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How to prepare a book for Kindle
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Natalie
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Jun 27, 2013 01:50AM

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Oh awesome. I am definitely happy to absorb all and any tips!
Good to know about re-uploading as well. I'm guessing if you re-upload after receiving reviews or downloads, those stats still remain?

Oh awesome. I am definitely h..."
Yeah, it's just like changing anything else (like the price) you just have to wait another x amount of hours for it to be changed in the system.
Another tip, which I heard after I published a couple of things, is to have a page at the end where you say something like, "Please feel free to leave a comment, and if you like this check out my other books ----- and you can find me at my blog/website here -----."


I am still not entirely sure if I am going to self publish. I am sending off to agents and part of me thinks I should hold out and go the more traditional route. There is a part of me that fears self publishing would just be me giving in to my impatience to get my work out there. (I just want people to read it!)
But the amount of control that you have when you self publish is very appealing. There are pros and cons I guess!
Another tip i learned is that in order to have a chapter appear on a different page, insert a page break. This way, it separates the chapters no matter what size font the reader uses. Its a little tedious but worth it. Just insert a page break wherever you want a new page to start.

What is your advice on controlling impatience? I assume that you are all big fans of self publishing and would say that it is a good idea?

Reference Susan's comment, be sure to use a page break as she suggests and not a section break.
Further to Robert's comments, if you can include the QR codes for your other books on eh last page, that is also helpful.

I'm a long way away from having a book that's ready to publish, and when / if I get there, I'd really value your support and advice. In the meantime, anyone would like feedback on their work, I'd very happy to oblige whenever work / life allows.
Good luck everyone.
Chris B.

I'm a long way away from having a book that's ready to publish..."
Hey Chris! I'm pretty new here myself, but welcome :)
I've literally just posted a snippet of my novel here: http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1... and would love some feedback!
What sort of thing do you like to write? Good luck with it!

What is your advice on controlling impatience? I assume that you are all big fans of self publishing and would say that it is a good idea?"
Well either route has its challenges. The biggest problem with self-publishing is getting exposure.

Smashwords recommends removing all line spacing except single space. Do not put more than three carriage returns in a row. Leave chapter titles within three lines of the top of the page. Some readers of fiction do like tables of contents. If your chapter title has a descriptive phrase like "Chapter One - Boy Meets Girl" many readers appreciate that and Smashwords will create the table of contents for you. Do not use the table of contents functions in Word or Open Office. The field codes do not translate correctly. They also do not translate correctly from one to the other.
I found that by carefully following the style guide both of my books uploaded to Smashwords and were assigned to the premier catalog on the first try. The same books with the cover page changed as appropriate uploaded to Amazon on the first try.
Unless you are creating a book with lots of graphics and photographs, there is no reason uploading to either Amazon or Smashwords need take more than a single attempt.
I use Open Office for all but my final draft and use Word for that. Smashwords recommends against switching word processors mid-stream, but I find I catch errors I would not catch any other way. I do have to completely reformat the entire work in the transition and that is part of the error-finding process. With fiction, this is not such a big deal, but with a non-fiction book heavy in graphics this would be extremely time consuming.

Yes, most of us are fans of electronic publishing which is related to, but not the same as, self-publishing. There is something about waiting six months to learn that the publisher has enough of your type of book to last them a decade kind of turns a lot of us off.
As for the impatience, you just have to be careful how you water them.

Leaving for our holiday tomorrow, and moving house when we get back, plus have a hand-in for my MA and work, so bit busy right now! But I will try and have a look at it for you when I've settled into the group a bit, and things have calmed down on the home and work fronts.
Chris
William wrote: "Susan wrote: "Another tip i learned is that in order to have a chapter appear on a different page, insert a page break. This way, it separates the chapters no matter what size font the reader uses...."
It did work on Kindle and Kindle Fire but when I read it on my iPhone it didn't apply. Chapters started in the middle of the page or wherever the last one ended :(. I think the iPhones are an exception to that.
It did work on Kindle and Kindle Fire but when I read it on my iPhone it didn't apply. Chapters started in the middle of the page or wherever the last one ended :(. I think the iPhones are an exception to that.

very
hard to read because of
seemingly random line breaks. I thought conver-
tingtext to an .epub should be ,
but
simple
sometimes words even intrude on wrong line.
what might cause this particular problem? So I can avoid it myself in future if need be :)
I have a Sony ereader not Kindle BTW so I don't know if anyone has experience with the epub format?