We’re lucky. We’ve already created two journals on Createspace. Our intent is to make this next one match and improve on the last – learning from our mistakes. Continue reading Journal News 2015 – Step 10 – format for print
Category Archives: self-publishing
Journal News 2015 – Step 6 – turning all those entries into a journal
This is where the edits slow down. We have a doc that’s formatted mostly correctly, and most of the automatic edits have been done; so now I have to read it. Actually, now I get to read it! It’s wonderful. It’s going to be a fantastic book. And I’m proud to be part of it! But while I read, here are some things I have to do besides just fixing typos and tenses. Continue reading Journal News 2015 – Step 6 – turning all those entries into a journal
Journal News 2015 – Step 4 – fixing author intent & accident
Making the document readable sounded easy, but it’s not. Each entry poses its own problems, so now I’m going through each entry, one by one, opening the original files to compare with the new, and looking for: Continue reading Journal News 2015 – Step 4 – fixing author intent & accident
And so it begins… Journal News 2015 – Step 1
The deadline for journal submissions was midnight last night. Ron spent vast amounts of time yesterday and today, ensuring all submissions were uploaded to our Dropbox. I spend all morning adding those submissions sent only to me, and mix-and-matching the sections. So now it’s time to start creating
The Writers’ Mill Journal
Volume 4
2015
For anyone who’s interested, here’s step 1. Continue reading And so it begins… Journal News 2015 – Step 1
Protected: Minutes 201502
Protected: How to Publish and Publicize an Anthology, from Woodshop Writers
Protected: Writers’ Mill Anthologies Poll
Protected: Write your book and get it published, from Steve Theme’s talk
Protected: Writing is a Business–Delilah Marvelle
Self-publishing for the Writers’ Mill Journal
What do you need to decide if you’re going to produce a journal, poetry book, picture book, birthday gift book, etc…?
Taken from a talk in preparation for producing our next Writers’ Mill Journal
- Format
- Hand-made books
- Good for small quantities, short books, gifts
- Bad for life expectancy of your printer and sanity of the person putting copies together
- Locally copied and printed
- Good for getting a good price on a fixed number of copies
- Individual price might be higher. Probably spiral bound rather than “perfect bound.”
- Espresso machine at Powells
- Good for quality, writing on spine, easy availability (just go to Powells to buy another copy)
- Print cost might be higher than online self-publishing
- For a fee, they will give you lots of great help and advice
- Internet, privately at createspace.com
- Good quality. Cheap, especially if we order in bulk from the account owner (cuts down postage)
- Good availability—createspace address where more copies can be ordered (https://www.createspace.com/4068825 for our last journal)
- Might have some “bleed” on cover, and no writing on spine (unless it’s a thick book), so not quite as good as the espresso machine.
- Internet publicly, on Amazon via Createspace
- Good because we become authors, get author pages on Amazon, and claim publishing credit
- Problem is, it increases internet sale price (because of hosting and distribution fees) but
- price to us, bulk purchase via the account owner, remains the same
- Distribution to Barnes and Noble and Powells
- Good because they might even put it on the shelf at Powells!
- Increases internet sale price again (because of more distribution fees) but price to us is same.
- Doesn’t take much more effort once the book’s been done
- Hand-made books
- ebooks via smashwords, kindle, kobo, ibookstore…?
Continue reading Self-publishing for the Writers’ Mill Journal