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Self Publishing

Step 1 – Write the book.
I write chapters (or stories in the case of my anthologies) and I keep it separated into word style .docx files. This is convenient because the small chunks can be run through the LanguageTool.org website. I signed up and magically, and for free, I get some really great grammar checking. I use LibreOffice Writer because I am too cheap to buy MS Word. I am also using LibreOffice because eventually I will want to export to PDF, and that is a no-brainer in LibreOffice.

Step 2 – Grammar check the contents. I use the built-in LibreOffice Writer spell checker. I have the LanguageTool extension in LibreOffice, which helps. Be aware that LibreOffice will freeze if you try to grammar check anything more than three or four thousand words at a time. I make a second check at the LibreOffice tool. Each version of the tool catches different kinds of errors, so you have to do both.
I write very fast and often leave out words. I leave out most commas, and I mess up things in unexpected ways.

Notes on Scanned documents. Recently, I scanned a typed novel for a friend using a scanner and OCR. I got all kinds of problems, including hard carriage returns where there shouldn’t be any, and many letters that the OCR messed up. Dirt on the paper frequently wound up as garbage in the text. Scanning a document is much more work than dealing with a word processing file. If I were doing it for money, I would charge at least double for converting a print document to a file.

Step 3 – Omit needless formatting. Your manuscript parts should all have minimal formatting. All paragraphs should be the default paragraph style. Remove all direct formatting and convert things like italics or special indenting to use a style. Try to limit things like bold or underline. Chapter titles should use the “Chapter Title” style. You can modify the style itself to change fonts, size and alignment.

Step 4 – Create the combined document. I had no luck with using Master Documents in LibreOffice Writer. Maybe MS Word works better. I have not researched other kinds of word processing tools. Google Documents did not have enough formatting features. I created the blank document and copied the individual files into it. Scan the document quickly, just to make sure that nothing is missing.

Step 5 – Download the manuscript templates from Amazon. These have a left page and a right page and basic styles for paragraphs, including one for chapter titles. Import the one you are using into Word or LibreOffice. Save it in your personal templates. Start with the paperback version. 6 by 9 is the most common and easiest to work with.

Step 6 – Add page styles for Left and Right pages without numbers. Add page numbers where you want them to the normal Left and Right page styles. You should have page styles for pages with and without numbers. The only difference is that the main body of the book has page numbers, but the front content, like the title and perhaps the preface, will use the styles that do not have numbers. Modify the default paragraph style to use a font less boring than the one in the template. Modify the chapter heading style so that there is a page-break before the style.

Step 7 – Add the table of contents. You may have to tell it to use your chapter title style. Make sure that you uncheck the “protected” option when you create it. I find it annoying if I can’t fiddle with it.

Step 8 – Make sure the pages are on the correct side of the page. The title starts on a right page (without a number). The next page is a left page with copyright and some other notes. The next page is on the right, and it could have the preface, introduction, dedication or the first chapter.

Step 9 – The first chapter or the beginning of the book proper should start on page 1. This means inserting a special page break that will start the page numbering at zero. It took a lot of googling to figure this out. It is not trivial. I spend more time on this one part than any other part of the formatting.

Step 10 – Export to PDF.

Step 11 – Start your book on Amazon KDP. Fill in the details and load your PDF into the contents page.

Step 12 – Design the cover. You need to download a template from the KDP cover size generator. Do some magical artwork and save it. I create the cover art using Paint.net, because it is feature rich and free. I use LibreOffice Draw when I am done and modify the page properties, and insert the cover image. Then, I can export to PDF in a way that KDP will be able to use. Add your cover PDF to KDP content and then use their checker to see if you did it right. It usually takes a few times to get it right.

Step 13 – After KDP thinks that everything is good, you need to order a proof copy or two. Don’t go wild, because when you see the book, you notice all kinds of terrible things that need fixing.

Step 14 – Fix things several times. Try not to spend too much on proof copies. You will eventually reach a point you can publish your book.

Step 15 – Once the paperback version is done, make a copy of everything in another folder. Edit the document and change the page sizes, margins and gutters for a hard cover version. Stretch out the Cover document, if you can, otherwise fix it up for the larger size. Start the hardcover settings and print a proof copy when you get it right. Nobody buys the hardcover version, so you might want to skip this step.

Step 16 – Create a copy of the document and take out the table of contents. Use the Kindle Create program to make a Kindle version. This is so easy compared to the paperback version. Enroll in the Kindle select program. You actually make more money even though the royalties are less. Take my word for it.

Step 17 – Start next book. Go to step 1.