Hi guys and gals
The book isn't about Jack the Ripper before you read on any more, but I would like a wee bit of advice from my learned colleagues on casebook about a few matters if anyone has got the time.
It's the first book I've ever written and I'm self-publishing it.
Obviously when I started the project back in January I had no idea whatsoever on how it all worked, but a friend of a friend happens to be a trainee proof reader and she helped me enormously. After she'd read through it and I'd made various ammendments and so on and so forth, I sent it off to my publisher.
The way I've got the book structured isn't conventional in how the dialogue is formatted.
Example.
John - Hi Mrs B, how are you today?
Mrs B - Fine thank you John
rather than...
John said, "Hi Mrs B, How are you today?"
"Fine thank you John," replied Mrs B.
Note how I also have a blank line between each speaker. The narrative passages of the book look conventional. It's only in the dialogue exchanges that I have it like this. Basically because the vast majority of conversations can be quite lengthy, and only a few words long in each case. i think it looks better and suits what the book is about better too. Even the publisher agrees.
Now what's happening is that I sent off my final draft as a DOC file.
They sent back a PDF file of that 1st draft for me to check. It had 21 instances of the blank lines missing.
I sent them a DOC highlighting these errors.
They sent back a revised PDF (version 2) and the original 21 blank lines had all been fixed, but 4 new ones appeared. These can easily be explained because they were lines that were originally spread over 2 pages, but because text has now dropped down with extra blank lines being added, they now sit on the same page.
I sent another DOC highlighting these 4 new "errors"
They sent me back a revised PDF (version 3) and those 4 are fixed but there are now just 2 new instances of these line spacing errors.
This morning I sent them a DOC highlighting them. They will doubtless fix them on Monday. Hopefully that will be it but we'll see eh.
My questions are...
1) When a DOC is converted to PDF wouldn't it just copy over directly without altering anything? The blank lines should remain as they did in the vast majority of cases I would imagine. I may have missed a few of my blank lines out but not 21.
The PDF is also coming in at around 220 pages, whereas my DOC was 164 pages. Obviously I had my DOC set in a smaller font than how the final pages of a regular sized paperback would appear. Also, some of the chapters start on a fresh page if the previous chapter ended near the bottom of a page, whereas my DOC just carried on down the DOC with chapter titles as required.
2) Therefore, with the editor manually starting some chapters on a fresh PDF page, could that cause this? I wouldn't have thought so myself.
3) Having no experience at all in book publishing, what is the expected number of revisions a final draft would go through before it gets to the printers, or indeed the internet? I appreciate that my dialogue is formatted differently, but I would imagine that there would be a few "final drafts".
By the way, I'm not annoyed AT ALL by these revisions, because it's actually given me the opportunity to make 2 very minor changes at the same time, and I'm also taking it as a lesson should I write anything else.
The publishers themselves are more than cooperative and these final draft emails have all taken just a day each time, so it's not taking a long time to sort all this out. We only started on Tuesday last week.
Thanks for your time folks.
John
The book isn't about Jack the Ripper before you read on any more, but I would like a wee bit of advice from my learned colleagues on casebook about a few matters if anyone has got the time.
It's the first book I've ever written and I'm self-publishing it.
Obviously when I started the project back in January I had no idea whatsoever on how it all worked, but a friend of a friend happens to be a trainee proof reader and she helped me enormously. After she'd read through it and I'd made various ammendments and so on and so forth, I sent it off to my publisher.
The way I've got the book structured isn't conventional in how the dialogue is formatted.
Example.
John - Hi Mrs B, how are you today?
Mrs B - Fine thank you John
rather than...
John said, "Hi Mrs B, How are you today?"
"Fine thank you John," replied Mrs B.
Note how I also have a blank line between each speaker. The narrative passages of the book look conventional. It's only in the dialogue exchanges that I have it like this. Basically because the vast majority of conversations can be quite lengthy, and only a few words long in each case. i think it looks better and suits what the book is about better too. Even the publisher agrees.
Now what's happening is that I sent off my final draft as a DOC file.
They sent back a PDF file of that 1st draft for me to check. It had 21 instances of the blank lines missing.
I sent them a DOC highlighting these errors.
They sent back a revised PDF (version 2) and the original 21 blank lines had all been fixed, but 4 new ones appeared. These can easily be explained because they were lines that were originally spread over 2 pages, but because text has now dropped down with extra blank lines being added, they now sit on the same page.
I sent another DOC highlighting these 4 new "errors"
They sent me back a revised PDF (version 3) and those 4 are fixed but there are now just 2 new instances of these line spacing errors.
This morning I sent them a DOC highlighting them. They will doubtless fix them on Monday. Hopefully that will be it but we'll see eh.
My questions are...
1) When a DOC is converted to PDF wouldn't it just copy over directly without altering anything? The blank lines should remain as they did in the vast majority of cases I would imagine. I may have missed a few of my blank lines out but not 21.
The PDF is also coming in at around 220 pages, whereas my DOC was 164 pages. Obviously I had my DOC set in a smaller font than how the final pages of a regular sized paperback would appear. Also, some of the chapters start on a fresh page if the previous chapter ended near the bottom of a page, whereas my DOC just carried on down the DOC with chapter titles as required.
2) Therefore, with the editor manually starting some chapters on a fresh PDF page, could that cause this? I wouldn't have thought so myself.
3) Having no experience at all in book publishing, what is the expected number of revisions a final draft would go through before it gets to the printers, or indeed the internet? I appreciate that my dialogue is formatted differently, but I would imagine that there would be a few "final drafts".
By the way, I'm not annoyed AT ALL by these revisions, because it's actually given me the opportunity to make 2 very minor changes at the same time, and I'm also taking it as a lesson should I write anything else.
The publishers themselves are more than cooperative and these final draft emails have all taken just a day each time, so it's not taking a long time to sort all this out. We only started on Tuesday last week.
Thanks for your time folks.
John
Comment