grammar Archives - Randall Floyd http://randallfloydauthor.com/tag/grammar/ Official Author Website Fri, 24 May 2019 23:15:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 How to format your print book for ANY PUBLISHER in less than 10 minutes http://randallfloydauthor.com/2019/05/24/how-to-format-your-print-book-for-any-publisher-in-less-than-10-minutes/ Fri, 24 May 2019 22:57:52 +0000 http://randallfloydauthor.com/?p=461 Formatting a book for the first time, especially to the uninitiated, can be a real pain. But, honestly, it's not that hard, once you do it a time or two. Not only that, you can do it in less than an hour. Actually, you can do it in less than 10 minutes - all you […]

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Formatting a book for the first time, especially to the uninitiated, can be a real pain. But, honestly, it's not that hard, once you do it a time or two. Not only that, you can do it in less than an hour. Actually, you can do it in less than 10 minutes - all you need is a little direction. So, here are the steps for formatting your book, so pay close attention!

1. Set the page size

Go to the "layout" tab, then click on "margins". Scroll down to the bottom of the dropdown list and click on "Custom Margins." There are three tabs on the top - Margins, Paper, and Layout. Click on the "Paper" tab.

At the top of the window, you'll see a heading marked "paper size." Where it says width, highlight the number and type in the width of your book (i.e 6). Where it says height, highlight the number and type in the height of your book (i.e. 9). You just need to make sure that you know what our book size it before you can type anything in. The common sizes are 6x9, 5x8, or 5.25x8. I like 5.25x8 the most, as it gives you a slightly thicker book and more room for your book cover.

Now we can move on to the next step

2. Set the margins

While still in the "Page Setup" window, click on the "margins" tab. Under the "margins" header, you should see a bunch of dropdown boxes next to the words top, bottom, left, right, gutter, and gutter position. Right now, just stick with the top bottom, left, right, and input these numbers"

Top: 0.5

Bottom: 0.5

Left: 0.75

Right: 0.5

Leave the gutter and gutter position boxes alone. Now, look down the window a little bit - down to the "Pages" header. The next line says "Multiple Pages" and has a dropdown box. It says normal right now, but you'll want to change it. To do that, click on the box and choose "mirror margins."

When you do this, you'll notice a couple of things: (1) the left and right boxes up above now read "inside" and "outside"; and (2) you can no longer choose the gutter position. Don't worry, this is supposed to happen.

3. Set the gutter

The gutter indicates how far over from the binding of the book you want your words to appear on the inside edge of the page. I'm not 100% sure why Microsoft word has both the inside setting and the gutter setting since it's just easier to account for the gutter with the inside measurement. However, this is the theory behind the gutter:

When you have a print book and you open it, you're going to want to make sure the words and the page are far enough over that they don't slide down towards the book's binding and become impossible to read. To make sure the words are still centered on the page, you generally want to account for a quarter of an inch in the gutter. If you were to do this with Word, you would go to the inside measurement and make it the same as the outside measurement. Then, on the gutter measurement, you would put 0.25. However, this is exactly the same as putting the gutter at 0 and the inside measurement at .75. So, you can do it however you want, but the two methods are EXACTLY the same.

Now it's time to prep your document to add a table of contents.

4. Mark all your headings with h1 tags

You need to do this in order to set up your table of contents later. It's very simple. All you need to do is select your first chapter heading and then click on the "Home" tab at the top of your screen. Go to the right of the header to where you see the styles section. Here you'll see a bunch of text that says AaBbCc....

Select the one that says "Heading 1" beneath it. Do this to all of your chapter headings and then you're ready to build your table of contents.

5. Set up your table of contents

Create a blank page after your dedication page. You can do this by putting the cursor after the last word on your dedication page, and simply hitting "control" + "enter" at the same time. This will create a page break. Now, at the top of the screen, click on the "References" tab

Then click on the Table of Contents button, and follow that up by clicking the first option. Now you're ready to go. Your table of contents is up and you don't have to do much else. Just check the table to make sure all of your chapters appeared there. If you, you are going to have to go back to the chapter headings that are not on the table and mark them as h1 again. If you can't remember how to do that, just go back up to step 4.

6. Set up your page numbers

This can be the most confusing part of formatting your books. The reason is that unless you know exactly what you're doing, you won't be able to have the entire book numbered correctly, but still have some pages that don't show numbers. So, here is what you do.

First, you need to find the first page you want your page numbers to actually appear on. I generally choose the page after the table of contents to by this page. The first thing you need to do is put the cursor at the bottom of the table of contents. To do this, simply click after the last number of the last entry. Then the down button.

This will put the cursor at the bottom of the page. Now, with the cursor there, click the layout tab. In the first section, on the right, you'll see a small dropdown labeled "Breaks." Click on that. Then scroll down to the "section breaks" section and click on "next page."

Once you do that, your cursor will now be at the top of the next page.

Now click on the "Insert" tab. Go to the right of the top section until you see the footer icon. Click on the footer and then scroll down the list until you see "edit footer" and click on it. Go up to the top of the page and click "design". It should be a blue link. Look to the left of the page, near the top. You'll see the words "link to previous." This box is automatically selected. Push the button to unselect it. Now we can add the page numbers.

At the top of the screen, you'll see three icons. Click on the "page number" icon. Then click on "bottom of page" and then choose one of the "plain number" options. I would recommend the one with the number centered. Now, click once more on the page numbers Icon at the top of the page and then choose the "Format Page Numbers" option.

At the bottom of the formatting window, choose the continue from a previous section and then hit "ok." Now, click on the page number on the previous page and delete it. This will delete all of the page numbers in the first section, but leave the page numbers on the rest in the rest of the book.

7. Zoom out and make sure your pages are on the proper side of the paper

There are two ways to zoom out. You can either click on the - button at the bottom right of your page until you can see 4 pages on each line, or you can hit control and then scroll down on the mouse. Then, you want to take a look at your pages. If you look closely - because you clicked the mirrored option when you were setting up your margins - the margins on your document mirror each other. Every other page.

The pages that have the larger margin on the left are the pages on the right side and the opposite is true for the other side.

Now you need to grab a book and take a look at it. Locate the title page, the copyright page, the dedication page, the table of contents, and the page of the first chapter or introduction. Take a look at what page they start on, and then take note of what side of the book these pages are.

Now, line up your document to match the book.

If a section is not on the proper side, simply go to the top of that page and put the cursor in front of the first word and then hit "control" + "enter" at the same time. Do this whenever a specific page is not on the side of the book you want it to be.

The last thing you want to do before you export the document is to go up to the table of contents. Click on the title of the table of contents. When you do this a box will magically appear above where you clicked. On the right side it says "update table." Click this and then choose the "update page numbers only" option. Then hit ok. This will update all of your pages.

Now you can format the look of the chapter headings, table of contents, title page, and even the text body, however you want.

8. Export it as a .pdf

Once you're done formatting the text, click on the file tab at the top of your screen. Then click "save as." On the left side of the screen, you will see a "Browse" button. Click on this and then locate the folder or directory you want to save your book in. Then, on the bottom of the screen, you'll see 2 long, white boxes.

The first box you can name your file. Go ahead and name your file. The second box allows you to choose the type of file you want to save as Click on this box and choose PDF. Then click save. Now, click "save as" one more time. This time, save your document in the same folder, but as a word document.

9. Send it off!

Now you're ready to send it off to your publisher - it could be Amazon, IngramSpark, BookBaby, or even Lulu Press. Hopefully, this helps get rid of any worries you might have.

If not, click here to sign up for my free email course that goes through each of these steps in a series of text and video lessons.

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Nobody Cares about your Comma Splices http://randallfloydauthor.com/2018/01/11/nobody-cares-about-your-comma-splices/ Thu, 11 Jan 2018 09:00:36 +0000 http://randallfloydauthor.com/?p=324 I was reading a book a few weeks ago, I can’t remember the author or the title. I don’t really even remember what the book was about. I slogged through the entire novel, and it was tough. The action didn’t build like a well-written book is supposed to, the ending didn’t hit me as right. […]

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I was reading a book a few weeks ago, I can’t remember the author or the title. I don’t really even remember what the book was about.

I slogged through the entire novel, and it was tough. The action didn’t build like a well-written book is supposed to, the ending didn’t hit me as right.

When I finished reading the thing, I found that nearly every single thing I liked about novels was missing.

The book would have been a huge disappointment if I were reading for entertainment purposes. But, I wasn’t.

When I picked up the book to read it, I had committed myself to a single rule: read this book until you find a grammatical mistake.

At the end of the book, I sat back in my chair and let out a breath of air. The author had done it. I couldn’t find a grammatical mistake anywhere. It was a thing of beauty – something that would make my 10th grade English teacher beam with pride.

Unfortunately, the rest of the book was garbage, but I say that in the nicest way possible.

You see, my reading exercise had two purposes. The first thing I wanted to do was see if it was possible to write a story with no grammatical errors.

Check.

The second thing I was looking for was whether or not the book, through free of typos and other mistakes, followed the rules of storytelling.

That was a resounding “No.”

The author of this novel, while well-intentioned, had fallen into one of the most common traps I see when editing novels.

Time after time, writers fail to write a book that words before they start fixing minor errors.

It’s a completely natural thing to want to do.

The problem is that this is the wrong way to to do things.

I read another story recently, this time I read it because I wanted to have a good read. The book had mistakes in almost every chapter, but I kept reading.

The story was well plotted, and the action built the way it was supposed to. When I got to the end, I once again sat back in my chair and let out another breath of air.

When I see books with errors, I tend to get distracted. I think that’s natural for most people out there. But what I found with this second book, was that because it followed the essential elements of storytelling, I was actually able to forgive the author for the mistakes, because the story was compelling, and it worked wonderfully.

What I learned with this second book was that grammar mistakes are second to following the principles of storytelling.

This is the case every time.

You might have the cleanest, most grammatical book ever written. But if it doesn’t flow the way stories are meant to flow, the book will stink, and nobody, except your high school English teacher, is going to like it.

So, the next time you think you want to start proofreading your book, take a step back and look at your global story. If it doesn’t work, ignore the typos. Figure out why your story isn’t working.

Once you do that, then you can work on the grammar.

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