a lifestyle, where the trip is home? 

Writing On Land or At Sea

Our home afloat sailed us down fifteen-hundred miles of the US river system, across the Gulf of Mexico, to the Florida Keys, and beyond. Now we’ve abandoned our life at sea in favor of “land yachting.”  So far, such journeys have lasted many years for my wife and me with no predictable end in sight. 

Still I write

Our last “front yard” chasing a Western sunset anchored off Key West, FL, USA. By land or by sea, write!
(original digital painting by GK Jurrens)

We will explore efficiencies that allow all authors greater productivity, even from within a tiny rolling (or floating) home. 

Will the Road End Before It Begins?

I now find it difficult to imagine remaining in one place for more than several weeks, but suspect I will eventually awaken from this delightful dream. If you are considering the wandering writer’s life, please keep reading for two important safety tips. 

Know that you do need an exit strategy before hitting the Interstate, or the Intracoastal. Nothing lasts forever.  

You should also know a full-time mobile lifestyle is not for the feint of heart, maybe not even for you. But such a quest does fan the fires of inspiration. Without question.

Perennial Writing Wisdom… Anywhere

First, certain elements remain the same, no matter the geography: 

  • Virtuosity requires writing daily whether standing or moving,
  • My evolution as an author continues—I will never cease studying the craft, 
  • Most of us need a controlled space to set our inner authors free. Some of us need noise, others silence. We all must focus. I arise early to write while it’s quiet,
  • And like all serious authors, I need to build my brand,  including a web site, a blog, subscribers, and social media,
  • I must communicate with other writers and readers. 

Adapting to a Mobile Writer’s Life

Other factors require me to road-adapt

  • Important relationships with other writers and writing groups are harder “out here.” I embrace this challenge by joining online groups such as “Authors on the Road” on Facebook. Remember, first sell yourself, then your books.Google for many fine resources. Seek a good fit. I’m meeting intriguing folks online—readers and writers—with whom I might not otherwise interact, much less share tips, feedback, and outrageous stories. 
  • Offering writing seminars pays delightful dividends like face-to-face marketing opportunities and increased book sales. I offer such seminars at RV rallies, local libraries, and bookstores. They never disappoint. 

An Author’s Paperless Workflow

While inspiration coalesces outside our windshield, we still sleep in our own bed each night. My study and favorite chair and ottoman faithfully follow me everywhere. Limited space for reference materials, especially for a hard-copy library remains our nemesis. Every cubic inch is precious in the bus. 

My strategy? A paperless workflow: 

  • A twenty-seven-inch iMac provides a large visual portal into my work. Yes, I made room for this important (and large) writing tool. 
  • Outlining Your Novel Software”gets my juices flowing,
  • Then I flesh out my first draft using an invaluable organizational and editing tool called Scrivener,”
  • Another program, ProWritingAid”facilitates my editing process, integrating nicely with “Scrivener.” I no longer print manuscripts for editing, now unnecessary with these productivity tools,
  • For now,  Kindle Direct Publishing produces my eBooks (Kindle editions) with me as publisher (Author One), eliminating the need for an inventory of space-consuming paper books, although this has affected my marketing efforts. I adapt as necessary.

You need not be a traveling author to leverage this efficient process.

Internet Connectivity & Synchronized Simplicity

My most daunting challenge remains consistent Internet connectivity to back up my research notes, drafts, and manuscripts in cloud storage, and for synchronizing my writing in Scrivener (see my review here) across my iMac, iPhone, iPad, and cloud storage. Only the Apocalypse will destroy my work even though it isn’t on paper! 

  • For this purpose, the free version of an Internet site called Dropbox” is effective and automatically synchronizes across all my devices after a one-time set up. 
  • By synchronizing projects across my computer, smartphone, and tablet, I can write anywhere with absolute confidence in the integrity of all my projects modified on any of my devices. Even if inspiration strikes while standing in line at the market. Or while lying in bed. Or astride the throne.
  • I shopped for cell plans that allow me unlimited data streaming to/from phones and tablets. The only time I’m data-plan-limited is to/from the desktop iMac, but my plan allows for that (except for the rare dead zone). I then use a phone or tablet as the Mac’s Internet “hotspot.” Speed is adequate. AT&T and Verizon offer adequate plans.  For almost two years I used a dedicated hotspot device (MyFi with AT&T… Verizon calls theirs a JetPack. With the evolution of cell plans, MyFi became obsolete, and I no longer need a separate device),
  • To optimize free WiFi wherever available, I use a bus rooftop booster called a WiFiRanger which boasts built-in security, even over an unsecured campground WiFi, by creating a bus-wide VPN (Virtual Private Network). Yeah, too techy. Sorry. 
    • Or I loiter in a coffee shop with my iPad and Bluetooth keyboard.
    • Most of the time, my unlimited streaming plan make WiFi obsolete, at least on the phone and tablet.

My productivity soared after I adapted my writing process to this paperless workflow.

Advantages of Mobile Research

Prowling used bookstores everywhere, I eagerly anticipate the aroma of musty volumes and strong coffee… and local inspiration:

  • In Astoria, Oregon, I love “Lucy’s.” Shop in a “Tardis” (Police Call Box) like Doctor Who’s.
  • Another example in Astoria: if you need to research Wicca (magic and witchcraft) for a project while sipping Arabica, nearby curmudgeonly “Godfather Books” features an entire section. Another pearl I discovered there—a book on 1940s prison slang! 
  • When passing through Cedar City, Utah, I love “Main Street Books” (collector’s editions, new/used, features local authors). This store connects to a popular coffee house where groups of readers and writers can commiserate in soft chairs. 

Googling can’t replace being there…  touching, smelling, hearing, tasting, feeling…

Handcrafted Characters Well Met

Delicious characters from each robust region of North America constantly surprise me, and will invade the pages of my new novels, poems, and memoirs. As examples:

  • Harley is a leathery old prospector of vintage nineteenth-century bottles. He researches local courthouses to uncover erstwhile outhouse locations in Oregon ghost towns so he can “mine” bottles from those high-value digs. 
  • And I’ve met self-proclaimed “rubber trampers” living in the open desert outside Quartzsite, Arizona. Most live on the cheap, minimizing their carbon footprints. Many are devotees of Henry David Thoreau. 

Oh, the as-yet-unpublished campfire stories and quotable recitations!

Staying Overnight at Writing Events

Life on the road allows us to intersect with book festivals and writing conferences. At each day’s end, we retire to our own home—the bus—just nearby. To our own bed and pillows, and to my own study from which my cherished iMac beckons. 

Frequented festival examples: 

  • The summer-long Shakespeare Festival, Cedar City, Utah, where we attended several live performances of The Bard’s work, and others, including a hilarious comedy, “The Foreigner.”
  • And the winter weekend Tucson Festival of Books (TFOB). As a volunteer venue monitor, I am able to meet successful authors, publishers, literary agents, and readers. If you independently publish, pay $40 for a two-hour slot at a table in the TFOB Indie Author’s Pavilion. Thousands of readers, agents, and authors see you and your work. But sign up early!  
  • A more intimate festival each Winter in Fort Myers, Florida—the Southwest Florida Reading Festival

Such networking opportunities, including more specialized writing conferences, are especially important to the traveling author. 

Pearls of Homegrown Wisdom

Traveling emphasizes the following lessons for all authors: 

  • To write well requires constant learning to keep our work fresh and evolving, 
  • As we travel to sources of inspiration, internal or external, we may pay a hefty price, but our devoted inner authors will wish to pay—emotionally, financially, perhaps physically,
  • No matter where I am, as a conscientious writer, I know I must pay close attention to what is happening around me, including sundry eccentricities that add spice to an otherwise bland stew.

In Conclusion

On the road or not, as authors, you and I must leverage each day as if it were our last. Because it soon will be, at least for this destination. We thus honor family, friends and readers encountered everywhere we wander. 

This is venerable guidance for all of us, not only as authors, but as human beings. 

A Traveling Author's Best Bets - Writing Tools & Going Paperless
The skeleon of an ancient Saguaro cactus reminds us neither are we immortal.
(original photo by GK Jurrens)

Write on!

GK

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