Ebooks Asked by DillonOnline on October 25, 2020
I’m in the process of writing my first eBook. The writing is nearly finished – I will be done by Tuesday.
Currently I’m writing in Google Docs and I plan to publish on Kindle. Are these compatible? If not, what should I do with the document I already have?
There are many ways to produce Kindle .mobi files. One method is to create a MS Word file and to convert it to a .mobi file (using Calibre or Amazon's own suggestions).
https://kdp.amazon.com/help?topicId=A14LJ3QNDNO64G
It is not easy to produce a kindle file from MS Word. If you start with Google Docs, you're going to have to export it to MS Word (don't export to PDF).
Calibre is pretty powerful; it can convert your MS Word file fairly well. If you don't have MS Word, you can export from Google Docs to Open Office (Libre Office) file format .odt. Choose File --> Download as --> ODT But my experience is that ODT to .mobi doesn't work that easily.
But expect to spend some time testing and previewing your Kindle file. It will take a good while to learn how to get it into mobi format (or epub format). Alternately you can pay someone $200-$300 to handle a simple ebook conversion.
If you are comfortable with some html, you might try pasting the ebook contents into Sigil Editor. https://github.com/Sigil-Ebook/Sigil/releases
Tip: It can be easier to make an epub file first and then convert it from epub-to-mobi. (Adobe Indesign can produce an epub file, as can some other programs).
To convert from epub to mobi, you can use Amazon's own Kindle previewer tool https://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html/?docId=1003018611
Answered by idiotprogrammer on October 25, 2020
It depends on if you wish to publish it with Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing. If you want it to be just available as a Kindle format but not dependent on publishing through Amazon, then you have to go through a little bit longer process.
The steps are as follows:
Now you can connect your Kindle to your laptop or computer, navigate to your documents map and copy your .mobi file into it.
Good luck!
Answered by sophievda on October 25, 2020
Yes. You can write. Here are my experiences.
MS Word approach
Overall suggestion using MS Word - write a couple of pages on GD which captures some of your complex formatting scenarios, export to DOCX and preview the file on Kindle previewer (online) . I would recommend doing this upfront so that you can learn lessons
HTML approach
You can also save your Google Doc content as a HTML file. This will come down as a ZIP with 1 HTML and a subfolder with all the images. But there were serious challenges.
HTML errors - Kindle Previewer 3 would frequently complain that there were errors in the HTML. I had to un-minify the HTML and then run Kindle Previewer again. Go back to the offending line number. There were many empty IMG tags and I had to remove all of them
Font units - The font sizes were too large when viewed on Kindle. I had to change the font units from pt to em for much improved rendition on Kindle
Equations - If your manuscript has mathematical equations then these will be converted to static pictures.
Table of contents - The table of contents that was generated inside Google Docs would not work nicely on Kindle. Clicking on the ToC would take me to unpredictable locations in the book. I have no explanation for this.
Further reference -
https://medium.com/@perrygarvin/how-to-make-an-amazon-kindle-book-using-html-and-css-146070ba0d7e
https://daveparsonsnz.wordpress.com/2015/02/26/converting-a-google-doc-to-a-kindle-format-mobi-file/
Summary Yes you can definitely use Google Docs for authoring Kindle content. You can use MS Word or HTML. You should try out a short sample before progressing too far down the road. However, in my case, I am almost on the verge of abandoning GD in favour of a tool like Scrivener, which I believe is more suited for such an endeavour.
Hope this helps.
Answered by Sau001 on October 25, 2020
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