(Remember the 1 -2-year span between signing with a publisher and
actually seeing your book in print?
Not exact matches
One important note for those who require large -
print text: The biggest size is
actually larger than the text I
saw in a large -
print book I had on hand.
While many have predicted that
print and / or digital have
seen their glory days already, the sales figures from Lulu appear to prove that one version's sales
actually stimulate the growth of the other and that the more successful authors are the ones whose
books are available
in both formats.
«Selling ebooks is great but to
actually see your literary effort
in a
printed book is something quite special.
Because
printed and digital
books actually support and complement each, you'll be
seeing increases
in sales
in both versions of the same
book.
DC's doing no post-processing on their previews, basically, so the pages are too large to
actually read
in a web browser comfortably, too high - res to be worth saving, and clear enough to
see all of the weird PDF signatures that
books have before they go to
print.
Today, non-seriff types have become so ubiquitous, that I
actually think they're easier to read for most people (and I've
seen quite a lot of
books being
printed in non seriff as well lately)-- especially since most resumes are now sent by e-mail and will be read on screen.