Smashwords - L. Darby Gibbs ~ Author https://testoldtheme.johnschneider.dev Epic & Romantic Fantasy Wed, 21 Oct 2015 14:00:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 https://testoldtheme.johnschneider.dev/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/cropped-dragon-site-icon-32x32.jpg Smashwords - L. Darby Gibbs ~ Author https://testoldtheme.johnschneider.dev 32 32 10 Styles That May Help You be Smashwords Ready Before You Have to Be https://testoldtheme.johnschneider.dev/10-styles-that-may-help-you-be/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=10-styles-that-may-help-you-be https://testoldtheme.johnschneider.dev/10-styles-that-may-help-you-be/#respond Wed, 21 Oct 2015 14:00:00 +0000 https://inkaboutpub.com/10-styles-that-may-help-you-be/ Before you write, set your styles. There’s always a little bit of a high I feel after I have formatted a book for upload to Smashwords and I receive the email stating that I have no autovetter issues. But I don’t get that smooth upload through luck. I set myself up for it from the...

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Before you write, set your styles.

There’s always a little bit of a high I feel after I have formatted a book for upload to Smashwords and I receive the email stating that I have no autovetter issues. But I don’t get that smooth upload through luck. I set myself up for it from the start.

I have a preset format that has me writing in Smashwords style before I type the first word. If you have uploaded to Smashwords once, you will know just what I mean, but you may not have set your MS Word to start you off right. If you are thinking about self-publishing your work with Smashwords, and it’s your first time, take the time to set up your document to meet the demands of the Meatgrinder.

There’s a bonus. My Smashwords ready novel will be 97 percent ready for upload to Amazon. I will only have a little front matter and back matter to change to meet Amazon’s requirements when I am ready to upload to Amazon.

It’s a pretty simple process to make yourself Smashwords ready at the start. Download the free Smashwords Style Guide and set up a four page document as if it was a book. Give it a title page, copyright page, chapter title, some body text and a bio with a few links to your author pages. In fact this can become your template for cutting and pasting into your finished novel when you are ready to format for upload. How great is that?! Now read that guide and apply the format requirements to this 1-4 page practice/template document. After this is done, you can open a new document based on these style settings.

With that four-page document ready for styles, you can set up what you need for that book you are going to write. I have created the following styles that I use in nearly all my books. They make preparing my manuscript very easy.

  • Body text: Modify your normal text to Times New Roman, font 12, first line indent .3, single spacing, everything else set to 0.  It’s important to do this first because all your other styles will be based on this one. (Look to the style guide for how to work the styles. It would be silly for me to repeat it, and the guide does a great job of showing writers how to do it.)
  • Book title: using your Normal style, create a new style setting the various qualities you want for your title: bold, italics, font size, font, center, no indent (I just use Times New Roman throughout). Label it.
  •  Chapter title: again (and I won’t repeat this any more) using your Normal style create this new style: bold, italics, font, font size, center, no indent. And add one more neat trick (thanks to Mark Coker). Click on the Line and Page Breaks tab under the Format/Paragraph pop up window. Put a check mark in the box “put a page break before.” This is great as it creates a reliable page break between the end of the previous chapter and the new one. I also increase the space above and below the written text (also recommended by Mark Coker). 20 above, 36 below to put the chapter title a little further down the page and the first line of text a nice distance from the chapter title. Play with this until you’re happy with the distance.
  • White space marker. I use markers for white space because simply adding returns can be confusing in eBook readers as the text that follows can appear as just a new paragraph rather than a change in time, viewpoint or character. So I use seven tildes in a row.  I type the seven tildes and click on my White Space style: center, bold, up a notch on font size and set .8 space before and after to clearly mark it as a separation often called white space.
  • Other chapter: the label does not explain well what this is for. I added this to my styles for this fourth book. I include not just Chapter and the number, but a title that focuses on a important issue in the chapter.  Originally I wanted to put these on one line together. But some of my titles were so long that they ran clear across the page. So I created an Other chapter style for the more specific title. It is based on the Chapter Title style but does not include the embedded page break which would have forced a blank page after my first line title when I put on the second line.  Chapter 1: The Dean’s Ghost works fine when it is short. But long titles don’t look right. Thus I do what I have below for all my titles and all it takes is a click on this style to make them look identical but act just that little bit different so I don’t have a blank page between my two lines of titling.

                Chapter 1

          The Dean’s Ghost
          

  • Time markers: in my first three books, my characters were moving about so much in time that I felt my reader would need a little assistance keeping track. So I set up a style for a time marker. Example: March 21, 2214, New Hampshire Complex, Langler Section. Bold, left justified.
  • Center: set up a style for centering based on Normal. According to Mark Coker, this is much more reliable than clicking the center button on the ribbon. Italics, bold and underline on the ribbon, however, are said to work fine.
  • Front and back matter. Mark recommends that front and back matter be left justified with no embedded indent. So I set up a style just for that based on my Normal style but without the .3 first line indent. And I added an 8 point space after to separate the left justified paragraphs.
  • Table of Contents look best either centered or left justified. I prefer left justified, so I made a style that had all the Normal text qualities but did not include the indent. And I use the Chapter title style for the title Table of Contents.

With these styles already set up in my styles ribbon, my manuscript was already free of most issues that cause autovetter problems and was largely ready for final formatting via the style guide.

One issue I found when I used the Pilcrow (backwards looking P thing in the ribbon that shows the the coding of your document) to check for unnecessary format coding was unexpected section breaks I did not insert. I don’t know what causes Word to insert section breaks, but they show up in the oddest places in my manuscript. When it comes time to get ready to format for upload, the first thing I do is activate the codes view (click on the Pilcrow) and look at every page, every line and every code. I get rid of extra spaces, tabs, unnecessary returns and most especially those pesky section breaks which will insert annoying extra pages. Then I’m ready to complete the format for Smashwords.

So if my husband did not keep chatting with me and asking me how much longer I’ll be, I would have completed my formatting for Smashwords in about 45 minutes. But that wasn’t the case. It took me about an hour and a half. And don’t forget to save as a doc rather than a docx which leads to a failed upload.  Happy formatting.

#writing
#smashwords
#formatting

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Smashwords Read an E-Book Week is in full swing https://testoldtheme.johnschneider.dev/smashwords-read-e-book-week-is-in-fu/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=smashwords-read-e-book-week-is-in-fu https://testoldtheme.johnschneider.dev/smashwords-read-e-book-week-is-in-fu/#respond Sun, 02 Mar 2014 19:01:00 +0000 https://inkaboutpub.com/smashwords-read-e-book-week-is-in-fu/ Read an E-Book Week I love Read an E-book Week at Smashwords, and as of March 2 thru March 8 it has begun.  I along with a huge number of other writers make use of this opportunity to invite readers to check out our books. Take a look and find a new author to enjoy...

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Read an E-Book Week

I love Read an E-book Week at Smashwords, and as of March 2 thru March 8 it has begun.  I along with a huge number of other writers make use of this opportunity to invite readers to check out our books.

Take a look and find a new author to enjoy and follow.

So if you like time travel novels, short stories or are interested in a text about narrative frameworks for fiction novels and shorts stories, you’ll find my books set at 25% off with coupon REW25.

Follow this link to Smashwords promotion page to check out the catalog on the enrolled books:  Smashwords Read an E-Book Week

 

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Read an E-Book Week at Smashwords https://testoldtheme.johnschneider.dev/read-e-book-week-at-smashwords/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=read-e-book-week-at-smashwords https://testoldtheme.johnschneider.dev/read-e-book-week-at-smashwords/#respond Sun, 03 Mar 2013 08:00:00 +0000 https://inkaboutpub.com/read-e-book-week-at-smashwords/ It’s Read an E-Book Week!  March 3 – 9.  You’ll find my anthology Gardens in the Cracks & Other Stories at Smashwords.com for 50 percent off. Coupon code:  REW50 Follow the book link and apply the discount coupon at time of purchase.

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It’s Read an E-Book Week!  March 3 – 9.  You’ll find my anthology Gardens in the Cracks & Other Stories at Smashwords.com for 50 percent off.

Coupon code:  REW50
Follow the book link and apply the discount coupon at time of purchase.

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Kenny Rogers, the First Edition and my writing https://testoldtheme.johnschneider.dev/kenny-rogers-first-edition-and-my/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=kenny-rogers-first-edition-and-my https://testoldtheme.johnschneider.dev/kenny-rogers-first-edition-and-my/#respond Thu, 24 Nov 2011 00:32:00 +0000 https://inkaboutpub.com/kenny-rogers-first-edition-and-my/ I remember when I first starting thinking about writing my book In Times Passed.  I worked at a factory and was a product grader.  I would pull off the line anything that didn’t meet quality requirements.  Doesn’t take much thought or intelligence, just good automaton-like reflexes. I would listen to music, day dream, write letters in...

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I remember when I first starting thinking about writing my book In Times Passed.  I worked at a factory and was a product grader.  I would pull off the line anything that didn’t meet quality requirements.  Doesn’t take much thought or intelligence, just good automaton-like reflexes. I would listen to music, day dream, write letters in my head while my eyes registered flaws and my hands reached out and grabbed, flipped and dropped the item into the correct bin based on the type of flaw.

Then a song came on the radio by Kenny Rogers and the First Edition, “I just dropped in (to see what condition my condition was in).” As I listened, the story of a man who found a means to travel in time started playing out in my mind.  I liked the image of him “dropping in to see what condition [his] condition was in.”  And it was there that the idea for my book came from. I actually didn’t start writing it for several months. Each night at work, I would run the story through my mind again and again, working out the characters, problems he would run into, who his friends were, where and when it was all happening.  And every once in a while, that song would play on the radio again and refresh the images in my mind.  So finally I sat down and began writing out the story.

The book has evolved a lot since then, changing, repeatedly edited, redrafted, etc. I thought of it as the book I was learning to write on, though I had written two other books before I began it.  It seemed to be the one I most wanted to make work.  I went on to write a sequel for it and then a third and fourth, thinking all the time that one of them would be good enough to get published.  But I never really made the effort to publish.  Oh, I did some half-hearted efforts:  I sent the manuscript to a contest once and a synopsis of it to a publisher another time.  Nothing came of it.  I’ve redrafted it several times since then.

So here we are in the digital age.  I can self-publish via Smashwords.com and see if someone can enjoy the story as much as I enjoyed thinking of it, writing it and redrafting it.  When I think of that book, it reminds me of the days in the factory and how much it made the time go by for me.  And I still think of it as the book I learned to write on.  And I think each one since has been an improvement. a step forward in the skill of story telling.  So it isn’t the best book out there.  I hope one day, someone will call it an early Gibbs, the one to read to get a sense of where I started. Where one can “just drop in to see what condition my condition was in.”

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Today I published my first ebook https://testoldtheme.johnschneider.dev/today-i-published-my-first-ebook/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=today-i-published-my-first-ebook https://testoldtheme.johnschneider.dev/today-i-published-my-first-ebook/#respond Sun, 31 Jul 2011 23:23:00 +0000 https://inkaboutpub.com/today-i-published-my-first-ebook/ I got sidetracked by blogging, and I think I let it happen on purpose. Today I uploaded my first book (In Times Passed) to Smashwords.  It was one of the most exciting things I have ever done.  Researching blogging let me settle into the fact that my book was now available.  I have been redrafting...

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I got sidetracked by blogging, and I think I let it happen on purpose. Today I uploaded my first book (In Times Passed) to Smashwords.  It was one of the most exciting things I have ever done.  Researching blogging let me settle into the fact that my book was now available.  I have been redrafting it for the last three months with a deadline date I set for August.  I beat that deadline by one day.

I searched for where to publish my ebook, and though I considered B&N and Kindle at Amazon, when I tripped over a reference to Smashwords and checked it out, I felt that I had arrived home.  Each step was scary but easy, as Mark Coker at Smashwords makes it easy.  When I downloaded my book onto my iPhone and flipped through the pages….euphoria.  I ran and showed my daughter, flipping the title page into view, then the table of contents and a few pages of the first chapter.  She said I looked scary and a little weird.  I think I am going to go see if I still look weird to her.

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