![jutoh chapters jutoh chapters](https://mybookcave.com/app/uploads/2016/07/Jutoh-character-styles.jpg)
So I added the new art, but for some reason it wasn’t appearing in the files I generated, and it turned out that in all the formats for Nook, Kobo, etc., the art wasn’t turned on, as it were.
![jutoh chapters jutoh chapters](https://windows-cdn.softpedia.com/screenshots/Jutoh_16.png)
(Was that clear? If you found that difficult to understand, imagine how much fun it actually is to do.) This means that when I have a clickable list of my other publications, with links that will lead to other books on (for example) Amazon, I can designate that only the list with Amazon links will appear in the file intended for Amazon. In other words, I can arrange that a certain piece of text will appear only in the file intended for Amazon, or for Apple, or whomever. One of Jutoh’s more useful features is that you can assign text to specific outputs tailored to the various online platforms. Plus, any support documents are written by aliens, and I generally can’t make sense of them. A small change, or the wrong number in the wrong place, can result in a cascade of errors that can be highly consequential. But it’s also extremely complex, with a very steep learning curve, and the interactions of all the intricacies are very hard to predict. Jutoh is vast and comprehensive, and will do anything with an ebook file you need doing. You’d think that changing the cover art and making some minor updates on an epub file would be simple, wouldn’t you? But no, because I work with a British program called Jutoh. UPDATE: the file is now available at Smashwords.
![jutoh chapters jutoh chapters](https://i1.wp.com/www.selfpublishingnerd.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Jutoh1.jpg)
#JUTOH CHAPTERS UPDATE#
If you prefer this art to the old (and why wouldn’t you?), you should be able to can erase the file currently in your reader and reload the update at no charge.įind Aristoi at Amazon, Kobo, Google, Apple, and (eventually) B&N and Smashwords. Other than the art, the text file is exactly the same, but with my list of publications updated. The revised file has now been uploaded everywhere but B&N and Smashwords, because B&N is very slow and because there are technical issues with Smashwords, which I’ll get to later today. I’ve long been dissatisfied with the purposefully odd but decidedly amateurish cover I designed for my novel Aristoi, and so I decided to do something about it, and approached the splendid artist Elizabeth Leggett, who very graciously agreed to fit me (and the book) into her schedule.