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When publishers implode...
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Tom
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Aug 22, 2016 05:16AM

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A few years back, a similar thing happened to Nathan Lowell, but it was a little less amicable. He had to fight to get his rights back. He posted about it quite a bit on his blogs. He decided to go the self-published route for most things.

If you can, negotiate to get the rights to your existing book covers as they are nice. Sometimes they'll just let you have it, other times you'll have to pay them something.
And then, just upload them to the distributors yourself. There's a steep learning curve involved with formatting, but it's not that difficult. It's just lots of tedious, fiddly little things.

The Indy route is tough, but there's plenty of help out there - for a price of course. Joe Friedlander has a site where he sells book templates that has all the formatting taken care of. All you do is copy and paste yours into the template. He has them for both EBooks and print. And there are companies - Ingram Spark, Amazon, and Bookbaby comes to mind - that will handle the distribution and sales end. So if you decide to go this route there are lots of resources.

thank you - lucky for me i am getting the electronic files from my publisher. i always kept good relations with them, even when things weren't so hot. so they are really excited to see me succeed going forward.

Let me make a correction to a name: Joel Friedlander and here's a link to one of his sites. http://authortoolkits.com/
Good luck with whatever direction you decide.

You can download the Smashwords Style Guide and learn how to format your own ebooks to upload most ebookstores, or if you want to color outside the lines, you can use Jutoh or Scrivener to take the next step and get fancy, or if you want to get super-fancy and own Adobe InDesign you can go right to IngramSpark.
Smashwords Style Guide *FREE* (how to format your source-document) - https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/52
Createspace has free templates right on their website to format up your Print On Demand edition. No need to pay for templates.
Createspace POD templates *FREE* - https://forums.createspace.com/en/com...
If you want to convert your own ebooks, I use Jutoh and it's inexpensive (one time $49 fee / great customer support):
Converting an ebook using Jutoh - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g3lvh...
And if you want to go right to IngramSpark and own Adobe InDesign, you can learn how to format a nice print and ebook edition with a $10 per month subscription at Udemy, SkillShare or Lynda.com. I like the SkillShare version:
Formatting Print book with InDesign - https://www.skillshare.com/classes/de...
One of the biggest advantages indie authors have is the ability to change up their own books, covers, interiors, and next book blurbs to suit their needs.

You can download the Smashwords Style Guide and learn how to format your own ebooks to upload most ebookstores, or if you want to color outside the lines, you can use Jutoh or Scrivener to t..."
What are you doing, Anna?! You just gave away a university education and all our professional secrets for free!!! Next thing you know you'll be telling people about the secret handshake. You could be drummed out of the Indie Union if you keep being so helpful.

I can't help it. The lawyer in me doesn't like to see people get taken to the cleaners :-)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aSmsa...

https://www.amazon.com/Timberwolf-Tom...
I would love to get your feelings on my blurb, cover, etc!
And if someone wanted to buy the book, it's less than a cup of coffee and I totally wouldn't stop you.