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What do you use?


So when you go to publish your work on KDP which would you use then?

The to Scrivener for full first draft.
Export to word for second+ draft and editing/formatting.
I use createspace.com for the Paper and Kindle book editions.

The to Scrivener for full first draft.
Export to word for second+ draft and editing/formatting.
I use createspace.com for the Paper and Kindle book editions."
Thank you i use paper and pen too x
First is Word for the document itself. I format it correctly for PDF conversion for my Create Space Print on Demand book. For my eBook, I take the whole thing from Word, copy it into a notepad, use CSS and HTML to format it, save as html, view the whole thing from a browser-copy it right back into Word to find any final output errors on my eBook, then correct it on the notepad file. Once satisfied, html goes into Mobi pocket converter, make eBook, and off to Amazon.
Morris
Morris

WOW you do so much more than me :)
My first book Moving On a friend helped me out loads, and the second in the series I want to try do myself and see I get on

Easy enough to convert for E-books on either Smashwords or Amazon.
I use Blurb for the print copy, with a little pre-formatting Word goes into their Bookwright software with only a little forcing.
If you want to learn how I do it, I can send you a file that matches a book I wrote, and you can look at what the input notebook file looks like, and the output file that it creates. This is sort of a tutorial in itself. I like it this way--it gives me more control over my product. Send me an email morris.graham@sbcglobal.net and I'll let you check my processes out and see if this is something that you would like to do.
Morris
Morris

I use Excel for outlines. It gives me several columns if multiple event are happening at the same time so I can trackl the timing.




I adore scrivener. My one complaint which I have brought to their attention and they had zero solution was I'd like to be able to lock individual chapters and scenes. I do a lot of work in the truck and chapters always end up bumping about with my Surface stylus.
- Kailee

I am writing a short story now, before I do anything to the 2nd in the Moving Series and I am working on Scrivener for it, so this is the first time I will be using it so it should be interesting how it all works out lol.
Moving On I did all though Word and I haven't had anyone say anything bad so that might just work for me :)
Libre or OpenOffice ftw! Opensource, free, and does everything word does. Course, you can use Google Docs easily too, and it does the same thing.

When finished and ready, I use Smashwords, Lulu, Kindle for ebooks, and CreateSpace for print.


Do you use these two or do you write on Word and Page.
Would love to hear what writing tool you all use...."
I write in Word and compile my e-book formats in Calibre (it's free). Piece of cake! Works beautifully every time.
April

Everybody knows that the bird is the word.
I use openoffice and calibre.

I use pages then I export to epub and finish it up in Sigil.

Then a combination of Word, Open Office and Google Docs for typing things up and some first draft stuff.
Then I finish everything off in Open Office and do the formatting etc from there.
I make my own covers in GIMP, but I do less of that these days as my sister-in-law is kind of one of the world's best book designers :)

Then a combination of Word, Open Office and Google Docs for typing things up and some first draft stuff.
Then I finish everything off in Open Office an..."
Im pen and paper first too.
I use Word more than anything else x

It's all very disorganised, so I make sure I have a decent first draft in paper :)

I write a lot of notes when I am out, for the Moving Series the first book is out and the second is being written but the idea still run in my head for the 2nd and 3rd book so a note pad when I am out and about x

Once I'm done with the edits, I like to make an ePub with sigil. Reading on a tablet helps notice typos that may have been missed.
I also keep me iPad near hand for quick notes when away from the computer.

Once I'm done with the edits, I like to make an ePub with sigil. Reading on a tablet helps notice typos that may have been missed...."
Never thought about reading in on tablet first before publishing, might do that
Charles wrote: "Everybody knows that the bird is the word."
Everybody knows the deal is rotten
Old black Joe's still pickin' cotton
For your ribbons and your bows
And everybody knows.
You put that song in my head today. Thank you.
Everybody knows the deal is rotten
Old black Joe's still pickin' cotton
For your ribbons and your bows
And everybody knows.
You put that song in my head today. Thank you.

That said, I first draft with pen and paper. Second (third, fourth... sixtieth) draft is part draft part transcription onto Word though I'm moving to Scrivener. (God bless the "backspace" key!)
I have been split on how well the Kindle and Createspace grinders "format" my final drafts. Am paying professionals to proofread and format from now on.

That said, I first draft with pen and paper. Second (third, fourth... sixtieth) draft is part draft part transcription onto Word though I'm m..."
So far I am happy with Scrivener which is a good sign

Paperback - Word Perfect 10 > save as PDF
The only problem with Word Perfect 10 was being able to place “all pages” author/ title headings on alternating pages. I searched for a week, gave up, and did each page manually - arrgh
Next novel I will try OpenOffice

Old LG messenger phone with Polaris 3 for notes on the go
Ywriter5 to compile all my notes after writing myself into a corner (unsnarl with dramatica , story structure architect, plots unlimited, & Marshall plan )
Page plus 14 for my paperbacks (chapters in chunks & can combine into press ready pdf's.)
Photo plus 14 with page plus for press ready book covers.
Word 2003 for creating smashwords/kindle editions using headers (Sigil for epubs).
I would rather use wordperfect but I have 8 and its fussy on win7 so I use open office 2.4 to deal with it (which is compatible with word 2k3).
I know too many word processors... -_-
My stuff is mainly office 2003 & serif xplus 14 . I use all the products in some way...


KDP eBooks:
- Like Morris, I move the text to Notepad (well, Notepad++ which is kind of nice for doing HTML work).
- I run some text formatting routines in Word before going to Notepad++, and then a few macros in Notepad++ as well.
- I also manually generate my .opf and .ncx files in Notepad++ (not so hard to do once you have a working template)
- I compile a mobi file using Kindle Previewer (which requires KindleGen to be installed). This has a fairly useful document debugger that gives you both warnings and errors with enough detail to find and fix them in your HTML doc, and it allows me to check formatting in any number of Kindle device formats.
Smashwords:
- I take the final Word draft and copy it to a new folder where I run a few text formatting routines on it. (Basically preparing the document to preserve italics when I go nuclear).
- Then I go nuclear (strip the document of all Word formatting.
- After this, I apply custom Word styles which format the document so that it will pass through Smashword's meat grinder function w/out a hitch.
CreateSpace:
- Very similar to Smashwords. Done all in Word, but using the templates CS provides for whatever size I'm using.
- Actually, I'm just doing this for the first time now, so I'm not sure exactly how well this is working yet!

I like simple too lol.
I would love to know what font and spacing and things you use on it. x

KDP eBooks:
- Like Morris, I move the text to Notepad (well, Notepad++ which is kind of nice for doing HTML work).
- I run some text formatting routines in Word before going ..."
I really need to start playing around with words more and get myself 100% sorted with it lol

I like simple too l..."
I use Times New Roman font size 12, single spacing, left line spacing. When I create a paperback I change the font to Garamond font size 12, single spacing, but justified line spacing.
I also create my own Styles, so it's easier to format each new book. I'm pretty simple when I write. I start on page one and use the same document until I get to the end. I don't create each chapter as it's own document like I have heard some people do.
Creating Styles is so much easier in the end. If I want my chapter title to be bigger and different font and centered, I create a Style...let's say called CHAPTER. I write Chapter one and then click on the Style called CHAPTER and it automatically changes it for me. I click back on Style NORMAL, which is my normal writing Times New Roman font 12. I also make Styles for section breaks, my name, my book title, and so on so forth. I've only published two, but I'm writing book four. It takes time creating Styles but once I did it's so much easier on book four. Instead of constantly clicking on top changing the fonts, the spacing, the centering all the time, I just click on one button...whatever Style I made and it's done.
I use Microsoft Word 10, so my Style area is on the top right hand corner. Took me a while to figure these little tricks out, but once I did it became so much easier.

The only bugbear I have is that when exporting to a Word document, any italics end up underlined in Word and does not retain the italics.

Thanks Dwayne for selecting my music for the evening. ;)
If you've never seen him live, you should.
I'm out. Words beckon.
-kailee

When setting up a Style you can also define what Style the following paragraph will be put in. So if you go into your CHAPTER style and put NORMAL into the "Style for following paragraph" box, all you'd have to do is type the Chapter name, change its style to CHAPTER, and then press Enter. BOOM, automatically in NORMAL style.




It's amazing how useful Styles can be. I'm so glad I stumbled upon that feature in Word. I'm sure there's much more I haven't figured out in Word yet. Good thing I like learning...some things anyway:)
Do you use these two or do you write on Word and Page.
Would love to hear what writing tool you all use.
xx