Self Publishing – Step 1. Format – Part 2
So, here I am trying to self publish some of my work. In my last article I went straight into publishing for the kindle and going the e-book route.
There are other ways a person could self-publish their books. A family friend wrote a book about the small town I lived in while growing up. Once the book was completely finished the author went to kinkos and printed out about 100 hard back books. She then sold them to folks around town.
Now, this is a way to self publish and there isn’t anything wrong with it. But, you will severely limit your audience if you go this route.
Over the past few months I’ve learned all kinds of cool stuff when it comes to be a self publishing author. For instance, CreateSpace is a place where you can upload your e-book and have it converted to an actual hard back. I found this totally interesting! There are other online sites that do this too.
What makes this cool is that they split the profit with you on the sale of your book. While you might not make a lot when folks order a hard back, you still do no go out a lot of money upfront.
Let me get back on task here. When I started converting my writing in the Kindle (mobi) format I looked up various samples on the internet. Now, in all honesty there wasn’t a lot. I manage to dig up a format guideline pdf from Amazon.
Using this guideline I created my first eBook. Cover page, table of content, the works. It was a lot of work in HTML and considering I found it ‘labor intensive” and I’m an IT programmer!
I gen’ed my book and viewed it on the various Kindle readers (windows, iphone, actual kindle) and I was pleased with my work.
I will say that I suck at drawing so my cover art is little lack luster. Now, I haven’t published that book yet because I’m in the middle of putting together a short story collection. My plan is to publish both at the same time.
So, I down loaded several eBooks from Amazon – some free and some not. And while I read them I make notes on the differences between my eBook and theirs.
This is what I have noticed:
Now, content on all the one I’ve read is fine. I’m the last person to critique someone’s writing. However, layout in most cases is weak.
It took me a while to figure out what why. Between the time I started manually creating my own e-book and the time I finished my first one – Amazon had upgraded their e-book services. Now, you can upload your material in a pdf format, msword format, and txt format.
This allowed authors to just upload their material as one giant document. So here I am reading this cool book called The Accidental Demon Slayer (at least I liked it) and my Kindle dies on me. It reboots and for the life of me I cannot figure out where I was. I couldn’t skip ahead by chapters because there wasn’t a table of contents and I didn’t set a book mark.
Another eBook had fonts on one page in one size but the next page it was really small. Some had dead end hyperlinks and graphics that was unreadable.
Now, granted not everyone has the time or expertise to meticulously set up their eBook. I know. However, being from the programming field I’m a stickler for the user interface.
Overall, all of these really are not big detractors and easy to deal with from the readers perspective.
However, if you are a perfectionist then get to learning some HTML because your going to need it.

My name is Leonard H. Johnson. I am currently a programmer. I have held numerous titles over the years, which include, butcher, roofer, and auto-mechanic. I have earned my BS, MBA, & PMP. I hope that soon, I can add published author to that prestigious list.

