Showing posts with label kindle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kindle. Show all posts

Thursday, July 14, 2011

ePub done! And Kindle TOC tips

Yesterday, I managed to get my book properly into ePub format. Woo! I still need to put it on a Nook and read through it (and possibly get it on my iPad and see if I can read it in iBooks), just to be sure the formatting is good, but a quick skim in Adobe Digital Editions looked promising. It was a real pain to do, partly because I’m such a control freak and had to do it all by hand, but also because, when I got frustrated with that method and actually tried a conversion program, it made a royal mess out of the whole thing. This is why I am such a control freak: if you want it done right, do it yourself.

I’ll do a post later about what I had to do to wrangle my nicely-polished Kindle HTML file into an equally-polished ePub, but rather than going off on a new subject right now, I want to finish what I promised last week and write up some tips on doing a Table of Contents for a Kindle ebook.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

More Kindle formatting tips

I keep meaning to update this more than just once a week, but right now the day job is cutting into most of my free time. If only I were independently wealthy, then I wouldn’t have to work at all!  *sigh* If only…

I’ll try to keep this post shorter. For one, the last one took my entire day to write up, and I’d like to finish my edits today. And I’m sure anyone who’s reading would appreciate a more manageable length. But I have a tendency towards long-windedness, so we’ll see how that goes.

Last week I went through some of the handier coding I’ve learned for formatting paragraphs and such. As promised, today I’ll do covers, chapter headings and if I haven’t gone too long, Table of Contents.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Three-Day Weekend!

Usually, I use a holiday weekend as an excuse to slack off, but this weekend I’m going to have to make myself work harder, because for the next 3 weeks, my hours at the day job are being increased to cover for a manager who is going on vacation. I’m happy to do it: he covers for me when I take vacations, so it’s only fair. But part of me is crying inside at the loss of at-home writing/editing time. Though who knows, I may end up bringing my writing work with me to help fill time, so it might work out all right. Shhh, don’t tell my boss. ;)

Anyway, I’m nearly done with my last (I swear!) edit, so I should finally have my Kindle ebook fully-formatted. At that point, I need to decide if I want to keep on the ebook route and work on the ePub version next, or take an ebreak and start formatting the print version (going back to ePub later). I’m still undecided, though if I’m going to be stuck at work more for a while, maybe the print version is best: I can work on InDesign there.

Before I get back to that editing, I figured it was time to get another blog post up. I meant to blog more often than this, but haven’t had much to say recently. Hopefully that will change soon! For this post, I thought I’d do a run-down of some of the better tips I’ve found/discovered as I’ve slogged through the process of formatting an ebook for Kindle.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Happy Birthday to Me

Note: this post was supposed to have been published yesterday (May 12). I have no idea why it didn't. I guess Windows Live Writer wasn't playing nice.

 

Today is my 35th birthday. It still feels strange to say that number. I don't feel 35. Hell, half the time I don't even feel 25! I never got to the point where I felt like I was finally a grown-up. Maybe because I don't have kids of my own?

Anyway, years ago, I decided that my life's goal was to be a published novelist by the time I was 35. So here I am... 35. Not published yet. Maybe that's why I'm jumping on the self-pub train (I refuse to call it a bandwagon, because that implies that it's a fad or short-lived trend). Well, I may not have been published by the time I turned 35, but damn it, I'm going to be published WHILE I'm 35! So I say that's good enough.

While toying around with ideas the other day, I came up with what I thought was a good plan: set the release date for my book to coincide with the 100th anniversary of Titanic's launch. I knew the ship was launched from the builder in Belfast sometime in 1911, but wasn't sure of the exact date.  If the date hadn't passed yet, I thought how perfect!  Well... the ship launched May 31, 1911.  So I may be pushing it to aim for that date.  That would give me less than 20 days to finish my edit, get the Kindle formatting flawless, get a website designed and running, start possibly doing some promotion, and get a paper version ready to go. I could maybe get the Kindle version up by then, but the rest?  I don't know. It doesn't help that I have yet to settle on a title or come up with a cover design I like. Without any of that, I can't start the website. So May 31 is out.

I discovered something in my research of this possible release date thing: you can't set a future release date for a Kindle DTP book. That's a little upsetting, to be honest. I liked the idea of having a future release date I could announce, and having the book ready to go and up on the site so people could see that it was going to be available soon.  I wasn't looking to have it sit there for months before it was released, but a few days, sure. I don't even care about doing pre-orders (I know at first my sales will be limited to my friends and family), but it would have been nice to be able to see it go up on the site and have everything there (I hear the product description doesn't always show up right away) when it's officially released. Maybe it's something they're working on, but for now, it doesn't look like you can do it.  Oh well. At lest now I know.

I'm going to spend most of the weekend finishing my edit and getting it ready for Kindle. After that, maybe I'll start on formatting it for print in InDesign. (I'd like to be able to have both versions out at the same time, since the majority of my friends/family don't have ebook readers.) I'm still debating the pros and cons of CreateSpace vs. Lulu: more research is needed. After I get that going, I can then focus on the other ebook formats. I'm torn between using SmashWords and doing each platform individually, so that requires some more research, as does iBooks.  I hear it's hard to get a book in there, so I need to do some reading around on that. Good thing I like research! (Gee, how many times can I use the word "research" in one paragraph???)

On a side note: tomorrow would have been my grandmother's 86th birthday. She's the grandma I got my pen name from, so happy birthday Grandma, and thanks for the name! :)

Sunday, May 8, 2011

The Big Edit (the latest one, at least)

This falls under the "do as I say, not as I do" category. All the advice out there about not editing your own work, but rather having a third party (preferably a neutral one) edit for you, is good. Editing your own work, no matter how good you may be, isn't the best plan. You miss things because you read what you know it's supposed to say, rather than what it actually says. I know this because I've edited my novel about 5 times now and continue to find errors. But I'm stubborn, and cheap, so I'm ignoring all that good advice and doing my own edits. I feel like I've gone through it with a fine-toothed comb by now and there isn't anything left to find. I could be wrong, and if I am I'll be the first to admit it, but like I said, I'm stubborn. (I am a Taurus, after all.)