MANUSCRIPT SPECIFICATIONS
Little Blue Books have certain very definite mechanical requirements. It is extremely important that Little Blue Book writers conform absolutely to these requirements. If you wish to deliver satisfactory Little Blue Book manuscripts, it will be a good idea for you to read this section carefully and memorize the specifications that apply to you.
Little Blue Books are now added to the series in two lengths only—32 pages or 64 pages (that is, in the completed book). This is counting every page from title page to last page (covers excepted). Little Blue Books are set in eight-point type, solid (which is to say, eight-point type cast on an eight-point slug), in lines 16 ems wide, 35 lines to the page. (Notice the manner in which this Little Blue Book is set.) Quotations (excerpts from other books, quoted letters, etc.) are set off from the main text by a slight space (leads) top and bottom, and set in seven-point type. Such quoted matter should be either single-spaced or indented about 1½ inches in manuscript. It should not be enclosed in quotation marks. (Note the quoted matter on page 12 of this book).
A 32-page Little Blue Book contains—when set as above—about 7,500 words; a 64-page book contains twice as many, or 15,000 words. You should indicate which length your idea is likely to require when you submit suggestions.
How to judge the length of your manuscript: It is unnecessary to count the actual number of words in your manuscript. If your typewriter has pica type (look up your bill of sale, or ask your typewriter salesman, if you do not know), 23 to 25 pages of manuscript, 8½ × 11-inch sheets, typed on one side of the paper only, double-spaced, with not over ½-inch margin at left and right, or ¾-inch space top and bottom, will make a 32-page Little Blue Book. From 50 to 55 pages of such manuscript are required for a 64-page Little Blue Book. If your typewriter has elite type, a 32-page book will require about 17 pages typed as above; a 64-page book will require about 36 pages.
Always type on one side of the paper only. Always double space any typewritten manuscript. Always submit the original (not the carbon copy) to the editor. Keep the carbon copy for your own files—and, by the way, it is wise always to keep a carbon copy. No editorial office assumes responsibility for any unaccepted manuscript beyond the usual reasonable care. Manuscripts also may be lost in the mails, and the slight labor of keeping carbon copies even over a period of years may some day repay your effort if a valuable manuscript is somehow lost. Number the pages of your manuscript.
You may, if you like, divide your manuscript into chapters or sections, or both. Such divisions are advisable in any technical manuscript. If such chapters are titled (and it is a good idea to give them titles), be sure to include with your manuscript a Table of Contents, leaving space for the printer to write in the page numbers when the type is divided into pages.
Be sure you distinguish the Table of Contents from the Index. The Table of Contents is arranged in the order of the pages—that is, the chapters, stories, or whatever the book contains, are listed in the order they appear in the book, with the number of the page on which each such chapter or section begins. An Index is an alphabetical guide to the contents of the book. In the Index subjects are listed alphabetically, as in a dictionary, and the page numbers (added after the book is set in type and paged) are put in to correspond. An Index is necessary only in a book dealing with various phases of some subject where frequent reference, for ready information, is likely to be made by the reader. (See Little Blue Books Nos. 815 and 816 for examples of indices).
In typing your manuscript indent the first line of every new paragraph three spaces on the typewriter. No other marking is necessary. Words you wish italicized should be underlined once. Words to be printed in small capitals (seldom used), should be underlined twice and marked “s. c.” Words to be printed in bold-face (seldom used), should be underlined (sometimes a wavy line is used) and marked “b. f.”
A minor point in typing manuscript—but nevertheless an important one—is to make clear the difference between a hyphen and a dash. The hyphen on the typewriter is adequate to signify a hyphen in manuscript, and the printer will set it accordingly. But a dash, which is much longer than a hyphen in type, is not provided for on the typewriter keyboard. The best way is to use two or perhaps three hyphens together, thus ‑‑‑. When so typed, these three hyphens will be set as one long line or dash. (As a matter of fact, special instruction to the printer is necessary in this manuscript to be sure he sets those three hyphens as hyphens instead of a dash!)
Inexperienced writers make oftentimes funny mistakes in preparing manuscripts. I remember one writer who persisted in dividing words at the end of the line and placing the hyphen (indicating division, or a broken word) at the beginning of the remaining part of the word on the line below! Of course, the printer set the manuscript all right, but the habit was annoying.
Please use 8½ × 11-inch manuscript paper, white, not too thin or too thick. White bond paper between 16 and 24 pound stock—as the stationer would say—is ideal. Do not use manila paper, or any color other than white. The color of your typewriter ribbon does not matter, but in typing manuscript use one color only—it is confusing to mix red and black, or red and blue, in a manuscript.
Again the inexperienced author, trying to attract attention by being “different,” errs in preparing his manuscript. One Little Blue Book author succeeded in delivering every one of several books typed on heavy foolscap, with deckled edges! Fortunately, it was not perfumed. Another writer—this time an unsuccessful one—sent in a manuscript on sepia brown paper, beautifully typed in dark brown ribbon to match. Such idiosyncrasies are inexpressibly annoying to both editors and printers. Avoid them.
A Word About Special Sizes of Type: Any necessary type or character can be used in setting up a Little Blue Book if it is essential. The books are standardized, as I have already said, being set throughout in 8-point type, with quoted matter (when it exceeds more than a sentence or two in length) set off from the rest of the text by being set in 7-point. Larger type is used for the headings (10-point caps—capital letters—as a rule). Boldface type, italics, small capitals, etc., can all be used in technical books if desired. Too many kinds of type in one book are in rather bad taste, so it is well to keep the typography simple and neat.
The Little Blue Book dictionaries are usually set in 5½-point type, two columns to the page. (Examine Little Blue Books Nos. 192, 696, 697, 637, 1011, 1105, etc.). The lines are therefore set 7½ ems wide; with one-em space between the columns; this makes the page the usual 16 ems in width. An em, by the way, is a printer’s unit of measure. There are six ems—sometimes called pica ems for greater precision, since, strictly speaking, an em may refer to any size type—to the inch. A pica em is the width of a capital letter M (square) in 12-point type. Incidentally, there are 72 points to the inch.
Preparation of Illustrations: In technical books illustrations are sometimes necessary. We expect an author to prepare and submit his own illustrations with his manuscript. If a technical title is assigned, it is given to someone who can send illustrations if they are necessary. Halftones (reproductions of photographs) should be avoided. In fact, it is so difficult to print halftones on the paper used for Little Blue Books, so they will show up well, that we are not using them at present.
Illustrations should be outline drawings or diagrams in black ink. These illustrations may be much larger than they are to appear in the book, if it is any easier to prepare them that way. They will be reduced to the proper size when they are made into line cuts (zinc etchings).
If illustrations are sent with a manuscript, be sure to indicate in the manuscript where, in the text, each illustration should appear, so that in making up the book the printers can place the cuts properly. Also, be sure to allow for the space the cuts will occupy in the finished book, and reduce the word-count of your manuscript accordingly. It is impossible for any Little Blue Book to be other than 32 or 64 pages in length. You must make your work fit into one or the other of these—whichever is specified at the time you receive the assignment. Also, you must not let your work fall much short of these lengths, for it is just as bad to have a manuscript fill 50 pages of a 64-page book as it is for it to run over to 40 pages of a 32-page book. It just can’t be done.
Do not hope to have an extra long manuscript converted into a two-volume Little Blue Book edition. This experiment has been tried and it is not feasible. Each title must be complete in itself, and run to either 32 or 64 pages.