Epub – What the Media Isn’t Telling You (Part 3)

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For the last two weeks, we’ve been talking about how media coverage around self-publishing can be misleading, since the average person who self-publishes doesn’t experience overnight success.  This is the third post on this subject, in which I’ll be asking these five self-published author exactly what it’s like to self-publish and sell a book. [Read the first post, read the second post]

I asked each author the same few questions for today’s post. You can read their answers below their website and book info.

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Amy Bennett
Her book: Entangled
Websites: www.EntangledBook.com and www.PermissionToPeruse.com

Sarah:How did you handle the cover? Did you design it? Did you get someone else to do it? 

Amy: I had an idea of what I wanted for the cover.  I looked through stock photos but didn’t see anything my ideal fit exactly.  I sent the ideas I had and the concept of the book to MOD. Melissa took original photos and put it together.  I’m very happy I left it in a professional’s hands.

Sarah: What about the interior layout? Did you design it? Did you get someone else to do it? 

Amy: MOD also handled designing the interior layout.  It’s one of my favorite parts of the book.  She is smart about fonts and layouts and did things like original, creative section breaks I would never have thought about.

Sarah: Lastly, who about choosing a title and editing the book? Did you have friends help? Or hire a service?

Amy: The title was probably the easiest decision I made.  I wanted something short yet something that encapsulated the message of the book.  I liked Entangled because you feel the drama and wonder what is happening and it comes from a verse that is related to the topic.  It also plays off the current popular Disney movie Tangled.  And it makes a great Twitter hash tag.

MOD also handled the editing.  She would print and edit it by hand and then scan in all the edited pages and send me a download link.  I then printed the scanned pages and made the edits to the book locally.  How that worked was a big question mark for me at the beginning when you have so many people working virtually but MOD had it down to a science and it was seamless.

Brandon Clements
His book: Every Bush Is Burning
Website: www.EveryBush.com and www.BrandonClements.com

Sarah: How did you handle the cover? Did you design it? Did you get someone else to do it? 

Brandon: One of my good friends, Kent Bateman, is an incredibly talented designer and he graciously did the design for me, so I was very blessed in that regard. Beyond blessed, actually—because I have so many talented friends who did so much work to help, all for free. Stephen Bateman built an awesome website for the book, and Jeremy and Austin from Dust Of The Ground shot the amazing trailer on the front page of the website. I have amazing friends.

Sarah: What about the interior layout? Did you design it? Did you get someone else to do it? 

Brandon: Because my book is a novel and needed a very simple layout, I did it myself. This is actually my biggest regret of the process, not because it looks bad, but because I ran into more headaches with this part of the process than any other. Oh—it was a nightmare. (The formatting would randomly change while converting the file to PDF). I finally figured it out—but it was awful. I still shudder when I think about how frustrated I was…I should have heeded what I read about word processors not being ideal for detailed interior layout.

If I can afford it, next time I will pay someone to do that part.

Sarah: Lastly, who about choosing a title and editing the book? Did you have friends help? Or hire a service?

Brandon: The title…I read a quote in a book one day, and the specific wording wasn’t in the quote, but the metaphor just kind of jumped out and grabbed me. I asked a few friends and they loved it, so I was happy with it.Editing…I did have a lot of help from friends along the way who read drafts and gave very helpful feedback. But I also hired Andy Meisenheimer, a professional freelance editor that I found online somehow through The Editorial Department. We started emailing back and forth, hit it off, and I ended up working with him for 2 years.I’ve often told him that now I am genuinely embarrassed to think about what the book would have been like if I hadn’t met him. Working with him was such a good decision, and I encourage everyone I talk to about self-publishing to seriously consider getting professional editing help. Because, let’s face it—none of us are as brilliant as we’d like to think, and having an un-biased, skilled, sometimes cruel editor make you cry by ripping your writing to pieces is, if not fun, incredibly helpful. We come out much better writers because of it.

Mike Hall
His book: Jigsaw
Website: www.JigsawBook.com and facebook.com/mikeisspeaking

Sarah:How did you handle the cover? Did you design it? Did you get someone else to do it? 

Mike: I’m a graphic designer in another life, so that one was easy to knock out myself.

Sarah: What about the interior layout? Did you design it? Did you get someone else to do it? 

Mike: I sent Pages docs and high-res JPEGs of the illustrations to the gal who did the layout. You probably know her, since you both live in Michigan. She was a real trooper with all my adjustments. Utilized Dropbox for this process, which made it super simple.

Sarah: Nice. A fellow mitten dweller. Lastly, who about choosing a title and editing the book? Did you have friends help? Or hire a service?

Mike: I wanted something simple and memorable. I wanted the title to be somewhat masculine sounding. And I needed a title that was atypical for a teen book. I was not about to call it something like, “The Youngster’s Guide to a Super Lifetime!”

As I said earlier, my wife primarily edited it. I would then look over her recommendations and adjust the flow of the book, expand certain points, and strike entire sections that were either overkill or unnecessary. This process happened via email. I had to be careful to resave/rename the finished chapters as CH.1 STORK-FINAL , so as not to get confused with previous versions.Andy Merritt
His book: Eden
Website: www.EdenTheBook.com and www.recklessliving.com

Sarah:How did you handle the cover? Did you design it? Did you get someone else to do it? 

Andy: I have a decent amount of experience with graphic design so I designed the cover myself. If you have experience with and access to programs like Photoshop and Illustrator you can easily do it yourself. On the flip side, one of the easiest ways to identify self-published books are poor-quality covers. If cover images aren’t high enough resolution or aren’t done right it can really hurt sales. 

We’ve all heard that you can’t judge a book by it’s cover…. But we also know that we all do.

Sarah: What about the interior layout? Did you design it? Did you get someone else to do it? 

Andy: Same thing. This can be done by yourself if you have the experience. I did mine myself, but I also had experience with professional quality design software. There are nuances to interior design that are easy to overlook, but make a huge difference.

Sarah: Lastly, who about choosing a title and editing the book? Did you have friends help? Or hire a service?

Andy: The title came about through hours working on the book. For editing I was lucky enough to have a friend who is a professional copy editor who cleaned it up for me.

Jimmy Spencer
His book: Love Without an Agenda
Website: www.book.lovewithoutagenda.com

Sarah:How did you handle the cover? Did you design it? Did you get someone else to do it? 

Jimmy: Everything in the Love Without Agendabook is cooked up in our offices. We are not a huge company. In fact, we are all still volunteers. So I don’t want you to think we had this warehouse full of workers. We had four primary workers who volunteered to get this important message out. We had to work hard to make it happen, but we have been working together for years in our neighborhood and we all deeply believe in the story in the LWA book. We made sure to use industry standards for everything. Adobe InDesign was what we used to actually layout the cover and inside of the book.Sarah: I think you already answered this, but what about the interior layout? Did you design it? Did you get someone else to do it? 

Jimmy: Same thing. We used our in-house team.

Sarah: Lastly, who about choosing a title and editing the book? Did you have friends help? Or hire a service?

Jimmy: I came up with the title since I primarily wrote the book. I floated lots of subtitles and actually changed the subtitle several times as the book evolved over a almost two year writing period. We had three main editors. Lisa edited first for content and tone. Then together we went through each chapter together for flow. Once it sounded good it went to Jacob Wentzel who is an English major and grammar whiz. After all that, we sent the whole manuscript off to a good friend who read the whole book and edited it also. Fresh eyes on the text was helpful! It was an evolution. We filtered it thru this process multiple times. It took us almost two years to write, edit and polish to get the final paperback version that was eventually printed.

**If you find this series helpful or if you or someone you know has self-publishing or e-publishing experience to share, please leave me a comment. Also, if you’re setting out to write your book, I’ve started a free community to support aspiring authors.**

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2 Comments

  • comment-avatar
    Jeff Goins February 13, 2012 (9:13 am)

    Love that you’re bringing this to light, Sarah. Btw, Brandon did a fantastic job with his self-published book. One of the best I’ve ever seen.

  • comment-avatar
    Sarah February 13, 2012 (9:56 am)

    Thanks @Jeff. It’s nice to hear some of the less than sensational stories more typical of the publishing world. :) And Brandon sent me his book. It’s well done for sure. Nice hearing from you!