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MAKE YOUR BOOK WORTH THE MONEY by Dan Poynter
Size matters. Your book has to appear to be long enough to be worth the money you are charging. Today, many of the high-speed web presses print signatures of 48 pages. As the paper goes through the press, 24 pages are printed on the top side and 24 on the
underside. The most economical page-counts are in even signatures. One signature (48 pages) or two (96 pages) will not command the price you want for your book. A good minimum page count is three signatures or 144 pages. Additionally, since paper it the most expensive component of a book, 288 pages
is a good upper limit. I hope you got as much out of reading my book as I got spending the money you paid for it. Anonymous If you need to lengthen your book, add resources to the Appendix: List other relevant books, videos, courses, mailing lists, associations,
suppliers, etc. Now your useful text becomes a valuable reference. You do not want to pad the book with extra writing and dilute your message. Adding resources is a better alternative. Other ways to lengthen the bookwhile making it more valuable and more interestingis to add
quotations, stories and illustrations to the pages and/or summaries at the end of each chapter. Be sure to lay out the pages with plenty of white space. Leigh Cohn took three of his wifes 30-page pamphlets on bulimia and combined them into a single book. They added resources, a
two-week program to stop bingeing and a guide for support groups. Lindsey Halls 160-page Bulimia; A Guide to Recovery has been through five revised editions for more than 100,000 copies in print. Since then, they have written nine books, established their own publishing company with
more than 20 titles currently in print, launched an eating disorder resource catalog, and published a clinical newsletter. http://www.gurze.com A book full of resource material is not just a quick read, it is a valuable reference. Dan Poynter does not want you to die with
a book still inside you. You have the ingredients and he has your recipe. Dan has written more than 100 books since 1969 including Writing Nonfiction and The Self- Publishing Manual. For more help on book writing, see http://ParaPub.com. © 2003
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