How to publish for Kindle on Amazon

To anyone who hasn't done it, publishing for the Kindle on Amazon can seem a formidable task, so this post is to share my tips on how I published Remix. There are other ways - and you can always pay someone else to do it. JA Konrath recommends the person he uses. Allow about a day to do it my way.Prepare your book as a Word document. Remove page numbers and headers. Make a title page; I'd advise condensing the usual front matter to one page. Put the indents to three characters, and start each chapter on a new page using Ctl and Enter. I used a tilde (~) between scenes, as the conversion process can remove line spaces, even though they show on the Preview. Consider if you should put a bit about another of your books, or a link to your website, at the end.Download Mobipocket Creator (free) and from the home page, import your Word document.Click on Metadata to the left of the page you are now on, and fill in your book's details and cover. You will need to use Ctl and V to paste.Click File and Save As, and the document will be saved in HTML form where you choose on your computer.Go to Amazon's Digital Text Platform. Register, go to your Bookshelf and click Add a New Title. Follow the instructions carefully.Once your HTML file is loaded, you get to the most important part of the process, Preview. Preview gives you an approximation of what your text will look like on a Kindle. At this stage, go through every single page looking for formatting flaws which have popped up, such as passages in bold or italic or incorrect indents. Put these right on the HTML document as you find them. You don't need any knowledge of HTML to do this; it's easy to work out which bit of code is wrong, and replace it with a sound bit of code from a correct passage. Remember to change the code at the end as well as the beginning of a paragraph. Warning: this painstaking process may take hours, depending how much extraneous concealed formatting your original Word document had. But it's essential. Reload the improved text, and check again.Repeat until your book looks the way you intended.Fill in the rest of the details.Publish! If you have a Kindle, download a copy to check; if you don't, download Kindle for PC and check on that.Sell lots of copies.
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Published on January 08, 2011 12:23
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message 1: by Heather (new)

Heather Richardson Great stuff, Lexi, and very concise. It would be good if you could do another post about the issue of pricing/collecting payments for UK writers. From what I've heard this can be complicated for non-US citizens.


message 2: by Lexi (new)

Lexi Revellian Heather, I'll do that when I find out! I'm such a new author on Kindle I've only had one cheque so far, from Amazon UK, that arrived on Christmas eve.

I really should look up the info on Amazon so I know what to expect.


message 3: by Heather (new)

Heather Richardson Thanks, Lexi! Looking at the Kindle author forums, it seems lots of UK authors are encountering complications. Perhaps it's all proved more popular than Amazon were expecting, and they're overwhelmed with thousands of (smallish) payments to process. Anyway, glad it's going well for you. I've bought 'Remix' for my Kindle (it's far too easy to impulse shop in the Kindle store!) and I'm looking forward to reading it.


message 4: by Lexi (new)

Lexi Revellian Thanks for buying 'Remix' - I hope you enjoy it.

Is Magdeburg going to have a Kindle version?


message 5: by Heather (new)

Heather Richardson My publishers are a bit Luddite, so I'm not sure how keen they'll be to go down that route. I want to have a chat to them about using the 'Look inside' facility on Amazon, because that seems fairly painless to do, and could well persuade some browsers to buy.

I'm toying with the idea of producing an ebook of some of my previously published short stories. It's really just an experiment, to let myself get the hang of it. I'm organising an academic conference for later this year, and I like the idea of publishing the conference proceedings as a low-cost ebook. I thought it might be sensible to have a trial run before I do that!


message 6: by Lexi (new)

Lexi Revellian The Search inside the Book does improve sales - not that I'm selling many paperbacks at all; only three this month. The paperback sold briskly the first half of December, I think because people who'd liked 'Remix' on their Kindles bought it as a gift for the Kindleless. In the UK, Amazon takes AGES to put SitB up once it has your files.

You could offer to epublish yourself for your Luddite publishers, or is that not on?


message 7: by Heather (new)

Heather Richardson I think they'd want to wait until all the print books are sold - after all, they've paid for them, and I'm sure they'd rather shift paper-and-ink stock than the virtual kind. Maybe it will be an alternative to a second print run, if the first lot sells through.


message 8: by Lexi (new)

Lexi Revellian Once people own Kindles, they can become reluctant to buy paper books. I read an article in the Bookseller: http://www.futurebook.net/content/sha... suggesting that Kindle sales, of that book at least, were add-ons to the paper book sales. It's not a market to be missed.


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