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Education

What you should know after ‘The End’

Learn what you should know about Indie Publishing…this page is always under construction with new information being added as the industry evolves.

Basic Publishing & Terminology

  1. Finish manuscript.
  2. Self-edit.
  3. Send maniscript to Alpha reader.
  4. Send manuscript to Beta readers.
  5. Send the beta-read manuscript to editor.
  6. Accept/approve/reject editor’s edits.
  7. Have a cover design concept completed.
  8. Get the print book designed and ebook adapted.
  9. Upload book files or distribution platforms/retailers.

Alpha & Beta readers are those people who see a manuscript before anyone else, including the editor.

Alpha reader

An Alpha is the first person who sees your first draft after you finish and you have done a bit of self-editing. An Alpha reader should really be considered reader-writers. They find disjointed sections, plot holes and should be able to be constructive in their advice. They should be looking ‘big picture’ not the minor things like punctuation and typos.

Beta Readers

These are people who read for the author in order to catch any issues, similar to the Alpha reader, before the book goes to the editor. Make sure your betas are experienced. In other words, don’t choose a neighbor, friend, or family member to beta your book. You need people who will be brutally honest.

  • Find continuity errors.
  • Point out plot holes.
  • Give constructive criticism to make the storyline more appealing.

Not all beta readers are created equal, choose wisely. Ask the authors you follow or have a friendly relationship with, for referrals.

Copy Editing

Copy Editing is checking a manuscript for spelling, capitalization, punctuation, verb tenses, and other grammatical errors. Also includes:

  • Checking for continuity;
  • sentence structure;
  • paragraph lengths;
  • word choices / missed words, etc.

In other words, copy editing involves correcting the language of the text.

Content Editing

Content Editing, also known as developmental or substantive editing, involves checking the content.  This includes:

  • Content for factual errors, contradictions, and inconsistencies;
  • If fiction, this is a check for discrepancies in the plot, character, or dialogue;
  • Verify the theme has been developed (i.e. developmental editing) properly;
  • Making sure sub-plots have been well integrated into the story line.

In other words, content editing evaluates the content in detail.

Line Editing

Line Editing is the technical side of the craft of writing, and that means paragraph structure, sentence flow, word choice, and language-related techniques. That also means voice, style, readability, and forward movement. In fiction, it pertains to the difference between scenes and exposition.

In the publishing industry, a manuscript first goes to a content editor, who evaluates the content, and if needed, suggests changes to the writer. The writer, with the help of the content editor, then re-writes the parts to be changed. Once the content editor and author are both satisfied (and feel positive the text will resonate with the reader) the manuscript goes to the copy editor. The copy editor and content editor can sometimes be the same person, just handling a different aspect of the editing process. Regardless of having one or two editors involved, copy editing is the final stage before the manuscript goes to print.

The cover of your book should give an idea of your book’s genre and story. It might not be right, but your book is judged by its cover. Does that mean a bad cover means the content on the pages is poor? No, but if you have a poorly designed cover, the general public is going to be less likely to purchase your book without a lot of capital invested in marketing. Without purchases, you aren’t going to get real reader reviews, real reader recommendations, and those are hard enough to come by as it is.

The cover gives clues as to the tone of the story within, and in many cases, that cover also influences the publication design of the ebook and the print book.

Formatting, Typography, Page Flow, Book Design; All these describe the same thing. This involves taking the manuscript and laying it out on the page or the screen for the most aesthetically pleasing reading experience for the readers.

Using the same or similar fonts and graphic elements used on the cover throughout the book and ebook will give the completed manuscript a professional look. Book designers will know the industry standards for layout and design so the book will not get poor reviews based on the reading experience.

Recto is the “right” or “front” side and verso is the “left” or “back” side when text is written or printed on a leaf of paper (folium) in a bound item such as a codexbookbroadsheet, or pamphlet.

By book publishing convention, the first page of a book, and sometimes of each section and chapter of a book, is a recto page, and hence all recto pages will have odd numbers and all verso pages will have even numbers.

 

In typesetting and publishingwidows and orphans are lines at the beginning or end of a paragraph which are left dangling at the top or bottom of a page or column, separated from the rest of the paragraph. (The typographer‘s terms for the top and bottom of a page or column are head and foot.)

As per the Chicago Manual of Style (CMOS): 
Widow—

A paragraph-ending line that falls at the beginning of the following page or column, thus separated from the rest of the text. Mnemonically, a widow is “alone at the top” (of the family tree but, in this case, of the page).

Orphan—

A paragraph-opening line that appears by itself at the bottom of a page or column, thus separated from the rest of the text. Mnemonically, an orphan is “alone at the bottom” (of the family tree but, in this case, of the page).Alternately, A word, part of a word, or very short line that appears by itself at the end of a paragraph. Mnemonically still “alone at the bottom”, just this time at the bottom of a paragraph. Orphans of this type give the impression of too much white space between paragraphs.

drop cap (dropped capital) is a large capital letter used as a decorative element at the beginning of a paragraph or section. The size of a drop cap is usually two or more lines. Drop caps are used in various media, including books, newspaper articles, documents, and webpages.

Drop caps can be typographically simple or elaborate. 

Some examples of drop caps are seen below:

POD or Print-On-Demand

POD is an economical way to publish books, printing individual or small batches of books as needed rather than an offset press run. Offset press runs usually consists of 1000s of books, printed on actual presses rather than copiers as POD books are done.

Offset or Press Printing

With offset printing runs, the publisher or author is responsible for arranging for the storage and fulfillment of the books. This can mean they are storing 1000 books in their garage and sending them out to those who purchase or they find a fulfillment center who store and fulfill orders.

Both methods of printing can print color and black and white but there are subtle differences in the final product, usual paper weight and color saturation. Also, when using KDP or Ingram for your printing, you are able to order author copies at a significant discount from the list price. 

Marketing is a huge part of publishing. With hundreds of thousands of books published each year, new releases can get lost in the crowd.

  • Book Teasers (use quality images to excite, engage, intrigue. Include book title, release date, and author name at minimum.)
  • Giveaways (the expense will pay for itself in engagement and social media shares.)
  • Blog Takeovers/ Facebook Party Takeover (cross-promotion will help authors get their books/name in front of new readers.)
  • Build your newsletter list (offering incentives for joining: free content, giveaways, and drawings can bulk up the list quickly)
  • Plan to market your book for a period of time (build interest before publishing and then continue for a few months afterward.)

Branding can pertain to series as well as authors. Color schemes, font choices, graphic elements all can tie teasers, posts, newsletters, etc. together. Use similar avatars, banners, etc. across various social media outlets (Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, Google, Blog, Website, Twitter, etc.)

Advance Reader Copy or Advance Review Copy

ARC are for sending to advance readers. This can be a ARC team, bloggers or reviewers through a ARC facilitator such as Kirkus or Hidden Gems.

Some ARC readers have requirements that must be adhered to such as physical (print) copy only, must be sent 90-days before release, and others.

When sending a print edition for review, it could have a ‘placeholder’ cover, a cover that says ‘Advance Copy; Not for Resale’ or even a watermark on the pages that reads advance copy.

ARCs are sent to reviewers before release in hopes that they will have a review written and ready to be uploaded to retail sites, books sites such as Goodreads, blogs and everywhere a reader interacts on the day of release or at least within the first few days that a book is for sale.

Editorial Reviews

Editorial reviews, such as those from Kirkus and other media outlets, should be added to the book’s information via Author Central. They can also be added to the very first page of the print edition if there is enough time to update the files before publication date.

 

Virtual Tours or Blog Tours have taken the place of book signings that traditional author’s publishing houses send them on.

You can make your own tour or hire a blog tour provider to arrange for you to ‘visit’ various blogs over a set period. These visits usually consist of interviews, book excerpts, ARC reviews, and various other post types.  Be prepared and have website-friendly images (72dpi and manageable size) as well as all your contact/social media links, bio, cover, book description and of course the sale links so that the blog can easily incorporate them if needed.

Fonts  refers to the style/family of the typography on covers and the interior of your book. There are a wide range of fonts, everything from crisp, clean and professional to funky, quirky, and even x-rated. Your font choices for the cover and the chapter headings help set the tone and atmosphere for your readers. You don’t see swirly, curley-q letters in horror just as you don’t see fonts that look like they are written in blood-stains for romance.

Parts of A Book

The first page or screen after the cover is the title page. It can be a graphic representation of the cover or as simple as plain text. It should list the title of the book and the author name at minimum. It can also include the series name, publisher name, and publication date.

The copyright page should list the copyright date as well as the copyright statement. It should also have the publisher and publisher address/contact information. Listing the ISBN number for each format (paperback, hard back print, e-book formats, audiobook, large-print edition) is acceptable.  Library of Congress Catalog number would appear on this page if received.

This would be a good place to include the team members — editors, proofers, cover models, design professionals, — various persons who contributed to the content or design of the book / e-book.

If the author wants to dedicate the book/manuscript to a person(s), place or organization, it will go here and is usually just a few lines long.

Here the author thanks people helpful in some way relative to the book: an editor, a writing instructor, the person who gave inspiration for the characters or plotline, a spouse or children, etc. The Acknowledgements might follow the Dedication, the Table of Contents or even appear in the Back Matter, depending on the publisher’s preference. (E-BookBuilders thinks it should be included in the ‘Front Matter’)

The Table of Contents is necessary in the ebook to pass specifications of many online retailers. It should be in the front of the book, not in the back as many formatters used to do it. In the ebook it should be ‘linked’ so that it ‘clicking’ the link will take the reader directly to that chapter or section.

In print fiction books it is not necessary, but many authors choose to have it so that a reader can tell at a glance how many chapters are in the book and what the back matter included is. It is necessary in non-fiction titles.

Forward, Preface, Introduction, Prologue, Endorsements — these should still be in the front of the body. It is not necessary to have all these ‘sections’, it is permissible to have one or more. The page numbering is done in Roman numerals or some other system that differs from the Body pagination unless otherwise noted.

Foreword —

A special kind of introduction that offers supportive information relevant to the book, the Foreword is written by someone other than the book’s author.

Preface —

Written by the book’s author, the Preface contains important information relating to the book topic, but outside of the book’s contents.

Other Books —

A simplified list of the other books in the author’s cataloge. In e-books these can be linked to the author or publisher’s website.

Introduction —

The author gives the reader more details about the book in this optional section. In trade nonfiction books, the Introduction may be an informal “Dear Reader” letter getting the reader excited about the information presented, inviting the reader inside the book and giving an overview of the book’s contents. (Regular pagination number starts here.)

Prologue —

A separate introductory part of the literary work – an event that proceeds the coming storyline. (Regular pagination)

Endorsements —

Can be literary reviews or blurbs by industry leaders; usually longer than one sentence with attribution to commenter. (These are usually before the title page.)

Epigraph —

A short quotation or saying at the beginning of a book or chapter, intended to suggest its theme.

This refers to the text of the book, which is usually broken down into chronologically numbered and named elements called Chapters.

In nonfiction books each chapter may be divided into sub-titled segments which may be included in the TOC.

In fiction, the chapters might contain segments called Scenes; these are separated by blank space, or scene change graphics or text (***) within the text. They are usually not referenced in the TOC.

In both fiction and nonfiction, chapters might be grouped together and labeled as Part, Section, etc.

Epilogue, Afterword, Conclusion, Synopsis, Postscript, Bibliography, Glossary
Afterword —

Any additional information for the reader to know after having read the book goes here.

Appendices —

Nonfiction books may have one or more Appendix listing recommended books, websites, organizations, or other resources relating to the book topic.

Glossary —

Usually found in nonfiction books, this section lists vocabulary words and their definitions as they relate to the book’s subject matter. Some fiction books such as paranormal or fantasy, a glossary might add to the reading experience or be necessary for the readers to follow.

Bibliography —

Lists the references used in writing the book.

Index —

Usually in nonfiction books, the Index is an alphabetical list of significant terms found in the text and the pages they appear on, helpful to someone seeking specific information in the book.

The author page can have the author headshot as well as a biography of approximately 300 words, usually written in 3rd person.

A list of contact methods (social media, websites, etc.,) can be linked here in ebooks. For print books use the shortest hyperlink possible or a QR code that links directly to the site.

Footnotes—

Footnotes are designated with a superscript number at the end of the sentence. Then at the bottom of the page (of a print book) or end of the section (ebook), the exculpatory information is listed.

Endnotes—

Endnotes consist of the same information that a footnote would have except they are placed at the end of the book, all compiled and made into a complete section.

Footnotes and Endnotes should all be ‘linked’ in ebooks leading from the note within the body of the book to the note explanation and back to the body, i.e. return links.

External links to other bibliography material found on various websites other than the author’s. (Not only should this be listed in the notes, but having the option to go to the actual article or webpage that supplied information is a way to build credibility with readers)

External links to videos — YouTube and other video hosting sites.

External links to author’s website for:

  • worksheets
  • chart of characters, timelines, genealogy charts, etc
  • detailed information not feasible to include in book format
  • exclusive video message from author to readers
  • supplemental information in various formats (video, audio, pdf, etc)
  • book list and purchase links

External links to other information sites that readers might find informative or helpful (the easier you make if for your readers to do more research or better understand the subject matter of your book the more likely you are to get a favorable review).