How to create an eBook: Scanning

With Midnight Hour soon to be available in electronic book form, I wanted to share the process of transforming our printed books from hard copy to an updated electronic version.

At first, the idea of turning a print book into an electronic book seemed simple. Since I have a background in design and layout, and I keep up on technology, the plan seemed doable.

And it was. The result are two books that look professionally designed. Currently Eleventh Hour is for sale and Midnight Hour is on its way.

The process wasn’t without its hiccups, however. First of all, the rights to the original printed works didn’t come with a complementary electronic file. The publisher was unable to provide one, which meant it was up to me to scan the pages and convert the content using OCR (optical character recognition).

Tools for scanning and initial layout:
OpenOffice Writer: I used OpenOffice, not just because it’s free and I didn’t have Microsoft Office, but because it seemed to be easier for this particular application. I did compare the two, but OpenOffice worked very well.

HP F4400 flatbed printer/scanner: I did use this printer/scanner because it was the only thing I had available at the time. But it worked well for the scanning process and the OCR output was pretty accurate.

Scanning process and initial layout:
I set up an OpenOffice chapter template for the approximate size of fiction book, partly because I wanted an idea how it would look in its finished electronic format, and partly because when referencing corrections between the physical book and the electronic word processing copy, it would be easier to locate the correction if I were somewhere in the ball park of the manuscript.

Before scanning the book, I simply cut the pages from the binding. I scanned the pages using an HP F4400 flatbed printer and the accompanying software, which uses Readiris technology. I scanned using the Text (OCR) to RTF File selection. I then used OpenOffice and imported the .rtf file into the document.

Each chapter I scanned, I subsequently put into its own OpenOffice word processing document. It was easier to manage short files than one large file.

Although converting the scanned text to characters was pretty accurate, the formatting caused the most inconvenience. I was actually happy that much of the formatting transferred over, because purely plain text doesn’t keep preferences such as italics and even paragraphs. Still, there was some clean-up to do. At this point, however, all the manual labor was done and the next step was for us to do an initial edit and proofread of the chapters.

NEXT: Style preferences and proofreading

NOTE: Remember to respect intellectual property and copyright laws.

Eleventh Hour available now!

So here we are, with Eleventh Hour up on Amazon for Kindle readers and Barnes and Noble for Nook readers. Some astute readers might recognize that Eleventh Hour, and subsequently, Midnight Hour, were originally published in the late nineties by Pacific Press Publishing Association. With that in mind, Céleste Perrino-Walker and I took this opportunity to update the books for today’s audience. After all, that’s one of the benefits of electronic publishing!

Scanning and converting Eleventh Hour has been an interesting experience. After such a long time, neither one of us could really remember how the story unfolded. It was a pleasant surprise to find ourselves so engaged again in the lives of characters we had once created.

When Eleventh Hour and Midnight Hour were first printed, they cost nearly three times more to purchase than the new updated versions we are releasing now! Another exciting benefit of electronic books!

To let you in on a little secret, Céleste had never owned an electronic book reader until the week after we started this project. Sounds as if she might be hooked after purchasing a Kindle Fire. Since I kinda talked her into publishing Eleventh Hour and Midnight Hour as eBooks, I hope you pick them up from Amazon, or Barnes and Noble (available soon,) and enjoy reading them.

Technology on the Farm: Looking for a Few Good (Wo)Men

Eleventh Hour

Re-post from from the author’s blog

Reindeer Station Farm

Allrighty boy and girls, I’m about to go all techie on you; stand back. I have to admit, I’ve spent the last few years trying to get AWAY from technology and back to the simple pleasures of living in real time. I created a serious learning curve for myself which was less than fun to surmount, but I digress. Point is the bunnies have decided that it’s time to get with the program. When they found out I got a Kindle Fire (after swearing up and down I’d never read a digital book. Like. Ever.) they started taking turns using it whenever my back is turned. I mean, like seriously, they hide it from each other and someone has nibbled a corner of the jacket, probably St. John. Good thing I got that super-duper screen protector. I think they downloaded Watership Down even though I warned them it had some scary bits in it. They are also very fond of LOTR because they like to imagine they are hobbits.

Anyway, it should be no surprise that they are anxiously awaiting the digital release of a book I co-wrote with Eric Stoffle. I should state now, right here, for the record, that it ends on a cliff-hanger so if you decide to read it get the sequel, Midnight Hour, before you finish and save yourself the kind of knuckle-popping anxiety that people raked me over the coals for when it came out in print and they had to wait years – yes, years! Oh the agony! – for the sequel. You can thank me later.

Anyway, Eleventh Hour is going to be released digitally on March 12 – ta-da! – and we’re looking for a few good men – and women, and even bunnies – to give away some pre-release copies to in exchange for an honest review – seriously, dude, you won’t hurt our feelings, we can take it, we’ve got big strong backs from hunching over keyboards every spare second – and post it on Amazon.com or wherever else you like to post reviews of eBooks. So if you want to be one of those people please send me an email at c.perrinowalker@gmail.com and tell me which format you’d like (I think your choices are .mobi or .epub but you’d have to ask Fergal because he’s the geek in the house.)

A bunch of my other print books are about to make the leap into technology and become eBooks as well through one of my publishers, Pacific Press. As resistant as I am to change, and technology, this is actually a good thing. People often ask me where they can find some of my earlier work and a lot of it has gone out of print. Now they’ll be able to get their hands on it again. Wait, maybe that’s not a good thing . . . By the way, may I state, also for the record, no one, and I mean no one, has guessed who the real people were behind the characters in Playing God. No one. But if you’d like to try, you’ll soon have the digital opportunity to give it a shot. Ain’t technology grand?

Suspense mounts in the Eleventh Hour

With the upcoming release of the Eleventh Hour and Midnight Hour, I wanted to share an excerpt from this exciting series. Colonel Amy Cooper, a doctor with the United States Army Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRID), must simultaneously find the cause of a deadly virus and manage the potential for mass panic.

What she must concentrate on most right now was to try and defuse the national panic it would create when people began to find out that you could die from this virus. And if what Mara had told her on the phone was true, she had better move quickly. Delaying the news of the vice president’s death a few days would buy them some time to gain control of the public. It could be done . . .

Almost in answer to Amy’s thoughts, the phone rang. Its two short bursts told her that Private Derek Grosse was on the line. Wearily, she reached for the receiver. “Yes?’’

“Colonel Cooper, there’s a call for you from a Greg Harrison.”

“Thank you.” She punched the blinking light on the phone.

“Hello? Mr. Harrison?” Amy visualized the serious rugged look of the CNN reporter anxiously returning her call. “Yes, USAMRIID is ready to make a statement on the virus.”

After she made a date to speak with the reporter in front of the cameras, Amy sat in her office staring into space for a long time. Deceiving the American public would be easy; it wouldn’t be the first time. Keeping her own fear under control so she could pull it off—that would be the hard part.

She picked up the phone.

“Derek? Get me the White House.”