One Authors Solution For Publishing Creative Writing Output

 Witness these famous masters of fiction who were all obliged to take the route of shelling out hard cash to have their debut novels printed.



Alexandre Dumas

D.H. Lawrence

Edgar Allan Poe

Edgar Rice Burroughs

George Bernard Shaw

Gertrude Stein

James Joyce

John Grisham

Mark Twain

Mary Baker Eddy

Rudyard Kipling

Stephen Crane

Upton Sinclair

Virginia Woolf

Walt Whitman

William Blake

Zane Grey


John Grisham, incidentally, sold copies of his first novel A Time to Kill out of the boot of a car, which at the outset was his sole 'vehicle' for distribution.

And it is getting tougher all the time, even for established authors.

It can be doubly frustrating when you've written something that you are desperate to see in print; something you want other people to read.

There is always recourse to the expensive vanity publishing houses, but I wouldn't take that route to come what may.

Would you?



Imagine my surprise then when I stumbled across the perfect solution for publishing creative outputs that you cannot place elsewhere.

I have a string of traditionally published titles currently selling in bookstores worldwide, but I have an almost equal string that I have never been able to get into print.

That is until now

The little known but highly reputable E-Book

Make a list of the reasons you are writing your ebook. Do you want to promote your business? Do you want to bring quality traffic to your website? Do you want to enhance your reputation? 

Then write down your goals in terms of publishing. Do you want to sell it as a product on your website, or do you want to offer it as a free gift for filling out a survey or for ordering a product? Do you want to use the chapters to create an e-course, or use your ebook to attract affiliates around the world? The more you know upfront, the easier the actual writing will be. 

Make your ebook "user friendly"



Decide on the format of your chapters. In non-fiction, keep the format from chapter to chapter fairly consistent. Perhaps you plan to use an introduction to your chapter topic, and then divide it into four subhead topics. Or you may plan to divide it into five parts, each one beginning with a relevant anecdote.  

You must figure out how to keep your writing engaging. Often anecdotes, testimonials, little stories, photos, graphs, advice, and tips will keep the reader turning the pages. Sidebars are useful for quick, accessible information, and they break up the density of the page. 

Write with a casual, conversational tone rather than a formal tone such as textbook diction. Readers respond to the feeling that you are having a conversation with them. Break up the length and structure of your sentences so you don't hypnotize your readers into sleep. Sentences that are all the same length and structure tend to be a good aid for insomnia! 



Good writing takes practice. It takes lots and lots of practice. Make a schedule to write at least a page a day. Read books and magazines about the process of writing, and jot down tips that jump out at you. The art of writing is a lifetime process; the more you write (and read), the better your writing will become. The better your writing becomes, the bigger your sales figures. 



In an ebook that is read on the screen, be aware that you must give your reader's eye a break. You can do this by utilizing white space. In art classes, white space is usually referred to as "negative space." Reader's eyes need to rest in the cool white oases you create on your page. If your page is too dense, your reader will quit out of it as soon as their eyes begin to tear. 

Make use of lists, both bulleted and numbered. This makes your information easy to absorb and gives the reader a mental break from dissecting your paragraphs one after the other. 

Finally, decide on an easy-to-read design. Find a font that's easy on the eyes, and stick to that font family. Using dozens of fonts will only tire your readers out before they've gotten past your introduction. Use at least one and a half line spacing, and text large enough to be read easily on the screen, but small enough so that the whole page can be seen on a computer screen. You will have to experiment with this to find the right combination. 

Of course, don't forget to run a spell and grammar check. You are judged by something as minor as correct punctuation, so don't mess up a great book by tossing out semicolons randomly, or stringing sentences together with commas. (By the way, that's called a "comma splice.") 


Last of all, create an index and a bibliography. That's it! You've written a book! Now all you have to do is publish your ebook online, and wait for download requests from your website visitors



We welcome independent writers and media creators with an entrepreneurial spirit.

http://bit.ly/soulpublishing

Soulwell Publishing Group offers writers and media creators a platform to develop their voice, promote their career and business.


Join Us! We promote stories and allow you to promote your own.

http://bit.ly/soulpublishing

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