In response to Rich Shepard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

> On Thu, 7 Feb 2008, Bill Moran wrote:
> 
> > Anyone know of a template for "standard manuscript format" ... as
> > described here, for example: http://www.shunn.net/format/story.html
> 
>    I don't know where he gets his ideas, but if you want to emulate that, use
> the article class with a monospaced typeface as the default. I submit
> typeset articles in pdf to journal editors, and only the most retrogressive
> ask that I put them into M$ Word format.

I'm not interested in M$ Word.  Most of the markets that are worth
submitting to want submissions sent by mail anyway, so the electronic
format is unimportant.

What _is_ important is that I can focus on my story while I'm writing it,
and not worry about whether my headers are correct, or whether OOo
decided to change the fonts or the line spacing on me for some reason.

At this time, I do most of my writing in OOo, purely so I have an active
spell-checker, and I save the files as ASCII text.  Once the story is
complete, I then go to all the trouble to fight with OOo to get the
story formatted as I want it.

While your comments about the relative benefits and disadvantages of
that format are "interesting", they're completely unimportant to me
until you can convince paying editors of their merits.  If you want to
take up that torch, feel free ... I'm simply trying to find a way to
adhere to the current market requirements.

>    His comment about making the content more important than the visual
> appearance is belied by the rest of his suggestions. Typeset material is so
> much easier to read that the content stands by itself. His blog entry was
> visibly irritating for me to read.

Well, if I'm submitting a story to you for publication, I'll remember
that and format it as you'd like.  However, until you're paying $.10 a
word or better for fiction, I'll follow the guidelines of the people who
_are_ paying.  And that page is the best description of those guidelines
I've found so far.

>    Heck, use OO.o if that's the appearance you want. Don't use a typesetting
> application to make a document look non-typeset.

OOo sucks for this kind of thing.  I, and other writers I know have been
looking for a superior writing tool for quite some time, and I honestly
believe that Lyx could be it.

-- 
Bill Moran
http://www.potentialtech.com

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