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Fonts for a print book

Nihal

Vala
I think many ebook readers use the user-defined font, ignoring the creator's directives.

I'm partial to serif typefaces in this case, they're easier to read. Whatever you pick it should have a good x-height, a decent width and proper kerning. Avoid free fonts from these sites with thousands of fonts, they often lack the bold and italic styles—fundamental for the body of text—and worst: they're badly kerned, if kerned at all.

If the kerning is bad you'll have to put considerable effort into formatting and correcting it at the risk of having a text that is straining to read.

With these considerations in mind, you can get started here:



Don't forget that your body typeface has to match your headings and auxiliary texts. :)
 

Addison

Auror
Personally I think that depends on what genre you're writing and who you're writing for. If it's first person I go with something that looks a little hand written, like Segoe, Gabriola, Comic Sans. Basically I try to have the font match the story in some way.
 
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