How To Publish Your Own Book Without A Fee
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There is a lot involved with publishing a book, especially if you self-publish.
Writing is only part of the process. But it also involves planning, research and design. Not to mention educating yourself on methods of promoting your book.
I have personally created and published several product manuals and I have also published two paperback books. Having had this experience, I can share with you how I accomplished this.
I'll teach you how to self-publish your own book, including proper page layout, font usage, designing your cover and methods of distribution.
I used Lulu.com to create all my books. Unless you are already a well-known author you may be better off self-publishing. Well-known authors may get paid by a large publishing house to complete their manuscript.
Anyone else will have to pay to get a publisher to create a book from a manuscript, print copies and promote it. Doing it yourself will save you money and it will be a quick way to get your book available for sale.
There is usually no fee to create your own book when you take advantage of print-on-demand. This is the method most self-publishers like to use. Lulu is one of them and they many tools on their website to help make the job easy.
You may want to consider doing it this way. But you need to do all the work yourself. Formatting the pages correctly can be done with a good word processor. I use Microsoft Word. I'll explain how that works in little later.
Assuming you already have your manuscript done and typed into some form of text file on your computer, let's review what comes next.
Print On Demand
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Once you have everything done you can upload your book and complete it on Lulu's web site. There's no fee for this as I mentioned. And that's because Lulu never has any costs for printing until you actually order a book. Your book is just in digital form at this point. This is known as Print-On-Demand.
If you don't want to spend a dime you can just let other people buy your book. But I don't recommend that. You should be willing to spend some money just to get a printed copy so you can confirm that you did everything right.
To tell you the truth, I kept making changes after reviewing a real copy of the book just because I didn't like how one thing or another turned out. So I would make changes, order another printed copy, and then repeat the process. I did that until I was satisfied. But you can handle it however works best for you.
Okay, let's continue. You only pay for the copies you order and you pay only the printing costs. When other people order it, they pay the retail price that you set, and you get a commission from the difference. You can specify the commission. Just don't be greedy or else the retail price will be too high and it won't sell.
Lulu will fulfill all your sales so you don't need to be involved with order taking and distribution. They send you a quarterly check for your commission of the previous three months.
Page Layout Design - Fonts, Formatting and Arrangement
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Microsoft Word is a great tool for creating a true print image of the pages of your book. MS Word lets you set the page size, margins, fonts, font size, etc. So you can concentrate on writing your book and Word takes care of the formatting.
Font Style
The suggested font to use for the main text of your book is 12 point Times New Roman. Don't play around with using uncommon fonts as you may have trouble with printing. Some fonts don't reproduce as expected in the final print process.
Headings should be larger. I use 18 to 24 point depending on how much text is used in my headings. You can experiment with that to make your headings look pleasing to the eye. The text for headings should be a Sans Serif font. That means they are block letters. They are without (sans) the curvy lines (serif) like that of Times New Roman.
Note that Serif is easier to read, as the curves tend to let the readers eye flow easier. But headings do not need this. On the contrary, you want headings to stand out.
So use a "San Serif type" for headings. A good example is Arial, although you can use Tahoma or Verdana too. These are all very common and you won't run into any issues with it looking different in the actual printed book than it looks on your screen.
Page Formatting and Setup
Page Setup is an important part of setting MS Word to format the pages properly to fit the size you plan for your book. The most common size for books to be sold by retail stores is 6" by 9". So I'll give you the specs for that.
You want to have almost a one-inch margin on the top, bottom and sides. This white space allows for errors with cutting pages for binding as well as leaving room so that the text on your pages does not seem to become clustered.
You also want to allow a little more room towards the spine. This is called the gutter and its purpose is to compensate for the spine when opening the book, especially in thick books. Otherwise the text may be hard to see near the spine without flattening out the book, which can cause damage to the binding.
So how do you specify all this?
In MS Word, click the "File" link and then select "Page Setup" from the pull-down list. You'll see all the fields for these settings as shown in the image to the right.
In this example, I have set all margins to 0.9" and I added 0.2" for the gutter.
The header and footer can also be positioned. Since the top and bottom white space is almost an inch according to my settings, I allow the header and footer text to fall right in the middle of that space by setting it to be 0.5" from the edge as shown in this image.
Make sure you set the checkmark for "Mirror margins." This will make it handle the gutter on the left or the right depending if it is an odd or even numbered page, respectively.
Also apply the settings to the "whole document" so your settings are uniform throughout your book.
Page Size
You need to have a minimum of 32 pages for a 6x9 size book. The max is 740 pages.
Other book sizes have slightly higher minimum page count requirements. But if you want to have global distribution for sale in retail stores you need to use a 6x9 book. So let's concentrate on that.
Page Arrangement
If you are making a book for your own enjoyment, then the page positioning does not really matter and you can do what you want.
But if you want to make your book available for distribution and possibly sell in bookstores, then you need to follow strict rules. There are specific requirements. Here’s a list. . .
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The total number of pages in your book needs to be a multiple of 4. So add blank pages if you don't end up with this.
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The last page needs to be blank on both sides to allow for retail markings that are automatically printed on that page. This can be counted as the last two pages.
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The first page is for the title only. The reverse of that page should remain blank.
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The next page is the description page, which shows the title and more info about the book, such as author name, publisher name, a short description, etc.
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The reverse of the description page is the copyright page. The layout of this is very important. I'll explain details below.
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Then comes the table of contents as a right hand page. This is optional and can continue on as many pages as required. MS Word helps place the proper page numbers in here for you when you use its tool.
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You may want to include a Foreword on the next right hand page.
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You may want to add an Acknowledgements Page after that, again on the next right-hand page.
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Finally, on the next right hand page you can start your content of your book. I like to start all chapters on a right-hand page, although this is not a requirement.
Individual Page Titles
I also like to stick with a rule of placing the book's title on the top of every even numbered page (left hand page), and the chapter name on the top of each odd numbered page, except for the first page of the chapter where you probably have it anyway.
MS Word has a feature where you can have it propagate the even and odd pages titles throughout the entire book for you. To do this, specify that the headers and footers should be different on odd and even pages. See the screen image at the right.
If you also indicate "a different first page" that will allow you to not display the chapter name on the first page of each chapter.
Remember to use chapter breaks at the end of each chapter to make all this work properly.
MS Word also can create an index for you. If you decide to include an index, this should be placed at the end of your book.
The use of MS Word is not the subject of this discussion. And you may be using another word processor anyway. So I suggest you learn the features and use the power of the program you use to get the most advantage out of it. It'll be very much worth your time.
Average Words Per Page
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Thanks to a question from one of my readers in the comments, I added this info.
Using my suggested format of margins that are almost one inch, 12-pt fonts, and a 6x9 book, you should average about 280 words per page. My book had pages with as many as 340 words when fully filled with no images.
The number of words per page is highly variable based on how many paragraph breaks you have, other white space you have, and if you include any images.
You can get more words on a page by making the margins smaller, but there are reasons for using the values I recommended. People find it easier to read when their eyes can rest. The extra white space helps. If you full a page from top to bottom and left to right with words, it becomes overwhelming. So leave the white space all around.
If you have a huge book you may think that you want to use a smaller font to keep the cost down. The number of pages affects the cost. But keep in mind that the 12 pt font also makes it easy to read. So judge wisely if you plan to use text with smaller fonts.
Specifics of the Copyright Page
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The copyright page, which goes behind the description page and is a left-handed page, contains the copyright information. Take a look at any published book and follow along…
On top is the title. Below the title is your copyright notice. Below that you can list some tags that indicate what the book relates to.
Below that is a short explanation of your rights and reproduction limitation.
Below that is an optional Library of Congress control number. I suggest you apply for that, as I did with my book. You can apply for a Preassigned Control Number (PCN) at www.loc.gov/publish/pcn/. They explain the process of applying for a PCN on their site.
Below that you should list your ISBN number if you already have it. When you purchase a distribution package from Lulu then will give you one and you need to go back and edit your book to include this information on your copyright page.
At the bottom you should mention where the book is printed, such as “Printed in the United States of America” if you are using Lulu.
Designing the Cover
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If you don't feel you are very good with artwork design, Lulu has online tools that help you create a cover.
You can select from a library of sample art for your cover background design and then position your title, subtitle and author name where you want them to appear. You can choose the color and font of the text as well.
You can also enter text to appear on the back cover and on the spine. They will put all this together to create the print image of the entire cover.
Use Your Own Cover Art
If you are into designing your own artwork, you can actually create your cover with any good Paint Shop software and upload the front and back covers. That's what I did.
That's my front cover at the right. After I completed it I just uploaded it. I did the same with the rear cover.
Lulu still helps with completing the spine of your book when you upload your cover images. Based on the thickness of the book (number of pages) their program automatically determines what font sizes you can use on the spine. They give you a choice of a few that will fit properly.
If you do decide to upload your own artwork, you will need to create ready-to-use files for the front and rear covers in the proper format. You've got to do this right or it won't fit. Here are the specifications you need to use for your cover image files...
- Must be JPG, GIF or PNG.
- Must be 300 dpi or better.
- Add a quarter inch to allow for bleed. 1875 by 2775 pixels for a 6x9 book.
- May be color or black and white.
Types of Book Covers
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There are three options for the cover of your book, Paperback, Casewrap, and Dust Jacket.
- Paperback is soft covered and can have three kinds of spines. See below.
- Casewrap has the cover image printed right on the hard cover.
- A Dust Jacket Cover is a separate paper cover around the hard-covered book. Cover art is printed on the jacket. The jacket has flaps that wrap inside the front and rear covers. Short text info can be printed on the front and rear flaps.
Types of Spines
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Spines on a hard-covered book can have text printed on them, such as the book's title and author name. Lulu calculates the width of the spine automatically based on the number of pages in your book.
When you use a paperback book, text can only be printed on a perfect bound book. A paperback book has three different types of spines that you can choose from...
- Perfect Bound - Glued flat spine that you can place some text on.
- Coil Bound - Useful for books that require opening flat. Such as work books.
- Saddle Stitch - Stitched thread holds book together.
Methods of Distribution
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If you want to make your book available on Amazon in addition to Lulu's site, the cost is a reasonable $25 to put your published book into what they call "marketREACH Distribution."
You can also purchase "extendedREACH Distribution" or "globalREACH Distribution"
ExtendedREACH Distribution lists your book in databases in the US and the UK.
GlobalREACH Distribution makes your book available online on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and other online book sites.
GlobalREACH also lists your book with the Ingram Book Company, which allows any bookstore to purchase your book to stock their shelves. But you have to make your own efforts with promotion, such as getting book signings and distributing press releases.
ISBN Numbers (optional)
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If you do decide to purchase the ExtendedREACH or GlobalREACH Distribution you will have an ISBN number assigned. The cost kept changing in the years I've used Lulu. So you need to check their site for the latest cost. But this is only a one-time fee.
The bar code for your ISBN number will automatically be included on the back cover of your book. So leave room for it if you create your own cover. The ISBN is assigned by the U.S. ISBN Agency so your book is listed in Bowkers Books-in-Print.
What Is The Cost Of Printing Books?
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Everything you do on Lulu’s website to create your book is free. The only charges are for ordering actual printed copies and for other services such as purchasing a distribution package. But you can always buy your own books and distribute then yourself if that serves your needs.
Your cost for getting your own books is only the charge for printing. That varies depending on the size of the book, how many pages, the type of binding and the paper grade you choose. As an example, a 200-page 6x9 perfect bound paperback using publisher grade paper costs $5.50 for a single copy.
You select the retail price when you decide to publish. You base this on the amount of royalty you want. The retail price is the cost of printing, plus a commission for Lulu and a royalty to you.
What To Do Before You Publish
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I didn't mention this yet, and it may go without saying, but please do yourself a favor and proofread your manuscript before you waste money ordering your first copy. MS Word has both a spelling checker and a thesaurus. Use them both.
Many times I discover that I don't catch my own errors. That seems to be a common problem for many of us because our brain already knows what it meant, so it "sees" the words as they were meant instead of what's on the page. So have a friend or two proofread for you.
I actually paid for a few printed copies at first to hand out to good friends so they could proofread an actual paperback copy for me. I recommend you do the same. They even made notes in them that turned out to be very useful feedback.
There is a big difference between publishing articles online and publishing a printed book. You can make changes and even add text when you publish on sites such as on HubPages. You can't do that with a book.
So you've got to put more effort into getting it just right before you pull the trigger by clicking the "publish" button. You can print samples for yourself over and over, uploading changes each time. But once you finalize your book, it's the same as if it's in stone.
So that's it. I hope you take my advice I mentioned to do before you publish. I've been there, done that! I know.
Copyright © 2011 Glenn Stok
★★★ Get to know the author... See Glenn Stok's profile ★★★
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another awesome hub voted up
Great info it is so amazing with all the resources available on the web though with that being said, it can be very time consuming to sift through the ones that are of worth. Thanks for letting out some good info!
Thanks a lot for your useful information. You have covered all the aspects in details. Though I did not endeavor of printing book but sometimes I could not manage while inserting tables and giving page marks in a long article like 50 pages in A4 size. While inserting tables, either it splits up in two pages or sometimes creates a gap in between pages. The problem mainly occurs while adding extra cells with the default table of 8 x 10.
Your above guidance has encouraged me to collect all the fragmented articles and give it a shape. Thanks again.
Great article with lot of details for newcomers in the field of writing book. It is very useful. Voted up. I also bookmark this hub as I will soon need it while writing book. Thanks for the great information.
Thanks for the information. Voted up.
Very well written and useful hub. Thanks Glen. I've bookmarked this page so I can come back to it when I needed it in the very near future.
Glenn:
Really enjoyed the read that you shared with all of us. You did a first rate job in summarizing the main steps; in getting a first book published. I recently signed up for Lulu.com and as you know have a romance novel which I would like to publish one day. As I continue working on this book, I will make sure to employ the tools you mentioned here on lulu. Really interesting article which I also voted up as well as useful. Take care.
Jim
Glenn:
Couldn't have been inspired to do so, if it weren't for receiving all of that motivation received from reading your article. Just got off of the lulu.com website and entered in my title and author name. Just have now to put some time aside, to set up MS word and start chipping away on the chapters. Again thanks for all of the mentoring. Later!
Jim
Very informative and useful, it really helps a beginner like me, voted up and thank you for the valuable hub
Very beautiful and useful points. Voted up and useful.
But what is the minimum number of pages for a book to be considered for publication?
Effective tips to everyone who wants to publish a book and it is very useful for me as I plan to publish a book in the near future.
Thank you, Glenn, for your kindness of sharing your experiences. Wish you all the success you deserve.
Reading your instructive hub may reinspire me to continue with a writing project I started over three years ago. Voted up of course.
Excellent, this was just what I was looking for. I almost signed up with an internet publishing company who wanted $500 just to get started. Now I can move forward instead of putting my book on hold. Thank you, keep up the good work.
Thanks, you have given me the courage to publish a novel I wrote. It has been sitting in my draw for a number of years. Still a lot of organisational work to do though...
I also wanted to ask: Do you sell many of your self published books?
Very useful information. Thanks...
Great Info !!
hi glen, very nice hub. thanks for the info.
Well explained Glen. I only sell ebooks on Lulu. Tried reading about how to self publish books with them, but there was too much info to understand. You explanation makes it sound so simple. Thank you.
Thanks for going into the process in such detail. I liked the description of your revision process and all the pointers. I'm curious, if you don't mind my asking, why did you choose Lulu over Amazon?
Great and simple how to publish on Lulu. Your information is very useful and a step by step process. I will use this information when I finish my book. Thanks. I marked you up!
Thanks for this! I have published a book full of graphic design work as a portfolio on blurb but never though of using lulu for a self-published novel. I may indeed do that as I have absolutely no luck through traditional publishing methods.
This is a very informative Hub! And I appreciate all the info. I went to lulu several months ago to try and publish a booklet, but couldn't figure out what to do. So for me this is a very welcomed Hub!
Thanks so much for spending the time writting it!
Great information and very useful. Knowing something like this is available inspires me to push forward with some writing projects. Thanks! Voted up.
This is absolutely fabulous! I rarely have learned so much about anything is such a short time. I am working on several books that I intend to self-publish. Your Hub here is a goldmine of solid information that I need. Thank you very much!!
By the way, with the 6X9 size, the font size 12 and the margins you mentioned, about how many words do you average per page? Like a 200 page book would be about how many words?
You are welcome and thank you for answering my question. Happy Holidays!
It was nice to see this hub. I have used Lulu, and am impressed with how easy it is...the hard part is having people find my books. Of course, my books haven't even been out there more than a few weeks.
My first book came up in search on Amazon...I think I got Globalreach...I have not really advertized in any way...the next set of books were only e-published, and Amazon doesn't interface with LuLu for e-publishing.
thanks for the sharing. opened up new possibility for me.
This is really great ..Thanks for the nice post
great hub, that's kind of like printing photos in a book format through iPhoto. That's what I use when I put a bunch of photos together and the digital file is sent to Kodak or whoever and I receive my photo book in the mail. I didn't realize you could make your own book through Lulu. Cool!
This is great! Thank you so much for this valuable information! You are a blessing..I voted up and shared. I will buy a copy of your book soon. It would be nice to get it autographed! :)
Amazing. Thank you for the great work. You deserve a star for publishing this hub. I am really thinking of publishing a book. This may be the answer. voting up and across. Thanks for SHARING.
Man, that was a really great hub. It makes me want to get started on my book right now!
Hello Glenn, This such valuable information you have put together. Thank you for taking the time to share it. I'm bookmarking for future reference.
Glenn, this is such a great hub, with so much helpful information. My hat is off to you for sharing such insightful and detailed info. I will keep this hub in my list of useful hubs to return to.
Voted up, interesting and useful.
Great hub, good information. Learned a lot.
Glenn - Great hub again. I have added this hub as one of my fav hubs for the week of March 25, 2012.










































nicregi Level 4 Commenter 6 months ago
Wow! Very detailed and interesting! Thank you for this and certainly voting for this.
Thank you again!