How are books made?
- Written by Lara Farina, Professor of English, West Virginia University
When authors need to make these tough decisions about what to change, they may have the help of an editor. An editor’s job is to review drafts of a proposed book and help the writer make it as good as it can be, and to coordinate all the steps to publish the book.
Editors work for publishers, the companies that help create the final form of the book and then distribute, advertise and sell it. When writers want to work with an editor, and hope to turn their story into a real book, they send their revised draft to publishers in hopes that the company will purchase it. This way, authors get paid for their writing, but the publisher also profits from book sales.
Many other people work at a publishing company[8], too. Copy editors and proofreaders check for mistakes in an author’s writing. Designers and typesetters are responsible for the look of the book, including its cover[9]. Publishers may also find illustrators for a book, although many authors want to illustrate their own.
Donna Ward/Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images[10]The final steps
When the content of a book is all ready, it will be sent to a printer[11] to be inked onto paper, glued or sewn together as a collection of pages, and bound into hardback or paperback copies. Hardbacks are books with stiff cardboard bindings and paper dust jackets to protect the covers. Paperbacks have a cover of only thick paper and are cheaper to make.
The first printing of some kinds of books, like novels or histories, is often a hardback. If lots of people want to buy the book and the publisher prints another batch of books – called a print run – they will typically be paperbacks.
UB Heidelberg/Wikimedia Commons[12]So far, I have described the way that most books are made now. But book creation predates modern publication, printing and even paper. For many centuries, books were written by hand on vellum, which is made of animal skin.
Before the invention of the printing press[13] around 1440, most writing was done by scribes[14], artisans who were trained to write in special scripts called calligraphy[15]. Authors could recite their work aloud to scribes, and the scribes would write it down. Scribes also copied a lot of material from other books to make new books for patrons, readers who told scribes what they wanted in a book and paid for it.
In my work as an English professor[16], I study many of these medieval handwritten books, called manuscripts. Often, manuscripts can give modern readers an idea of what particular people in the past wanted to read. For example, a book written for a queen might contain the stories she liked, calendars of important dates, a history of her family or her country and prayers and poems she might recite. There’s a good chance that the queen’s book was unique, because it was written specifically for her.
Hildesheim Cathedral Library/Wikimedia Commons[17]You can look here at pages from a manuscript[18] made for use by one particular woman: Christina of Markyate[19], a holy woman in 12th-century England. She ran away from home as a teenager to become a recluse and later became a spiritual adviser to the monks of St. Albans monastery. The monks made this very beautiful book of prayers for her.
You can make your own mini-book[20] just by folding a single piece of paper. Think of some content, write a draft and then be your own scribe by writing and illustrating your book!
Hello, curious kids! Do you have a question you’d like an expert to answer? Ask an adult to send your question to CuriousKidsUS@theconversation.com[21]. Please tell us your name, age and the city where you live.
References
- ^ Curious Kids (theconversation.com)
- ^ curiouskidsus@theconversation.com (theconversation.com)
- ^ material things (www.merriam-webster.com)
- ^ brainstorming ideas (www.youtube.com)
- ^ outer space (theconversation.com)
- ^ and revise (www.youtube.com)
- ^ Lamaip/iStock via Getty Images Plus (www.gettyimages.com)
- ^ work at a publishing company (www.cmu.edu)
- ^ including its cover (theconversation.com)
- ^ Donna Ward/Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images (www.gettyimages.com)
- ^ to a printer (www.youtube.com)
- ^ UB Heidelberg/Wikimedia Commons (commons.wikimedia.org)
- ^ invention of the printing press (www.youtube.com)
- ^ was done by scribes (www.medievalists.net)
- ^ calligraphy (www.youtube.com)
- ^ an English professor (english.wvu.edu)
- ^ Hildesheim Cathedral Library/Wikimedia Commons (commons.wikimedia.org)
- ^ pages from a manuscript (www.albani-psalter.de)
- ^ Christina of Markyate (www.oxfordbibliographies.com)
- ^ make your own mini-book (www.youtube.com)
- ^ CuriousKidsUS@theconversation.com (theconversation.com)
Authors: Lara Farina, Professor of English, West Virginia University
Read more https://theconversation.com/how-are-books-made-191145