негодяй и извращенец (С)
Себе на изучение: graphic art and book production.
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The book production process officially starts when the acquiring editor submits a final, edited book manuscript to a copyeditor. At that point, the manuscript is considered to be "in production."
The copyeditor reviews the final manuscript for grammar, spelling, and consistency. He or she corrects errors and questions anything that isn't clear in the text.
The copyedited manuscript comes back to editor and author with queries from copyeditor. The author and the editor answer the queries and consult to finalize the text.
The manuscript now goes for design and layout. For books that don't have an art program, the author will likely not see the text again until the page proofs. Note that the jacket design process happens somewhat separately.
Additional Steps for books with art programs:
In art-, photo- or illustration-heavy books (such as cookbooks or coffee table books or do-it-yourself instruction books), the author is often looped in during the page design process. While the pages are being worked on, an overall design direction is determined for the book by the creative team and editor. At this point in the process, the author receives sample pages.
Once a design is finalized by the team, an entire "dummy" book is created, which enables all parties to review the layouts, to fit copy, to gauge the appropriateness of art-to text--and to make changes, as necessary. There may be more than one dummy book stage to be reviewed.
The author receives the text laid out in page proofs (or the text and art in a dummy book, see above). At the same time, it's being reviewed by the editor, a proofreader and various members of the production staff. Typos are corrected and minor changes made. There may be additional back-and-forth and fine-tuning in layout and design that doesn't involve the author.
For some books, uncorrected page proofs, galleys or ARCs of the book may be printed and bound for promotion and publicity purposes.
During the next, final stages of production, printing and shipping, there's usually a lull in activity for the author.
Once the pages are final, an index is created, typeset, and proofread. (Note: the author generally pays for the indexing--the money is deducted from the advance against royalties).
The files are now reviewed for any issues and prepped for manufacturing. Copies of the final, clean files (including artwork) are simultaneously sent to the printer for printing and binding, and to a file converter (either in-house, or freelance) who preps the files for the e-book version.
Books come off press and advance copies are rushed to the publisher. Samples are distributed to the author, the editor and the agent, but the bulk are generally used for publicity and sales.
The books are packed and shipped to the publisher's warehouse. The length of time for printing and shipping varies dramatically--from 3 weeks turnaround for an all-text computer book printed in the U.S. to months for printing overseas (which is the norm for most full-color books) and being shipped back via boat, going through customs, and trucked to the publisher's warehouse.
Finished books ship from warehouse to retail destinations, such as individual independent bookstores or national account distribution centers (as for Barnes & Noble or Amazon.com) where they are inventoried, unpacked, re-shipped (in the case of distribution centers) and shelved for consumer purchase in time for the on-sale date.
In a parallel timeframe to printing and shipping, properly coded e-book files are made available to the online retailers via data feeds from the publisher. The bookseller offers them for purchase and download by consumers through their websites.
publishing.about.com/od/BookEditingAndProductio...
PPS
PS
PS
The book production process officially starts when the acquiring editor submits a final, edited book manuscript to a copyeditor. At that point, the manuscript is considered to be "in production."
The copyeditor reviews the final manuscript for grammar, spelling, and consistency. He or she corrects errors and questions anything that isn't clear in the text.
The copyedited manuscript comes back to editor and author with queries from copyeditor. The author and the editor answer the queries and consult to finalize the text.
The manuscript now goes for design and layout. For books that don't have an art program, the author will likely not see the text again until the page proofs. Note that the jacket design process happens somewhat separately.
Additional Steps for books with art programs:
In art-, photo- or illustration-heavy books (such as cookbooks or coffee table books or do-it-yourself instruction books), the author is often looped in during the page design process. While the pages are being worked on, an overall design direction is determined for the book by the creative team and editor. At this point in the process, the author receives sample pages.
Once a design is finalized by the team, an entire "dummy" book is created, which enables all parties to review the layouts, to fit copy, to gauge the appropriateness of art-to text--and to make changes, as necessary. There may be more than one dummy book stage to be reviewed.
The author receives the text laid out in page proofs (or the text and art in a dummy book, see above). At the same time, it's being reviewed by the editor, a proofreader and various members of the production staff. Typos are corrected and minor changes made. There may be additional back-and-forth and fine-tuning in layout and design that doesn't involve the author.
For some books, uncorrected page proofs, galleys or ARCs of the book may be printed and bound for promotion and publicity purposes.
During the next, final stages of production, printing and shipping, there's usually a lull in activity for the author.
Once the pages are final, an index is created, typeset, and proofread. (Note: the author generally pays for the indexing--the money is deducted from the advance against royalties).
The files are now reviewed for any issues and prepped for manufacturing. Copies of the final, clean files (including artwork) are simultaneously sent to the printer for printing and binding, and to a file converter (either in-house, or freelance) who preps the files for the e-book version.
Books come off press and advance copies are rushed to the publisher. Samples are distributed to the author, the editor and the agent, but the bulk are generally used for publicity and sales.
The books are packed and shipped to the publisher's warehouse. The length of time for printing and shipping varies dramatically--from 3 weeks turnaround for an all-text computer book printed in the U.S. to months for printing overseas (which is the norm for most full-color books) and being shipped back via boat, going through customs, and trucked to the publisher's warehouse.
Finished books ship from warehouse to retail destinations, such as individual independent bookstores or national account distribution centers (as for Barnes & Noble or Amazon.com) where they are inventoried, unpacked, re-shipped (in the case of distribution centers) and shelved for consumer purchase in time for the on-sale date.
In a parallel timeframe to printing and shipping, properly coded e-book files are made available to the online retailers via data feeds from the publisher. The bookseller offers them for purchase and download by consumers through their websites.
publishing.about.com/od/BookEditingAndProductio...
PPS
@темы: reading, ликбез, Для памяти, Ссылки