Since many of my clients send their manuscripts via email, this is when I open
their manuscript in my word processor.
Not exact matches
A little later, packing up his
manuscripts, Ford happened to see «the page and the very commended phrase «old - eyed», and to notice that somehow
in the rounds of fatigued retyping that used to precede a writer's final sign - off on a book
in the days before
word processors, the original and rather dully hybridised «cold - eyed» had somehow lost its «c» and become «old - eyed», only nobody'd noticed since they both made a kind of sense.»
At least one (preferably two) qualified individual needs to read over your
manuscript from cover to cover
in an effort to seek out those nasty typos and misspellings that your
word processor didn't catch.
In fact, all of the 15 books I have written I wrote in Scrivener, including this one, but no matter what anyone will tell you, as you will see in a moment, word processors — and that includes «Scrivener» — are not very good at what eBooks do, and are therefore the wrong tools for the job when the time comes to create an eBook from your finished manuscrip
In fact, all of the 15 books I have written I wrote
in Scrivener, including this one, but no matter what anyone will tell you, as you will see in a moment, word processors — and that includes «Scrivener» — are not very good at what eBooks do, and are therefore the wrong tools for the job when the time comes to create an eBook from your finished manuscrip
in Scrivener, including this one, but no matter what anyone will tell you, as you will see
in a moment, word processors — and that includes «Scrivener» — are not very good at what eBooks do, and are therefore the wrong tools for the job when the time comes to create an eBook from your finished manuscrip
in a moment,
word processors — and that includes «Scrivener» — are not very good at what eBooks do, and are therefore the wrong tools for the job when the time comes to create an eBook from your finished
manuscript.
Mike's right, there is sometimes a point of confusion for new authors when the «size» of their
manuscript changes
in physical size from the original
word processor trim size of 8.5 x 11 to the more common book size of 8 × 5 or 6 × 9, and this change
in size results
in a greater number of pages for the final book (which affects the book's pricing).
In a time where eBook readers have become increasingly powerful and capable, and where more authors than ever put their content out in the market, one would think that formatting manuscripts to publish them as eBooks should be as trivial as exporting them from a word processor, but alas, that is not the cas
In a time where eBook readers have become increasingly powerful and capable, and where more authors than ever put their content out
in the market, one would think that formatting manuscripts to publish them as eBooks should be as trivial as exporting them from a word processor, but alas, that is not the cas
in the market, one would think that formatting
manuscripts to publish them as eBooks should be as trivial as exporting them from a
word processor, but alas, that is not the case.