Thursday, August 16, 2007

Book specifications for qualifying for EVVY Award Nominations

In the category of "better late than never" this posting and the one tomorrow will share the Official Outskirts Press 2007 EVVY Winners. A previous post (about 4-5 postings ago, but 5 months ago) mentioned the official Outskirts Press EVVY Nominees. From that list of nominees, Outskirts Press received 15 EVVY Awards last March, the most ever from a participating publisher.

The EVVY Awards are sponsored by the Colorado Independent Publishers Association (CIPA) and are open to all Colorado publishers. Named after CIPA's founder, Evelyn, the EVVY Awards recognize excellence in independent and self-published books.

Just being nominated as an Outskirts Press Official EVVY Nominee is an honor. Less than 5% of the books Outskirts Press publishes each year are nominated and the books must pass a set of criteria, both technical and subjective. These are the same set of criteria we know the independent, 3rd-party judges use when judging all the EVVY submissions.

The technical specifications are good rules to follow for anybody working on publishing a book. It is surprising to discover the number of publishers who do not deliver the basic requirements of a book:

A barcode must appear on the back
The ISBN must appear on the back
The price should be clearly apparent
The copyright page should contain all the relevant data and be organized

A book without a barcode or an ISBN is not a book, as defined by the industry. The U.S. ISBN agency requires that any non-children's book be at least 48 pages in length to qualify legitimately for an ISBN. Non-children's books of less than 48 pages are not classified as books and should not be assigned ISBN numbers. Problems arise when book-mill publishing companies do not enforce these operating standards; the authors end up paying the price, not due to negligence so much as lack of education.

Tomorrow I will recognize our 2006 EVVY Award winners.