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At Amazon - soon to be in print |
Some of you may have heard me say this
before—I’ve been vocal enough in my frustration—but those “brilliant” techies
who designed Word 2010 can only be described as sadists. I’ve just finished
formatting three books for CreateSpace. I had help from my blog host—yes you,
Ellis—who sat down with me in a restaurant halfway between our houses and
showed me how to format the first book, step by step. We switched to Word 2003,
a much more user-friendly program, because even a seasoned tech writer like
Ellis thinks Word 2010 sucks. My lesson went well, one book done, so off I went
to do book two. Easy, peasy, right?
Um, not when I got home. I resisted
throwing the computer out the window at least a dozen times, but because I have
a major character flaw called persistence, I forged ahead. (Okay, I sent the
file to Ellis a couple of times to straighten out the section breaks and the
pages. I admit it.) But I had another problem. My Photoshop program is on the
computer with Word 2010, so I have to send the file to CreateSpace from that
computer. Surprisingly, and after a lot of hair-pulling, I got the second book
finished in Word 2003 on one computer and sent it to myself to open on the
other. The formatting held.
Sound effects—heavenly music from above.
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At Amazon - soon to be in print |
I thought it might be Firefox, so I ran
it through on Explorer. Same thing. Rejected. I called my credit card company. (They
love me, by the way. I really don’t know why. I never pay a finance charge. But
I digress.) So I went back to CreateSpace. They said it was my CVV code. Same
code I used three weeks before. I told them I’ve never had so much trouble
trying to give a company my money. They assured me they wanted my money.
We had a long telephone conversation.
The customer service representative had a lovely, lilting English/Indian
accent. I understood her. She understood me. She contacted the tech people
while I was on the phone. She was really trying to help. They insisted it was
my CVV code. I insisted it wasn’t. She said they’d get back to me.
So I worked on book three.
I don’t consider myself totally tech
challenged; in fact, I’m really not bad for an old broad learning new tricks. I
even do my own book covers on Photoshop, do my own website. But every time I
thought I had the third book finished—this in Word 2003—I scrolled up and there
were headings where they shouldn’t be, numbers on another line, pages
disappearing when I scrolled—seriously. I thought I was seeing things. Now you
see it, now you don’t.
Did that stop me from torturing myself?
Not even close. I got what I thought was a good document, sent it to CS. Their
proof looked a mess. Backward, in fact. Enough of Word, back to the sample
books. I called CreateSpace again. Another lovely service rep. The credit card
validating company is closed until Monday. She will get back to me. Meanwhile,
she’s sending my samples free of charge. I didn’t argue.
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www.pollyiyer.com |
By the time this blog posts, I may have
an update. It’s Saturday, 5 o’clock. I’m on the way to the fridge for a beer—or
maybe something stronger.
Monday, 5 o’clock. After all the fuss
and phone calls, it turns out it wasn’t my CVV code that they insisted was the
problem. It was the expiration date. It was still the same expiration date that
was in their file, so I don’t know why it decided to kick back. I peeled the
egg off my red face, entered the profile again with the updated expiration
date, and made a dummy sale that Sara, the wonderful customer service rep, said
she’d delete. Bingo. The sale went through. Sara couldn’t delete it. So she
didn’t charge me for that book either. I’m feeling a little guilty getting five
sample books for free. After all, it was really my fault. I offered to pay. She
refused. I guess I’ll just have to live with Amazon’s generosity.
Time for my afternoon libation before I
send the next proof to CreateSpace.
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Polly is the author of Insight, Hooked, Murder Déjà Vu, and Mind Games
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Polly is the author of Insight, Hooked, Murder Déjà Vu, and Mind Games