This is not
the case in a print book, in which an interior file and a separate cover file are submitted to the printer.
Not exact matches
Before that
book was
printed, all the way from the roman empire to martin luther, the catholic church had everyone under a salesman's spell since the people were afraid, and
in some
cases depended on the church to protect them, so they just bought all the religion without even knowing what really went into and if that information was trustworthy.
All
books are hand - wrapped and shipped without a
printed receipt
in case they are shipping as a gift.
Full of Pre K activities, the kit has fully - coordinated
books, flashcards, posters, a
print guide and magic drawing board, all
in a
case.
«
In the
case where a library has been destroyed, all of the
books — especially those that are out of
print or rare — may not have to be thrown away,» he said.
The
book will be beautifully presented
in a clothbound clamshell
case and is part of a limited edition of 500 and will include a signed and numbered
print exclusive to the
book.
According to
CASE, the award recognizes, «creativity and overall excellence
in design of individual
print publications...» Among the publications included for consideration are alumni magazines, annual reports, marketing materials, and
books.
In the case of print books, just cut out the last page in every book, which details the program and lists qualifying titles in the same genre or by the same autho
In the
case of
print books, just cut out the last page
in every book, which details the program and lists qualifying titles in the same genre or by the same autho
in every
book, which details the program and lists qualifying titles
in the same genre or by the same autho
in the same genre or by the same author.
A week or so ago, I mentioned that I was busy formatting and,
in some
cases, reformatting, my
books for
print release.
To order a proof, your
book must still be
in «draft» status and you will pay the
printing cost for your
book ($ 4.86
in the
case of Vengeance) plus shipping.
You select the kind of project you're interested
in hiring a designer for (
in your
case, you'd select «
print design» or «
book cover design»)
In Novel Living, Lisa Occhipinti makes a moving
case for embracing
print books — now more than ever — as «a counterpoint to the swipe of a screen.»
However, there are many, many
cases of employees at publishers shipping PDF's of the
book's
print file to reviewers, which appear as a mangled garble of words and punctuation
in most eReaders.
That doesn't mean you're unable to create an ebook
in these
cases, though — if you can provide your
book's text
in a single - column format, converting it to an ebook shouldn't be a problem; it just won't look exactly like your
print book.
This right includes, without limitation, the right to: (a) reproduce, index and store Digital
Books on one or more computer facilities, and reformat, convert and encode Digital
Books; (b) display, market, transmit, distribute, sell and otherwise digitally make available all or any portion of
Printed Books & Digital
Books through A&A Properties, for customers and prospective customers to download, access, copy and paste,
print, annotate and / or view online and offline, including on portable devices; (c) permit customers to «store» Digital
Books that they have purchased from us on servers («Virtual Storage») and to access and re-download such Digital
Books from Virtual Storage from time to time both during and after the term of this Agreement; (d) display and distribute (i) your trademarks and logos
in the form you provide them to us or within
Printed Books & Digital
Books (with such modifications as are necessary to optimize their viewing), and (ii) portions of
Printed Books & Digital
Books,
in each
case solely for the purposes of marketing, soliciting and selling
Printed Books & Digital
Books and related A&A Printing offerings; (e) use, reproduce, adapt, modify, and distribute, as we determine appropriate,
in our sole discretion, any metadata that you provide
in connection with Digital
Books; and (f) transmit, reproduce and otherwise use (or cause the reformatting, transmission, reproduction, and / or other use of) Digital
Books as mere technological incidents to and for the limited purpose of technically enabling the foregoing (e.g., caching to enable display).
The returnability that bookstores require is a two - edged sword — if Barnes & Noble folds (or closes a bunch of stores), then any unsold
books will get returned to Ingram for a refund, which means the publisher (
in this
case me) will end up getting billed for the
printing costs.
If they review the audio of your
book, be sure to make it clear that there's also a
printed version —
in which
case they'll mention it
in the context of the review.
I've got a thousand or more copies of that
book in my warehouse that I have to sell through before I can do another
print run — and I need to decide if sales are strong enough to warrant another thousand or more
books, or if I need to go to a small digital
print run,
in which
case, I might need to raise the price (because small
print runs cost more per unit than large ones, and I have to offer my distributor a 65 % discount as per our contract).
In one
case you're
printing a
book (an automated manufacturing process) or you're publishing a
book to an e-marketplace (a bunch of servers, software and bandwidth (not free)-RRB-.
In the
case of
print books, the
book is manufactured via
print on demand when one of these sellers orders a copy, and then you are paid for that sale.
We offer paperback, hardcover,
in case laminate hardcover where the image is
printed directly on the
book.
In English - language book - contracts, it's almost always the case that countries where English isn't the native or official language are «open territory,» meaning that if a writer sells her English language rights in Canada and the US to Macmillan, and her UK / Australia / NZ / South African rights to Penguin, both Penguin and Macmillan are legally allowed to sell competing English print and electronic editions in Norway, Rwanda, India, China, and Russi
In English - language
book - contracts, it's almost always the
case that countries where English isn't the native or official language are «open territory,» meaning that if a writer sells her English language rights
in Canada and the US to Macmillan, and her UK / Australia / NZ / South African rights to Penguin, both Penguin and Macmillan are legally allowed to sell competing English print and electronic editions in Norway, Rwanda, India, China, and Russi
in Canada and the US to Macmillan, and her UK / Australia / NZ / South African rights to Penguin, both Penguin and Macmillan are legally allowed to sell competing English
print and electronic editions
in Norway, Rwanda, India, China, and Russi
in Norway, Rwanda, India, China, and Russia.
Other self - published phenoms have eventually sold their
books to traditonal publishers, but authors like Amanda Hocking, the first self - published million - copy Kindle seller, sold both
print and digital (
in her
case, to St. Martin's Press).
In many
cases this leads to severely overprinting or under
printing of
books.
Costs for
printing books will be slightly higher
in Case 2 because a smaller quantity of
books is being ordered.
Even though publishing both
print and ebook versions of a
book is financially and technologically more feasible than it's ever been
in history, there is one
case where ebooks might be a better choice.
But as an avid reader of
books, I'm hoping that this
case would eventually result
in prices of e-
books in Apple's iBookstore and elsewhere being much lower than the prices of their
print counterparts.
Cases like this take more then a year to resolve and
in the meantime he can't make an ebook or
print more
books.
In this
case the agent and author worked together to find Greenpoint Press, a dedicated publisher utilizing
print - on - demand technology to publish important
books that might be overlooked by the big commercial presses.
Your admiration for authors of note is also misguided;
case in point: James Patterson, who writes 20 percent of his
books, yet has the audacity to claim authorship of the other 80 percent, and which, by the way,
in my opinion, are not even worth the paper on which they are
printed, And then there is the Mary Higgins Clark junk that she has now passed on to her daughter so she has something to do with her time.
I don't think it's fair to lump all people reading pirated eBooks into the same category, because many of them are victims of higher institutions of learning that force their students to buy course material written by the teachers and published
in very small
print runs, jacking the price of a hardcover textbook up to over $ 100
in many
cases, with a new edition coming out every year, making any «used»
book market obsolete.
The judge
in that
case, Harold Baer, not only stated that the scanning of entire
books is necessary for indexing purposes
in allowing ease of searchability, but also had strong words for the benefits that programs of this kind can have for readers as a whole, especially
print disabled readers.
Soon now a
book of mine could be remaindered also, Though not to the monumental extent
In which the chastisement of remaindering has been meted out To the book of my enemy, Since in the case of my own book it will be due To a miscalculated print run, a marketing error — Nothing to do with meri
In which the chastisement of remaindering has been meted out To the
book of my enemy, Since
in the case of my own book it will be due To a miscalculated print run, a marketing error — Nothing to do with meri
in the
case of my own
book it will be due To a miscalculated
print run, a marketing error — Nothing to do with merit.
Well, e-
books are typically cheaper than
print books, and
in most
cases, you'll find it difficult to get
print books in front of the noses of purchasers.
The price gap between the
print and e-versions of some top selling
books has now narrowed to within a few dollars - and
in some
cases, e-
books are more expensive than their
printed equivalents.
As a fellow avid trawler, I agree that
print won't always lead the way, and
in fact doesn't lead now
in the
case of self - published
books.
So
in the
case of the ET, I've found the ebook version (I have the PDF version on my desktop) good for quick reference, and because others also default to
print for craft
books, I wanted to mention the special circumstances for the ET.
Or,
in the
case of
print - on - demand
books, your words will languish — unprinted and unbound — inside a computer unless you let potential readers know about your work.
I think that the days of traditional publishers with
print books, where sales had to be made right at / immediately after release
in order to make best - seller lists, aren't the
case with small press and indie publishing.
Unfortunately as
in this lovely authors
case as with the majority out there, up until the time of
printing the focus is completely on writing their
book.
In some
cases, ebooks can give the reader a better experience than a
print book.
Another factor that Amazon doesn't mention is that it makes less money per e-book than it does on
print books, and
in some
cases is losing money on e-
books.
In this
case,
book owners can shift their
print material to a digital copy for use on their e-reader devices, tablets, or computers.
«Joel includes well written, easy to understand information which,
in this
case, will answer almost all of your questions on publishing a
print version of your
book.»
It probably means that most people already have e-
books as you do not have to buy many of them like
in the
case of
printed books.
However, just as the entire industry and consumer base had to do when the e-reader devices appeared on the market
in a wide - scale way, Hsu had to look for — and found — a purpose for digital children's
books;
in Hsu's
case, it was the ability to still read a bedtime story to his children via Skype when he traveled, his children holding their
print edition and he reading on his iPad.
If your
book does get picked up by a firm, it can take over a year to see your
book in print... and that's a best -
case scenario!
If there is little reason to use a publishing service provider for
print distribution, then for e-
book distribution it might be considered counterproductive, at least
in cases where the service doesn't give you immediate access and control over your e-
book administration and management (to update your
book's metadata, pricing, description, and so on).
If they click «Look Inside» and see ugly formatting, even if the ebook cover and
print cover look good, they may not buy,
in which
case, it's better not to have any
print book and just go with the ebook.
In this
case, the author retains a greater royalty share due to the above — typically 70 % of the profit from the most common sales channels depending on the list price of the
book and whether it is an ebook or
print.