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Drawing of E. Scholz



Learning to Publish My First Book: Notes from the Trenches

I thought writing a book was the hard part.

Turns out, that was just the beginning.

What I’ve really been learning lately is how to publish a book—specifically, how to get something live on Amazon KDP. And honestly, it’s been a mix of Google searches, AI explanations, random forum advice, and a lot of “wait… what?” moments.

This is a journal-style snapshot of what I’ve figured out so far.


The First Realization: Writing Isn’t Publishing

At first, I assumed:

“I’ll just finish writing, upload it, and done.”

Nope.

A real book—even a simple one—needs:

  • A title page

  • A copyright page

  • A table of contents

  • Formatting for digital and print

That was the first shift:
A manuscript is not a book yet.


ISBNs, Canada, and Feeling Official

One surprisingly nice discovery: in Canada, ISBNs are free.

You can get them through Library and Archives Canada, which instantly makes things feel more “real.” You’re not just uploading a file—you’re technically becoming a publisher.

Also learned:

  • eBooks don’t actually need an ISBN on KDP

  • Print books do

So already, there are different rules depending on format.


The Table of Contents Rabbit Hole

I did not expect the table of contents to be complicated.

I thought you just type:

Chapter 1
Chapter 2

But for eBooks, it has to be clickable.

That means:

  • Using heading styles (not just bold text)

  • Letting Google Docs generate the TOC

  • Exporting properly so Kindle recognizes it

It’s one of those things that feels trivial—until it completely breaks if you do it wrong.


Formatting Shock: Page Size Changes Everything

Another surprise:
The size of your book changes how many pages you have.

My document started in standard Google Docs format (8.5" × 11"), but books aren’t printed like that.

Common book sizes:

  • 6" × 9" (standard)

  • 5" × 8" (smaller)

When I resized:

  • The same text suddenly became way more pages

This actually matters because:

  • KDP requires a minimum of 24 pages for print books

So formatting isn’t just visual—it affects whether your book is even allowed to exist.


The “Test Book” Idea

At some point I realized:

Why am I trying to perfect a full book first?

So I switched strategies:

  • Make a small test book

  • Just 1–2 chapters

  • Treat it as a “preview edition”

This feels way more manageable—and smarter.

Instead of one big leap, it’s:

Learn by publishing something small first


What I Learned About “Looking Legit”

Even a short book needs structure.

Minimum setup:

  • Title page

  • Copyright page

  • Table of contents

  • Actual content

And if it’s a sample, you have to say so clearly, or people will think it’s incomplete (in a bad way).

That was a subtle but important insight:
Presentation matters as much as content.


The Reality of Print vs eBook

Another layer I didn’t expect:

eBook:

  • Flexible layout

  • No fixed pages

  • Easier overall

Print:

  • Fixed size

  • Margins matter

  • Page count matters

  • Cover includes spine width

Print feels much more “engineering-like.”


What Actually Helped Me Learn

Honestly, it’s been a mix of:

  • Googling very specific questions

  • Asking AI for step-by-step breakdowns

  • Reading random bits of advice (some good, some questionable)

And slowly, a picture forms.

Not all at once—just piece by piece.


Where I Am Now

Right now, I’m not trying to publish a masterpiece.

I’m trying to:

  • Get a small book live

  • Understand the system

  • Avoid beginner mistakes

Something simple like:

  • A couple chapters

  • Clean formatting

  • Low price

  • Just to see it exist


Final Thought

Publishing used to feel like a mysterious, gatekept process.

Now it feels more like:

A technical system you have to learn how to navigate

Still not trivial—but definitely doable.

And honestly, that shift alone makes it feel possible.


More to come once I actually hit “publish.”


KEY WORDS ARCHIVE, book

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