Thanks
]]>Glad I could help. I’ll be finishing off the last of this 3 part post next week.
]]>Glad I could help. I’ll be finishing off the last of this 3 part post next week.
]]>Thanks Matthew. I used your work to format my YA fantasy the nuclear option way. Thanks. It worked out great. My problem became what to do next until I downloaded the book Amazon recommended. That was the step I needed to finally “get ‘er done.”
Any kudos I get belong to you. I am just the messenger.
Thaks again.
I also did a guide for Barnes & Noble’s Nook:
http://matthewleeadams.com/2012/03/publishing-to-nook-barnes-noble-epub/
And one for CreateSpace:
http://matthewleeadams.com/2012/03/createspace-document-settings/
Note that I did these guides two and a half years ago. So there may well be some updated changes to consider. Amazon has released new versions of Kindle since this time, and I believe mostly the main differences will be in cover creation/sizes and expanded capabilities available for anyone who wants to use them. Table of Content creation and links might have changed in some way. Those are always tricky and it’s well worth being certain.
Generally, the basic document formatting should be the same, which is the bulk of the guide.
Be certain to review all the formatting guidelines here: https://kdp.amazon.com/help?topicId=A36BYK5S7AJ2NQ
CreateSpace also may have some changes. Their guidelines can be seen here:
https://www.createspace.com/Products/Book/
I don’t think Barnes & Noble has done anything in the past two years. Also, Kobo should be able to use virtually the same ePub file as Barnes & Noble.
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