A Foal Poem is a full-length poetry book from Rose Hunter. Written in Mexico during the course of 2010, the poems form an outer journey that starts in Puerto Vallarta, moves to Acapulco and San Miguel de Allende, Sayulita, and back to Puerto Vallarta. Overall, the book takes the reader on an inner journey through the themes of addiction and recovery, relationships, and changing/emerging identities.
Update, 2012: Decomp Magazine reviewed Foal, with several quotes: "This is where Rose Hunter takes us, "...this place / slouching towards, no, stumbling, / towards, along, overexposed cobblestones; one gringo dive bar / after another and never stop" ... And Hunter achieves, again and again, an absolutely surprising effect, like something hatching in your throat and then you falling love with that thing when it flies out, so beautiful, so new."
For another taste of A Foal Poem, try Aposematic / Grey at BluePrintReview, and The Lion / rebar at Connotation Press.
"A Foal Poem drew me in and didn't let go.... I wanted to stay within this world - the cube lady explaining with her hands; the Mexican palms and the cranes; bubbles in the rock and black sand beaches. Life during the wave’s lifetime... Revealing and concealing, A Foal Poem curls inward, outward, and within." -Sherry O'Keefe
Rose Hunter is the author of to the river (Artistically Declined Press), and the editor of the poetry journal, YB. Poems from this book have appeared in A cappella Zoo, decomP, elimae, Escape Into Life, kill author, The Nervous Breakdown, PANK, Referential, The Toronto Quarterly, Willow Wept Review, the BluePrintReview, and others. There also is an author talk with Rose Hunter in this blog.
Rose Hunter: A Foal Poem
poetry collection, 108 pages, $6.50
(originally posted in fall 2011)
Showing posts with label createspace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label createspace. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 06, 2012
A Foal Poem - Rose Hunter (update)
Labels:
A Foal Poem,
createspace,
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Monday, April 16, 2012
How to create a book cover for print-on-demand services like CreateSpace
Here are some notes on creating a book cover for print-on-demand services like Lulu or CreateSpace - back in August, YB-editor Rose Hunter and i mailed back and forth about her "Foal" cover. The mail dialogue includes the steps from first layout to final proof, and notes on file resolutions, fonts, book spines, blurbs, etc.. It also includes screenshots, some links and typical error messages. As this theme comes up every now and then, i thought i put the dialogue online as reference.
This article includes 4 parts:
PART 1: Cover, Page Count, Template, Logo, Blurbs..
PART 2: Creating a cover wrap
PART 3: Creating a PDF-File
PART 4: Uploading the File and Checking it
NOTE: If you want to read more about publishing services in general, then visit this article: A quick guide to Book Publishing Services (Lulu, Smashwords, Createspace, Issuu...)
NOTE II: If you look for a cover, but don't want to get into all the technical stuff and rather ask someone who does covers for self published authors, try the following 2 links to find advice / suggestions:
- Goodreads Self Published Authors Group - Author Resources
- and the free guidebook: Secrets to E-Book Publishing Success has an own chapter on this
***
PART I: Cover, Page Count, Template, Logo, Blurbs..
Rose
I wonder if you would have the time or inclination to do a cover for me? I had the template and a possible cover image in the photo software GIMP yesterday and was like, gagh! I am going to screw this up, no doubt. Especially with things like the resolution.
Attached, the photo:
Dorothee
Yes, i like the idea of trying a cover. I would start with your image, and then play with some photo effects, and see how this works. Tell me a bit more about the book size etc.
Rose
The book, I've put it at 5x8 at Create Space, and it comes to 107 pages.
CreateSpace has basically the same template as Lulu, you enter the book size and page numbers, and then you download it, well, you know all this. Let me know if you want me to send you the cover wrap as PDF and PNG file - I was unsure which to use and whether it mattered.
Dorothee
have a look, i played with the window photo in photoshop, enhancing the outlines, and turning it into abstract:

Rose
I love this!! I think it's so really perfect for the book! It's so good with the content. I like that font too. it's very foal-ish. I guess I should double check the page numbers and CS requirements and then we could talk about a cover wrap? Maybe then just the title on the cover, and my name on the spine if possible.... And then, the same image on the back cover, except without the title - or rather: mirroring front and back cover - what do you think?
Dorothee
so glad that you like the cover. it really came together as if it wanted to crystallized like that. it’s good when it works like that – to work with an image, and then move into it, and arrive at an abstract that feels: “yes!”
Revisiting the cover, i remembered that it’s always a good idea to test the cover in thumbnail size, as that's how it will appear in Amazon-listings, or when you use it as twitter-icon etc.. Here's how it looks, it think this works well:

About the wrap: on which platform do you plan to publish it, CreateSpace, right?
Rose
yes, CreateSpace. Here is the link to CreateSpace, all about covers, with the template to download: https://www.createspace.com/Products/Book/CoverPDF.jsp
It's still 107 pages, 5X8 (and will stay that way!) and I checked there is a template available for that.
The page count: unless I get a blurb, in which case it would be 108 pages.... But I do not think 107 or 108 is any different. (?)
Dorothee
thanks for the links – i just checked out the cover template generator, that seems to make things easy.
so this would be the specifications, right?

and yes, 107 or 108 pages is same, or rather: with 107 pages, you also get the 108 pages book. a rule for the page count: you always need a page count that can be devided through 4, for the printing. if you have less pages, they fill it up with white pages.
so i would put together the cover like it is, and a back cover: like a mirror, without book title, otherwise it might be confusing. and then the isbn-field on the backcover, and the logo for your press. and on the spine: book title and your name
about a blurb, i think that is important for books in a shop, as a “talking presenter” of the book. but for books that are mainly ordered online, the better place for a blurb is a website.
Rose
Yes, I really like the cover like it is, without the author name. On the spine it could even just be my name - or my name and the title - I'll leave that one to your judgment. And yes, the back cover a mirror just without the title....
Re the logo and CreateSpace - I might leave the logo off the cover in case CS has a problem with it. In my understanding, with the free, CS-assigned logo, CS regards itself as the publisher. I don't want it to be pulled or you to have to do it again, because it violated something. I will put it inside the book maybe even in a less prominent place and of course the whole cover is like a giant (version of) the logo anyway.
***
PART 2: Creating a cover wrap
Note: to create a cover wrap, you need some photo editing software: Photoshop, GIMP, etc, and need to spend some time with the formatting / resolutions. It's really simpler than it looks at first glance, and is useful for all kinds of photo editing tasks. So it's really worth to figure the figures out for once.
1) configure your template and download it
to do that, enter your details in the specifications box (either in Lulu or CreateSpace). the systems then lead you to Templates. these are like a size model for your cover, and are customized - as they depend on the spine size. the PNG-file works usually better in a photo editor.
here's the template for the 5x8 cover wrap for "Foal":

2) create a high-definition version of your cover
the draft you see in the first part is a low-resolution cover. low resolution is easier and more comfortable to work with in the first steps. yet once the cover draft is ready, it needs to be transformed to high resolution.
to do that, you go back to the original photo. the cover template lists the exact measures of your cover. so you adjust your photo accoridingly: crop it when necessary, and then resize it. here's the key to that: you need to make sure to set the resolution to 300dpi when adjusting size, so that it works for print.
the usual resolution for online images is around 80 dpi. the size of both versions are the same: and on the screen, they look alike, but if you print an 80dpi image it turns out blurry. imagine 2 woven carpet of the same size, and one comes with a lot of knots and details, and others with less. that's what dots per inch are about, their equivalent in the carpet world are the knots-per-inch.
3) create the wrap
so now you have the template and the cover image. now, place the cover image on the template. make sure it covers the visible area and also the borders (the "bleed"). now, create a backcover and the spine. cover, spine, and backcover can be different images placed on the template, or one image that includes all.
for "Foal", i created a cover that also included half of the wrap. then i mirrored the image in the photo editor, and used the mirror version as backcover and other half of the spine. the title is added as text field, same as the spine text. once all is in place, you put the template on top of all, and then turn down the opacity - so the real cover wrap shines through. now check if all fits, and adjust. make sure there is no important text in the yellow field where the bar code will be placed. then check, adjust.. until it all fits.
4) final file
once all fits, remove the template layer. now all that remains is the wrap. here's a miniature of the Foal wrap:

PART 3: Creating a PDF-File
For CreateSpace, you need a PDF-version of the file, same for Lulu if you want to create an own complete wrap. (If you get stuck with the process, then try Lulu first: it includes a cover-creator, where you can upload the frontcover and backcover as single jpg-files, and then get the whole cover wrap as pdf. this is technically easier than doing it all yourself, but doesn't work for layouts with images that continue through the spine).
So back to the PDF-file: to get that, you need a PDF-converter. There are various free online PDF-convertors, the one I use is called "PDF-Creator" and works well (here's the link: pdfforge).
One key to PDFs: from computer logic, creating a PDF works like printing something. You open the file you want to convert (word-document, or in this case, image-file), then click "print", and then choose not your usual printer, but select the pdf converter, and then click "print". That's also the place you can adjust settings: your converter would use the usual paper settings to print, so you have to configure the printing size yourself, and enter the exact size of the cover wrap. The converter then creastes a PDF-file, and asks where to save it. Check the file, and make sure it's 1 single page. If it isn't, try again and adjust the printing size until it all fits.
Here's a screenshot that gives you an idea of how the "printing" looks on the screen, with the size being adjusted in settings. of course, depending on your photo software, and the pdf-converter you use, the details will be different - but the logic behind it always the same. (and if you feel that this is one tedious step: yes. it would be so much easier if photo editors directly created pdfs.)

*
PART 4: Uploading the File and Checking it
Once you have the PDF-version, you can upload the file to the POD-service.
The POD-service then will check the file.
This is the response we received for the first upload of the "Foal"-wrap:
Subject: Files for "A Foal Poem" require your attention
The interior and cover files for A Foal Poem have been reviewed and are printable in their current state:
Rose
The interior image is a map... it's in 80 dpi. Of course I can resize the map in 300 dpi, right, and then load it into the document.
But what to do with the spine text, remove it?
Dorothee
Yes, good idea to resize the map to 300ppi, and then upload as png or jpg.
About the spine – i created covers for smaller books before, and got the same note back then, but it turned out really okay. i think it would be good to have a name on the spine, especially as your name isn’t on the cover. i guess they just add the line that people later can’t complain when the text isn’t in the perfect middle, or touches the spine borderline. but it’s up to you, if you want i send a version without anything on the spine.
Rose
Awesome. Thanks Dorothee. After I emailed you I looked at all my poetry books which are under 100 pages and they have stuff on the spine, so.
I realized the logo wasn't in 300ppi either, so I guess that's what else they meant. OK! So I fixed all that and ready to re-load the ms. :) Although I don't think much will happen until next week since it's a holiday weekend int he US I just heard. I think....
Thanks again, so much, for all your help. :)
Dorothee
Ah, see you are getting the hang on the dpi now! that’s good. i think i might piece together a blog post about it, with the notes form the mail. i guess many struggle with the dpi-thing.
Rose
My initial confusion was: dpi is what? Then I googled it and found oh, it's the same as ppi.
I found this link, which I thought was useful: DPI and PPI explained
I am going to go back and retrace the steps of this cover at some point, see if I can manage the whole thing....
But for now after uploading the new images I went ahead and ordered the proof, so we will soon see how this one turned out!
[* postscript: the proof was received two weeks later, and it all turned out beautifully....]
----
THE BOOK!
..and another couple of weeks later, the book was featured in this blog, so if you are curious for the actual content behind the cover, here's more: A Foal Poem - Dorothee
*
This article includes 4 parts:
PART 1: Cover, Page Count, Template, Logo, Blurbs..
PART 2: Creating a cover wrap
PART 3: Creating a PDF-File
PART 4: Uploading the File and Checking it
NOTE: If you want to read more about publishing services in general, then visit this article: A quick guide to Book Publishing Services (Lulu, Smashwords, Createspace, Issuu...)
NOTE II: If you look for a cover, but don't want to get into all the technical stuff and rather ask someone who does covers for self published authors, try the following 2 links to find advice / suggestions:
- Goodreads Self Published Authors Group - Author Resources
- and the free guidebook: Secrets to E-Book Publishing Success has an own chapter on this
***
PART I: Cover, Page Count, Template, Logo, Blurbs..
Rose
I wonder if you would have the time or inclination to do a cover for me? I had the template and a possible cover image in the photo software GIMP yesterday and was like, gagh! I am going to screw this up, no doubt. Especially with things like the resolution.
Attached, the photo:

Dorothee
Yes, i like the idea of trying a cover. I would start with your image, and then play with some photo effects, and see how this works. Tell me a bit more about the book size etc.
Rose
The book, I've put it at 5x8 at Create Space, and it comes to 107 pages.
CreateSpace has basically the same template as Lulu, you enter the book size and page numbers, and then you download it, well, you know all this. Let me know if you want me to send you the cover wrap as PDF and PNG file - I was unsure which to use and whether it mattered.
Dorothee
have a look, i played with the window photo in photoshop, enhancing the outlines, and turning it into abstract:

Rose
I love this!! I think it's so really perfect for the book! It's so good with the content. I like that font too. it's very foal-ish. I guess I should double check the page numbers and CS requirements and then we could talk about a cover wrap? Maybe then just the title on the cover, and my name on the spine if possible.... And then, the same image on the back cover, except without the title - or rather: mirroring front and back cover - what do you think?
Dorothee
so glad that you like the cover. it really came together as if it wanted to crystallized like that. it’s good when it works like that – to work with an image, and then move into it, and arrive at an abstract that feels: “yes!”
Revisiting the cover, i remembered that it’s always a good idea to test the cover in thumbnail size, as that's how it will appear in Amazon-listings, or when you use it as twitter-icon etc.. Here's how it looks, it think this works well:

About the wrap: on which platform do you plan to publish it, CreateSpace, right?
Rose
yes, CreateSpace. Here is the link to CreateSpace, all about covers, with the template to download: https://www.createspace.com/Products/Book/CoverPDF.jsp
It's still 107 pages, 5X8 (and will stay that way!) and I checked there is a template available for that.
The page count: unless I get a blurb, in which case it would be 108 pages.... But I do not think 107 or 108 is any different. (?)
Dorothee
thanks for the links – i just checked out the cover template generator, that seems to make things easy.
so this would be the specifications, right?

and yes, 107 or 108 pages is same, or rather: with 107 pages, you also get the 108 pages book. a rule for the page count: you always need a page count that can be devided through 4, for the printing. if you have less pages, they fill it up with white pages.
so i would put together the cover like it is, and a back cover: like a mirror, without book title, otherwise it might be confusing. and then the isbn-field on the backcover, and the logo for your press. and on the spine: book title and your name
about a blurb, i think that is important for books in a shop, as a “talking presenter” of the book. but for books that are mainly ordered online, the better place for a blurb is a website.
Rose
Yes, I really like the cover like it is, without the author name. On the spine it could even just be my name - or my name and the title - I'll leave that one to your judgment. And yes, the back cover a mirror just without the title....
Re the logo and CreateSpace - I might leave the logo off the cover in case CS has a problem with it. In my understanding, with the free, CS-assigned logo, CS regards itself as the publisher. I don't want it to be pulled or you to have to do it again, because it violated something. I will put it inside the book maybe even in a less prominent place and of course the whole cover is like a giant (version of) the logo anyway.
***
PART 2: Creating a cover wrap
Note: to create a cover wrap, you need some photo editing software: Photoshop, GIMP, etc, and need to spend some time with the formatting / resolutions. It's really simpler than it looks at first glance, and is useful for all kinds of photo editing tasks. So it's really worth to figure the figures out for once.
1) configure your template and download it
to do that, enter your details in the specifications box (either in Lulu or CreateSpace). the systems then lead you to Templates. these are like a size model for your cover, and are customized - as they depend on the spine size. the PNG-file works usually better in a photo editor.
here's the template for the 5x8 cover wrap for "Foal":

2) create a high-definition version of your cover
the draft you see in the first part is a low-resolution cover. low resolution is easier and more comfortable to work with in the first steps. yet once the cover draft is ready, it needs to be transformed to high resolution.
to do that, you go back to the original photo. the cover template lists the exact measures of your cover. so you adjust your photo accoridingly: crop it when necessary, and then resize it. here's the key to that: you need to make sure to set the resolution to 300dpi when adjusting size, so that it works for print.
the usual resolution for online images is around 80 dpi. the size of both versions are the same: and on the screen, they look alike, but if you print an 80dpi image it turns out blurry. imagine 2 woven carpet of the same size, and one comes with a lot of knots and details, and others with less. that's what dots per inch are about, their equivalent in the carpet world are the knots-per-inch.
3) create the wrap
so now you have the template and the cover image. now, place the cover image on the template. make sure it covers the visible area and also the borders (the "bleed"). now, create a backcover and the spine. cover, spine, and backcover can be different images placed on the template, or one image that includes all.
for "Foal", i created a cover that also included half of the wrap. then i mirrored the image in the photo editor, and used the mirror version as backcover and other half of the spine. the title is added as text field, same as the spine text. once all is in place, you put the template on top of all, and then turn down the opacity - so the real cover wrap shines through. now check if all fits, and adjust. make sure there is no important text in the yellow field where the bar code will be placed. then check, adjust.. until it all fits.

4) final file
once all fits, remove the template layer. now all that remains is the wrap. here's a miniature of the Foal wrap:

PART 3: Creating a PDF-File
For CreateSpace, you need a PDF-version of the file, same for Lulu if you want to create an own complete wrap. (If you get stuck with the process, then try Lulu first: it includes a cover-creator, where you can upload the frontcover and backcover as single jpg-files, and then get the whole cover wrap as pdf. this is technically easier than doing it all yourself, but doesn't work for layouts with images that continue through the spine).
So back to the PDF-file: to get that, you need a PDF-converter. There are various free online PDF-convertors, the one I use is called "PDF-Creator" and works well (here's the link: pdfforge).
One key to PDFs: from computer logic, creating a PDF works like printing something. You open the file you want to convert (word-document, or in this case, image-file), then click "print", and then choose not your usual printer, but select the pdf converter, and then click "print". That's also the place you can adjust settings: your converter would use the usual paper settings to print, so you have to configure the printing size yourself, and enter the exact size of the cover wrap. The converter then creastes a PDF-file, and asks where to save it. Check the file, and make sure it's 1 single page. If it isn't, try again and adjust the printing size until it all fits.
Here's a screenshot that gives you an idea of how the "printing" looks on the screen, with the size being adjusted in settings. of course, depending on your photo software, and the pdf-converter you use, the details will be different - but the logic behind it always the same. (and if you feel that this is one tedious step: yes. it would be so much easier if photo editors directly created pdfs.)

*
PART 4: Uploading the File and Checking it
Once you have the PDF-version, you can upload the file to the POD-service.
The POD-service then will check the file.
This is the response we received for the first upload of the "Foal"-wrap:
Subject: Files for "A Foal Poem" require your attention
The interior and cover files for A Foal Poem have been reviewed and are printable in their current state:
- The cover file meets our submission requirements; it is not necessary for you to make any revisions to this file or upload it again.The Interior file meets our submission requirements; it is not necessary for you to make any revisions to this file or upload it again.Additionally, we have noted the concerns listed below. You may choose to move forward with the below issues as-is; however, we wanted to bring them to your attention.
- The interior file contains images that range from 119 to 103 DPI, which may appear blurry and pixelated in print. For optimal printing, we recommend all images be at least 300 DPI. Examples of Pages with low-resolution images include but are not limited to: PDF page 3
- The cover file contains spine text. We do not recommend including spine text for books with less than 130 pages as the text will likely wrap to the front or back cover.
Rose
The interior image is a map... it's in 80 dpi. Of course I can resize the map in 300 dpi, right, and then load it into the document.
But what to do with the spine text, remove it?
Dorothee
Yes, good idea to resize the map to 300ppi, and then upload as png or jpg.
Rose
Awesome. Thanks Dorothee. After I emailed you I looked at all my poetry books which are under 100 pages and they have stuff on the spine, so.
I realized the logo wasn't in 300ppi either, so I guess that's what else they meant. OK! So I fixed all that and ready to re-load the ms. :) Although I don't think much will happen until next week since it's a holiday weekend int he US I just heard. I think....
Thanks again, so much, for all your help. :)
Dorothee
Ah, see you are getting the hang on the dpi now! that’s good. i think i might piece together a blog post about it, with the notes form the mail. i guess many struggle with the dpi-thing.
Rose
My initial confusion was: dpi is what? Then I googled it and found oh, it's the same as ppi.
I found this link, which I thought was useful: DPI and PPI explained
I am going to go back and retrace the steps of this cover at some point, see if I can manage the whole thing....
But for now after uploading the new images I went ahead and ordered the proof, so we will soon see how this one turned out!
[* postscript: the proof was received two weeks later, and it all turned out beautifully....]
----
THE BOOK!
..and another couple of weeks later, the book was featured in this blog, so if you are curious for the actual content behind the cover, here's more: A Foal Poem - Dorothee
*
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
A quick guide to Book Publishing Services (Lulu, Smashwords, Createspace, Issuu...)
This isn't news: the digital revolution changed the way books are produced, and also the way they are read.
Print on Demand (POD) makes it possible to create single copies of books, which allows to publish books for smaller and special audiences. Parallel, e-readers make it possible to read e-books in a new, leisure way.
Together, this leads to a growing range of publishing formats, and publishing services, which are especially interesting for small presses and for authors.
Below is a list of service providers, with examples of printed books and e-books that are featured in the blueprint book blog.
Lulu
Lulu is a company offering publishing, printing in various sizes, and distribution (including e-books).
Since their founding in 2002, Lulu has published over 1.1 million titles by creators in over 200 countries and territories and adds 20,000 new titles to their catalogue a month.
links: Lulu webpage, wiki-page
examples: "lulu"-books in this blog (print books + e-books)
cover: if you want to publish a book at CreateSpace, here some advice for creating the book cover
CreateSpace
A publishing/printing/distribution service that provides free tools to help self-publish and distribute books, DVDs, CDs etc. on-demand at CreateSpace and via Amazon.com. (CreateSpace belongs to Amazon, thus the listing, which only works for Amazon.com, no other countries)
link: CreateSpace
examples: CreateSpace-books in this blog
cover: if you want to publish a book at CreateSpace, here some advice for creating the book cover
Smashwords
An ebook publishing and distribution platform for ebook authors, publishers, agents and readers that offers multi-format ebooks, ready for immediate sampling and purchase, and readable on any e-reading device.
link: Smashwords
examples: Smashword-books in this blog
how-to-guide: Smashword Style Guide + Marketing Guide
Issuu
Issuu is a digital publishing platform that delivers full-color reading experiences of magazines, catalogs, and newspapers.
link: Issuu
examples: Issuu-books in this blog
Related links: Red Lemonade, exPress tutorial, Wiki-Pages
Other blueprint How-to posts:
Print on Demand (POD) makes it possible to create single copies of books, which allows to publish books for smaller and special audiences. Parallel, e-readers make it possible to read e-books in a new, leisure way.
Together, this leads to a growing range of publishing formats, and publishing services, which are especially interesting for small presses and for authors.
Below is a list of service providers, with examples of printed books and e-books that are featured in the blueprint book blog.
Lulu
Lulu is a company offering publishing, printing in various sizes, and distribution (including e-books).
Since their founding in 2002, Lulu has published over 1.1 million titles by creators in over 200 countries and territories and adds 20,000 new titles to their catalogue a month.
links: Lulu webpage, wiki-page
examples: "lulu"-books in this blog (print books + e-books)
cover: if you want to publish a book at CreateSpace, here some advice for creating the book cover
CreateSpace
A publishing/printing/distribution service that provides free tools to help self-publish and distribute books, DVDs, CDs etc. on-demand at CreateSpace and via Amazon.com. (CreateSpace belongs to Amazon, thus the listing, which only works for Amazon.com, no other countries)
link: CreateSpace
examples: CreateSpace-books in this blog
cover: if you want to publish a book at CreateSpace, here some advice for creating the book cover
Smashwords
An ebook publishing and distribution platform for ebook authors, publishers, agents and readers that offers multi-format ebooks, ready for immediate sampling and purchase, and readable on any e-reading device.
link: Smashwords
examples: Smashword-books in this blog
how-to-guide: Smashword Style Guide + Marketing Guide
Issuu
Issuu is a digital publishing platform that delivers full-color reading experiences of magazines, catalogs, and newspapers.
link: Issuu
examples: Issuu-books in this blog
Related links: Red Lemonade, exPress tutorial, Wiki-Pages
- Advice+Example: How to prepare a book cover for print-on-demand services like CreateSpace
- Red Lemonade: new experimental service: full texts online + print books (example)
- exPress: print to e-book workflow tutorial advice from Folded Word
- General information: Wiki: Print on demand / Wiki: E-book
Other blueprint How-to posts:
Labels:
createspace,
e-book,
how to,
issuu,
lulu,
POD,
publishing services,
smashwords
Thursday, September 23, 2010
Watermark - Clayton T. Michaels (qarrtsiluni)

The images in Watermark are vivid and visceral; the writing superbly succinct; and that something extra — call it gravitas, call it cohesion — that makes a chapbook a work of art as well as a work of literature is present in each of these fine poems. —Pamela Johnson Parker, winner of the 2009 qarrtsiluni chapbook contest
Clayton T. Michaels is a teacher, poet and musician who currently resides in Granger, Indiana. He has been a featured poet at the online journal Anti-, and his poems have appeared in The Prism Review, Nerve Cowboy, >kill author, Makeout Creek, Slipstream, and The Chiron Review, among others. He currently teaches composition, creative writing, and comic book-related courses at Indiana University South Bend. An interview with Clayton on Watermark is online as podcast: inerview link.
About qarrtsiluni
As online literary magazines go, qarrtsiluni, at five years old, is positively venerable -- but retains the edginess, openness, vitality and editorial responsiveness that have set it apart from the beginning. In August, the journal published poems from all eleven finalists in its annual poetry chapbook contest: chapbook finalists. The current issue at qarrtsiluni is The Crowd, edited by Dave Bonta and Beth Adams, the managing editors of qarrtsiluni.
Clayton T. Michaels: Watermark
print + online + audio version
ISBN: 0978174925
32 pages, 7.95$
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
economy (qarrtsiluni)

"We urge you to think broadly, associatively and imaginatively about this touchstone word. Consider economy of movement, expression or effort. Think fuel, cash or gift economy. In your investigation, remember the epigram and the epitaph, both concerned with the economics of composition. Think about how the subject might inform style, as well as content."
The result was one of the most consistently high-quality and creative collections qarrtsiluni has ever published. It includes work that explores not only the negative but the positive sides of "economy," and does so in surprising ways. The issue is now available as a printed edition, and as a timely commentary on the current state of both our outer and inner worlds.
Issue editors
Anna Dickie is a photographer and poet based in East Lothian, Scotland. In the last three years she's won or been short-listed in a number of competitions, including having a shot hung in the Scottish Parliament as part of a touring exhibition on the theme of coastal erosion.
Pamela Hart is a former journalist. Her chapbook, The End of the Body, was recently published by toadlily press. She is writer-in-residence at the Katonah Museum of Art and teaches writing at Long Island University's Graduate School of Education.
About qarrtsiluni
As online literary magazines go, qarrtsiluni, at five-and-a-half years old, is positively venerable -- but retains the edginess, openness, vitality and editorial responsiveness that have set it apart from the beginning. The current issue at qarrtsiluni is "New Classics," edited by Ann E. Michael and Jessamyn Smyth. In August, the journal will publish poems from all eleven finalists in its annual poetry chapbook contest, and the winning manuscript in its entirety: Watermark, by Clayton T. Michaels, which will also be published as a printed book available from Phoenicia Publishing. That will be followed by the fall issue on the theme, "The Crowd," edited by Dave Bonta and Beth Adams, the managing editors of qarrtsiluni.
economy (qarrtsiluni)
print edition of the online issue "economy"
96 pages, $13.96
ISBN 978-0978174972
related links: the world these days, mixed formats
Friday, April 02, 2010
Mutating the Signature (qarrtsiluni)

The print edition couldn't include music or video and one set of image-poem collaborations for which color was necessary, but it contains all the other poems, essays, and stories that were published online. One of its most intriguing aspects is the inclusion of "process notes" by each pair or group of collaborators, explaining how they worked together and how the collaborative process not only mutated each person's original ideas into something new, but changed their concept of authorship itself.
After editing the collaborate qarrtsiluni issue, Dana Guthrie Martin and Nathan Moore continued the concept in their own online magazine, also called Mutating the Signature, each issue of which features real-time collaborations between two poets, or a poet and an artist.
About qarrtsiluni
As online literary magazines go, qarrtsiluni, at five-and-a-half years old, is positively venerable -- but retains the edginess, openness, vitality and editorial responsiveness that have set it apart from the beginning. Qarrtsiluni offers cutting-edge electronic delivery of original, thematically organized poetry, prose, and art, and its almost-daily posts are available online both as text and audio, read by the authors; the magazine can be accessed via browsers, email, feed readers, portable music listening devices, and through the print editions. The title comes from an Iñupiaq word that means “sitting together in the darkness, waiting for something to burst.” Qarrtsiluni's managing editors are Dave Bonta and Beth Adams; three of the four issues each year are guest-edited by teams of two invited editors and the magazine sponsors an annual chapbook contest.
Mutating the Signature (qarrtsiluni vol. 1.2)
Dana Guthrie Martin + Nathan Moore, editors
146 pages; 6 x 9", $13.95
March 2010.
Labels:
author_world,
createspace,
experimental,
format_p,
menu_on_writing,
press+magazine,
small_press
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Odes to Tools - Dave Bonta (Phoenicia Publishing)

Dave Bonta, well-known to many readers as one of the co-editors of qarrtsiluni online literary magazine and author of the blog Via Negativa, was born in 1966, which makes him just three years older than the Internet. Though he lives on a remote mountainside in rural Pennsylvania, Dave says he's "not nearly as handy" as these poems might suggest, and that his favorite tool is actually the computer mouse.
About Phoenicia Publishing
Phoenicia Publishing, located in Montreal, publishes poetry, non-fiction, fiction, and photography, and is interested in "words and images that illuminate culture, spirit, and the human experience." The press's founder, Elizabeth Adams, says that a particular interest is on writing about travel between cultures — whether literally or more metaphorically — with the goal of enlarging our understanding of one another through experiences of change, displacement, disconnection, assimilation, sorrow, gratitude, longing and hope.
Dave Bonta: Odes to Tools
poetry chapbook,
32 pages with full color cover, $6.95
ISBN 978-0-9781749-9-6
Labels:
author_NAmerica,
author_US,
chapbook,
createspace,
flavour_philosophical,
poetry,
press_Canada,
press_NAmerica,
small_press
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