But fortunately, there is one that will work for you.
And thanks to DAVID KUDLER we now have a very good breakdown of several. While not an all-inclusive list, David has reviewed the top tools used by most writers.
So if you’re ready to convert and upload that best-selling book, keep reading.
Amazon KDP KDP accepts ePub, Word doc/docx, HTML, mobi formats. Output mobi, and HTML. In my book Tryouts for Ben, I uploaded a Word docx and had little trouble. I agree with David; it’s easy and almost fool-proof. Don’t waste your time using fancy fonts, or formatting, because KDP will not recognize most of them. However, if you are confident with HTML, and CSS format, you can edit the converted file in HTML.
Barnes and Noble Nookbook I’ve not converted any of my books to Nookbook. But David assures us it’s fairly straightforward. But doesn’t allow for HTML editing.
KOBO Again, I’ve not yet used KOBO. It appears to be less than user-friendly and not sure I’ll bother with it. David didn’t appear to be impressed.
DRAFT2DIGITAL (D2D) D2D accepts ePub, Word doc/docx, RTF files, and the output is ePub, mobi, or PDF. I did consider D2D but wasn’t happy with their conversion tool.
SMASHWORDS Smashwords accepts files in ePub, Word doc (not docx.) Note: this means you must save your manuscript in the older version of Word. Out put is impressive: ePub, mobi, PDF, PDB, lit, TXT, and many more. Again, this is one I considered but decided it wasn’t for me.
Last Edit: Jul 14, 2016 15:04:58 GMT -5 by J.A. Stinger