Mon Feb 11, 2008 8:51AM EST
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Goodbye to those literary agents and big publishing houses that put judgement on whether or not to publish your words. Hello to yet another do-it-yourself web genre. This one's for wannabe novelists, how-to-gurus, poets, and memoir writers.
Traditionally, self-publishing your own book was relegated to companies found on late night infomercials or back-of-the-book magazine ads. New web sites like Blurb.com, Lulu.com, and Wordclay let you go from the idea stage straight through to your published book without dealing with the cast of extras: layout artists, copy editors, agents, and distributors—and without sharing the royalties. Unfortunately they don't do much to distribute and market your opus either.
With these sites, creating your book is free. Printing it costs money, but these sites all print your book on demand. If you've got 15 family members who want to read the family history, then you print 15 books. If your friends want to create a cookbook of favorites, it can look like the pros'. What they don't do is distribute the book for you. For that you're on your own.
Lulu is probably the largest of the sites. Founded in 2002, it claims to have published 300,000 titles. You set your own price for what the finished book should cost. You can go it alone or purchase add-on services including marketing, graphics, and pre-publication. Then each time you want a book published, you give Lulu 20% of the price that you've set for your book. They'll even give you an ISBN—needed if you go into distribution via commercial stores.
What I like: Makes it easy to sell your creations to the Lulu Marketplace and offers great toolkits to help you self-promote.
Blurb.com is by far the prettiest site, one that makes me think of creating a luscious family photo album, cookbook, or nature photography book. Download the blurb maker and lay out your book for free. You pay $12.95 to print a 40-page softcover book and $22.95 for hardcover.
What I like: Blurb takes the guesswork out of things like using photography by offering simple advice and constraints. Clear advice like this abounds: "Blurb books are printed at 300 DPI. The largest photos you can use—full page pictures in our 13x11 book—should be no bigger than 3900x3300 pixels." The best choice for books with photos.
A spinoff from the real world personal publishing company, iUniverse, Wordclay is the newest of the self-publishing sites, but its roots are in traditional custom book publishing. You can create your book in MS Word and upload it into the publishing templates. Then you can publish as few or as many as you like. Wordclay has lots of add-on services like copyediting, pagination, professional editorial help, and more. They've made decisions about things like boo trim size and gutter width pretty easy to understand.
What I like: Offers extensive add-on professional services and has the benefit of a successful offline publication house.
Final word to all boomers: According to Wordclay's CEO Susan Driscoll, guess which demographic are the most prolific self-publishing book authors? You got that right. It's the ones with time, money, and a story to tell. Have any of you self published a book online?
Related: This blogger endorses Lulu, but he's a good resource to read if you're thinking of publishing that opus.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
We'll look for your book, Therez. The only cautionary note about Kindle is that it's a proprietary format. That said once you have it in the Kindle store there's nothing to prohibit you from importing it into a another format. We really do need ebook standards, don't we?
That is really great and wonderful idea, now we can publish our works and even our personal history throw sites it's smart@
I have published several photobooks on Blurb, and can vouch for their quality. You can download a free pdf sample by going to Blurb.com and searching for "Heirloom". (No, I'm not getting paid either.) Regarding all of the wonderful do-it-yourself web technology available: no amount of technology can make up for an artistic choice--it takes talent and concentrated effort to make a decent book, be it photos or prose.
Thank you so much for this article, you have really helped me out big time.
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1 Posted by therez0 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:05PM EDT Report Abuse
I haven't published anything, but I have some ideas that might translate well into a book. With that in mind, I've been playing around with Amazon's Digital Text Platform. Its an online publishing tool to distribute works to the Kindle platform, and all you need to get started is your Amazon login (and really, who doesn't have one nowadays?) Sure, Amazon might get the major percent off your sales (you only get 35% of the sales price--but really thats an ok amount compared to going through a publisher), but you don't have to pay money to get your work printed because its distributed digitally through the Kindle store, nor do you have to go through all hoops of negotiating contracts with publishers and artists. The DTP is currently in beta, and users can currently upload books to the service in word document, html, limited pdf, and mobi pocket files. It can be found at http://dtp.amazon.com And no, I'm not getting paid by Amazon for this ad-like blurb.