Thursday, April 24, 2008

New Journaling Book is Gone~

Yes, the joyfully updated and expanded 2nd edition of my book, Many Face of Journaling, is now in the pre-press department of the book printer. Shipped from the Kirkwood Post Office via overnight express, it arrived in Ashland, Ohio, before noon on Tuesday. Unfortunately the graphic artist "forgot" to send the cover art until after working hours that day. But now everything is on track.

Within a month or so, 2,000 copies of this 6" x 9" trade paperback book will be printed on 192 pages of recycled paper. The official publication date is May 2008, and the new ISBN# is 978-0-9665672-9-8.

About ISBN numbers: ISBN stands for International Standard Book Number. Did you know that our books are identified worldwide by that number rather than by the title?

I'm having the books shrink-wrapped in packs of 4 books. Unless your books really will sell out in a few months, shrink-wrapping is an ideal way to keep them fresh and clean while they all wait patiently to be purchased. FYI the cost for that service at my printer is $.22 per pack. Those will be packed in cartons of about 44 books per carton and shipped to the BookMasters book storage and distribution facilities in Ohio.

About book storage facilities: Professional book storage facilities provide climate control, insurance, and an efficient staff for shipping books to distributors and wholesalers.

The last 3 weeks or so of work on the book were hectic and, towards the end, catastrophic. When I set about making the header/footer corrections following the indexing and final proofreading, I ran into problems. The file absolutely would not let me delete the old header/footer formatting nor would it allow me to replace it with new, uniform formatting no matter what I did. What should, logically, have been a straight forward adjustment, wasn't.

After a full day's worth of optimistically trying one new "fix" after another, I conceded that the entire manuscript and index file was corrupt. Whereas I had been planning to ship to the printer the following day (Tuesday, the15th), I was now praying the the entire file wouldn't have to be retyped!

Eventually, I ran it through NotePad which deleted every last spec of formatting -- both the good and the corrupt. Then this format-intensive book had to be reworked, then reindexed. A lot of intense hours of computer work went into the problem's diagnosis and remedy. But finally by the end of the evening last Friday, the file printout was ready for another final proofreading.

Sunday evening, as I did the pdf. conversion and stored that to jump drive, packed that with the hard copy, signed contract, and check for 50% into a clean white carton, I did an ecstatic little dance and thanked my stars that it was soon to become that Big Grown-Up Book it was meant to be.

Within 7-10 working days after receipt of the manuscript package, the printer will ship me the "bluelines," which are the pre-press proof copies of the book and book cover. Then I'll have 3 days to do the drop-dead check and ship it back. I'll pay about $35 for each page that needs any correction at that point. So the final proofreading before it going to the printer can save a lot of money. Still, if I discover a misspelled name or other crucial error, you can bet I'll be happy to pay for the correction.

About bluelines: They're called "bluelines" because they're produced by somewhat the same process as an architect's blueprint drawings. In addition, they smell of ammonia and the printing will quickly fade if you leave the pages in direct sunlight.

Since I've been working 6-day weeks lately, the last two days have been sweet, kick-back days of walking in the sunshine, lunching with that fascinating, energizing writer friend, and reading all the way through my daily paper.

Happy writing to you all ~\

Linda

Saturday, April 12, 2008

5 Days to Book Printing

It’s been a wild time for a quiet writer-person like me. The last time we visited on Writer's Ruminations, the revised first edition of my book, The Many Faces of Journaling 2nd edition, was being proofread.

Last Sunday morning I picked that up, made most of the changes suggested by the proofreader, and copied it to a jump drive. Monday at a quick pick-up dinner, I passed the project along to the indexer.

Obviously, at this point in the process, my schedule is measured in hours, not days.

I retrieved the indexed electronic file from her Wednesday, drove back to my place, loaded it onto the laptop, corrected a few spacing shifts, and ran off a fresh hardcopy of the whole kit & caboodle for the final proofreader. She met me at Borders and took the manuscript home for a keen-eyed, picky perusal of all 183 pages.

Today [Saturday] she called with a couple of questions about formatting and told me she’ll have it back to me on Monday – day after tomorrow. Hot dern!

If it’s early in the day, I’ll make the corrections, and ship it to the printer Tuesday morning. (Good grief! Think of all the Post Office patrons who’ll be mailing last minute tax returns that day.)

That’s almost a week ahead of my target date!
Man, do I have a go-git-‘em book crew here.

Today being Saturday and all, I headed down to Kaldi's Coffee Shop to ponder & scribble a bit on the book that could be coming out in February 2010.

What a welcome change of pace. It’s in a stage of bubbling ideas and random note taking. There's no schedule, deadline, nor any kind of structure involved, except for that far away date two years hence. For now it’s pure creative playtime.

Wish me luck as I fret over the last touches to prepare my literary baby for the real world, all fluffed and buffed and ready!

And happy writing to you all~

Linda

Friday, April 4, 2008

2 1/2 Weeks and Still Lucid

Experience is good. Most of us suspected that, but tonight I can verify it. The orderly flow of chores threw me into a tizzy the last time I published. Of course, then I was coming out with three (!!!) books at one time—something experience has taught me never to do again.

But thanks to my prior walks along this path, the 2nd edition of The Many Faces of Journaling is moving along at the planned pace. That means that on Monday, April 21st, I’ll ship this manuscript off to the book printer and let it take its place in their production line. It’s almost all grown up now ~

The content editor did her thing on the revised author’s preface and introduction and on the two new chapters. I, in turn, made the changes I deemed beneficial, then handed off the updated and revised 1st edition manuscript for proofreading.

While the proofer has been fine tooth combing that, I’ve updated the Press Kit. So far, the new kit includes the Book Fact Sheet, Quotations from The Many Faces of Journaling 2nd. Ed., Media introduction and Sample Questions, Speaker Available Sheet, Endorsement Sheet, and the longer book review.

That’s actually enough for now, since fewer people want to see the Press Kit than in the past. Generally, it goes to bookstore event coordinators, radio or TV program directors, or non-bookstore retail locations where a book reading and signing might be well received (and profitable).

To accommodate those who don’t want the hardcopy kit, I’ll ask my web master to set up a “Press Room” on the PenCentralOnline.com web site. That’s another job—creating the list of additions and changes to the two web sites to promote this new edition.

I’m not getting out of the office much these days, and for the most part, I'm deeply grateful to just be able to work. But once a week, I recharge my whole battery bank during lunch with a brilliant and highly creative writing colleague. And one other time, I’ll get together with family or friends to stay in touch with the outside world and exercise my funny bone. I actually took a walk in the sunshine last week!

This truly is a blogging ramble. But it’ll give you an inside view of how engrossing this authoring and publishing business can be at particular times in the process. That’s why obsession is quite useful for a writer. Blocking everything else out helps you concentrate!

Pure focus on your writing is a beautiful thing ~

Linda