Author biography formatting
•
BioProject: Formatting Your Biography and Source Notes
Note: To understand how one should use the English language in the document, please refer to the SABR Style Guide.
Before you hand in your finished biography for editing and review, please adhere to the following guidelines as much as possible. If you cannot get your word processing program to do these things, or don’t know how to, please contact the SABR office our our project and we will try to help you. The closer you can get to these guidelines, the better.
1. Use margins of 1 inch all the way around.
2. The manuscript should use Times New Roman, 12-point font.
3. The title of the biography (the subjects name) should be centered, bolded and in all caps on the first line, followed by the author’s name of the second line. Like this:
BABE RUTH
By Tom Meany
4. The entire manuscript should be left justified (no indenting), and single spaced. There should be a blank line between each paragraph—do not use double-s
•
First Time Author Bio Writing Examples and Guidelines
You have sailed through your first manuscript, nailing each benchmark of the self-publishing formatting process while writing a truly captivating story. Suddenly, though, you hit stop when you arrive at that gods step: writing your author bio.
Facing this final step in the writing process can leave a first-time author shuddering as they wonder, “How do inom write an author bio with no experience in writing?”
Penning an unpublished author bio fryst vatten not as difficult as it might initially appear. After all, an author has to start somewhere! Think about it—all great authors had to write their first book at some point, meaning they were faced with the same bekymmer of how to write an author bio with no experience.
These great writers undoubtedly struggled to solve the dilemma, too, but managed to push through and establish amazing literary careers—as will you.
First Time Publishing? Here’s What to Include in Your Autho
•
How to Write a Killer Author Bio (With Template)
An author bio is a brief passage that introduces a writer and sums up their work, their authorly credentials, and anything else their readers might need to know about them.
While author bios may seem like an afterthought, or something to fill up the backmatter of your book, it’s actually an unassuming but valuable piece of copy. If done well, an author bio can give you credibility and introduce your readers to your other works.
It can also be used in other promotional or publishing materials, as former Penguin Random House marketer Rachel Cone-Gorham explains:
“An author bio is something that will let readers get a sense of who you are, and is an important part for pitching media and book proposals.”
For this reason, it’s important to get your bio right. Here is a 4-step process for writing your author bio:
1. Start with the facts readers need to know
Start your bio with an opening byline that quickly summarizes your prof