Hi Bob, 

Where there any elements in particular in the InDesign mock-ups that your 
designer provided that were difficult to implement in XSL for the PDF? Was 
there anything in particular that required some "creative" stylesheet 
workarounds? 



------ 
David Goss , Technical Writer 
Frontier Science | www.fstrf.org 
4033 Maple Rd, Amherst, NY 14226 
(716) 834-0900 extension 7204 


From: "Bob Stayton" <b...@sagehill.net> 
To: "docbook-apps" <docbook-apps@lists.oasis-open.org> 
Sent: Tuesday, July 7, 2015 5:16:46 PM 
Subject: [docbook-apps] ANNOUNCE: new solar book produced using Docbook 

You know me as the author of DocBook XSL: The Complete Guide . Now I have 
written another book on a completely different topic: solar energy. Since I 
produced my new book using DocBook, I'm taking this opportunity to tell the 
DocBook community about it, and I describe how I produced it at the end of this 
message. Replies about the DocBook process can go to the whole list if you 
think it's appropriate. If you want to reply about the book's content, please 
reply just to me so we don't burden the mailing list. 


I'm pleased to announce that my book Power Shift: From Fossil Energy to Dynamic 
Solar Power has been unleashed from its long development and is now available 
to the world. If you have any interest in solar energy, then you should read 
this book. 



Climate change researchers sometimes paint a bleak picture of our current 
global-warming crisis, but rarely explain how we got into this predicament in 
the first place and how we get out of it. Now, for the first time, my new book 
does just that. Power Shift retells human history through the lens of energy, 
explains the science behind the crisis--in clear, succinct language that anyone 
can understand—and provides a detailed blueprint for the future, from 
governmental, commercial, and individual perspectives. 

Wondering if the book is any good? Here is what others are saying: 

"Solar is surging all of a sudden, and if you read this comprehensive 
book you’ll understand why!" -- Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature 

"An energy book that is a pleasure to read" -- Kirkus Reviews 

"visionary and brilliant" -- NASA Researcher Joe Jordan 

"Exceptionally well written" -- Midwest Book Review 

"lucid, convincing" -- Denis Hayes, organizer of the first Earth Day 

"points the way to a clean energy future" -- California Secretary of Natural 
Resources John Laird 

or check out the reader reviews on Amazon 


After teaching solar energy for many years, I spent over 15 years researching 
and writing this book, all while living the life in the off-grid solar home we 
built. This is my lifework. 

It has been a long road to publication. I handed out the first draft in January 
2000, and many things have changed since then. Now I get to report on solar 
energy's success instead of just wishing for it. I'm self publishing the book, 
because as an unknown author I could not interest a publishing company, and 
because they don't offer much in the way of marketing for new authors anyway. 
So I started my own publishing company, Sandstone Publishing ( 
www.sandstonepublishing.com ) , whose catalog contains exactly one book. 

Now I get to market my book, an activity for which I am totally unsuited. My 
low-budget marketing plan consists of getting good reviews, and word of mouth. 
So if you read the book and like it, please write a review on Amazon or 
Goodreads, and tell your friends and family about it. Even climate skeptics can 
get something out of this book. 

The book is available in paperback and Kindle at Amazon , in paperback and Nook 
Book at Barnes & Noble , in iBooks at the Apple iTunes Store and in Kobo from 
Kobo Books . And if you can't afford one, convince me and I'll give you an 
Ebook copy. 8^) 

By the way, although you know me as Bob Stayton, I'm publishing the book under 
my full name Robert Arthur Stayton as a gesture to honor my father Chester 
Arthur Stayton, Jr. and my grandfather Chester Arthur Stayton, Sr., with whom I 
share my middle name. 

Producing Power Shift with DocBook 

I wrote the book in DocBook 5 using XMetal 7. I started off writing it in 
modular fashion, but found that it got in the way of continuity. This isn't 
technical documentation, after all. 8^) So I merged all the files into one big 
book file and finished the book that way. That allowed me to easily find 
something for cross referencing and to keep the narrative flow moving. Searches 
for indexterms were much easier in a single file, and I used XMetal macros to 
assist with inserting indexterms. 

I hired a book designer for the interior and implemented the specs from the 
InDesign file she gave me in DocBook XSL. From that I could generate the PDF 
for the book's interior. I had hoped to be able to show you the page design by 
referring to the Look Inside the Book feature on Amazon, but for some reason 
they put the Kindle version in there and I have not been able to reach the 
right person at Amazon to replace it with the PDF version I submitted to them 
two weeks ago. One of the many trials of working with automated publishing 
vendors. 

For the cover, I started with a cover template in InDesign that I generated 
from Lightning Source, which is the print-on-demand vendor that I'm using. They 
provide a form to enter the book's dimensions, paper type (which determines 
thickness), and page count, and they generate an InDesign template for the 
cover spread (back cover on left, spine in center, front cover on the right). I 
could then fill in the text in the appropriate boxes. I left the cover in 
InDesign rather than try to implement it in DocBook. From InDesign I produced 
the PDF for the cover. 

Then it was just a matter of setting up the book at Lightning Source and 
submitting the two PDFs. Since I already had an account at Lightning Source for 
my DocBook book, I just had to add another book. If you are new self publisher, 
they will likely try to push you over to Ingram Spark, their service that is 
intended for self-publishers with little publishing experience. Lightning 
Source does much less hand holding than Spark. 

Lightning Source has some specific requirements for the PDF files you submit. 
All fonts must be embedded, including those of any SVGs you insert. They also 
came back and said the cover colors were too rich and had to be scaled back. I 
was able to fix all the PDF issues using PhotoShop and Acrobat Pro's Preflight 
tools. 

In January of this year I ordered the first Advance Reading Copies (ARC) to 
send to reviewers that want the book months before publication so they can 
write a review. The ARC version predated the final copy edit, the index, and 
other final details. The great thing about print-on-demand is that I could 
order only as many copies as I needed. In April I completed the final revisions 
in XMetal and submitted my revised PDFs. It cost only $40 each to update the 
book block and the cover. Once I approved the test book, Lightning Source 
arranges for the book to be posted on Amazon and listed in Books-in-Print. 

I also used the DocBook tools to produce Ebook versions with the epub3 
stylesheet. I ended up producing four different epub3 flavors for Kindle, Nook, 
iBooks, and Kobo. They differ mostly in the CSS used, because their readers are 
not at all consistent about how CSS is handled. It reminded me of the bad old 
days of HTML browser incompatibilities. I then had to set up accounts on each 
of the systems to become an Ebook seller. The biggest pain was iBooks, because 
Apple *requires* you to use an Apple computer to run the software they use to 
manage iBooks. 

Just when you think you are done, you realize that no one is buying your book 
because no one knows about it. So I had to start a whole new career as book 
marketeer. Not much help from DocBook there. 
-- 
Bob Stayton
Sagehill Enterprises b...@sagehill.net 

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