Sci-Fi, fantasy and speculative Indie Authors Review discussion
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Why are we told not to use illustrations?
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Richard
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Nov 21, 2014 01:06AM

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and that one has got illustrations. So you're not alone in using them at the moment, and to be honest I think they can be a good addition to the story. In Dragonfly they didn't add much to the narrative, but I thought they were a nice way to show the ideas behind the novel.

If you want to illustrate your story, by all means do so.

Odd. I've never heard that. Off the top of my head, I can think of at least three books with illustrations that were quite popular. Vonnegut used doodles of questionable nature and no one complained, least to my knowledge.

I've never heard that you shouldn't use illustrations, but my only traditional publishing experience is from selling a few short stories to magazines, and for every story of mine they published they provided illustrations.

In print I don't think there's a huge taboo anymore. It used to be that printers had to cut dies for the illustrations. Newer technology made printing illustrations cheaper.
The only reasons against using illustrations in print books now would be the quality of the artwork (if you're illustrations aren't pro-quality, then they can really detract from the presentation), and the fact that some readers really dislike having someone destroy their mental image of what's described in the text. There are people out there who absolutely detest anyone showing them what a character looks like, for example.
In digital books, however, (aside from the above, which obviously apply here as well) there are a couple other issues. As Jelena pointed out, eBooks are prone to all kinds of formatting and presentation problems. Since they can be read on anything from tiny smartphone to huge-monitored desktops, you have very little control over how the end product looks on any given reader. Illustrations can be problematic.
Secondly, there are handling costs deducted from your sales pre-royalty calculation (at least from amazon) for the size of your eBook file. And illustrations rapidly increase the size of that file.
Oh...AND, if you're inserting them inside the main body text, the DO interrupt the flow of reading, which can be kind of annoying. It's less annoying in print where it's easier to ignore them, but in an eReader, you HAVE to scroll or page past them on-screen and this can get annoying. I mean, I even get annoyed having to scroll past pictures and imbedded videos on web pages.
In my own book I included sketches, diagrams, maps, extra boxes of info and even one graph! Hardback and paperback were fine, and the only problem I've had is (inevitably) with the eBook where captions can become separated from their illustrations (i.e. appearing at the top of the following page). Incorporating any captions as fully part of their illustrations would avoid that.
