[bksvol-discuss] Re: Three Asterisks: An explanation from the staff

  • From: "Lisa Gorden-Cushman" <crysania@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 4 Oct 2012 18:47:58 -0700

So I should get in the habit of putting 3 asterisks after a normal chapter 
heading.  Thanks for the clarification.
 
 
 
From: bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
[mailto:bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Roger Loran Bailey
Sent: Thursday, October 04, 2012 6:36 PM
To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: Three Asterisks: An explanation from the staff
 
Here is how I understood the explanation. The asterisks are used when there is 
a chapter heading for the benefit of the Braille readers. It is the standard in 
Braille that when a chapter heading appears in the middle of a page that there 
be a blank line before and after it because Braille does not indicate bolding 
or other indications that the chapter heading is apart from the rest of the 
text and the blank lines need to be there to indicate that. Again, though, the 
bookshare conversion tools will strip out those blank lines. The three 
asterisks are to be inserted to substitute for the blank lines that will not 
survive the conversion tools. That goes for all blank lines that you want the 
presence of to be indicated. It follows then that if the chapter heading is at 
the top of the page rather than in the middle of it that the three asterisks 
need only to be placed after the chapter heading. That would mean that the 
format of a page on which a chapter heading appears at the top of the page 
should be this: Page break, blank line, page number, blank line, chapter 
heading, three asterisks, text of page, blank line, page break. If the chapter 
heading appears in the middle of the page with text before and after it then 
the format should be like this: Page break, blank line, page number, blank 
line, text of page, three asterisks, chapter heading, three asterisks, text of 
page, blank line, page break.
On 10/4/2012 9:17 PM, Lisa Gorden-Cushman wrote:
Maybe I did not read the explanation closely enough, but arenât the three 
asterix not only something we have to do if we are formatting a chapter heading 
in the middle of a page?  So if the chapter is like most chapters, canât we 
still forego them?
 
 
 
 
 
From: bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
[mailto:bksvol-discuss-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Martha Rafter
Sent: Thursday, October 04, 2012 6:09 PM
To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: Three Asterisks: An explanation from the staff
 
Hi Madeleine,
   Thanks for this, but I think Iâm either confused or really, really dense!  
Smile  Donât we need to put in a blank line between the page break and the 
chapter heading any more?  Then it would be:
 
Page break
blank line
Chapter heading
* * *
text of page
 
Again, thanks you!
Marty
 
From: Madeleine Linares <mailto:Madeleinel@xxxxxxxxxxxx>  
Sent: Thursday, October 04, 2012 5:43 PM
To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
Cc: mailto:cynthr@xxxxxxxxxxx 
Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Three Asterisks: An explanation from the staff
 
Hello everyone,
 
My sincere apologies for my delayed response re. asterisks but here is whatâs 
going on:
 
In Braille, neither bolding nor font size changes show up, which means that it 
is really difficult to tell when there is a new chapter or section. Therefore, 
three asterisks are added after each chapter title or chapter name to make it 
clear where the chapter title or name ends and where the text begins. For 
example:
 
-----page break---
Chapter Three
***
[text]
----page break-----
 
It could also look like this:
 
-----page break-----
[text from ch. 4]
***
Chapter Five: Kristy Kills
***
[text for ch. 5]
--------page break---------
 
 
This is especially important if there is a chapter name. For example, Chapter 
Three: The Woman in Red (or whatever). Without the star, Braille readers would 
have no way of knowing whether or not âThe Woman in Redâ was the first line of 
text or a chapter title.
 
Three asterisks are NOT needed at the beginning of a page before a new chapter 
(if the new chapter starts at the very top of a page) but ARE needed if the 
chapter starts in the middle of the page. Three asterisks are also used to show 
other breaks in the text, whether itâs a change in narration and the sighted 
reader sees a font change or all italics, if there is a symbol in the page to 
indicate a time change or something, and when there is a new section of the 
book (such as Part One or Book One of several).
 
Many volunteers already do this, which is wonderful. Since we want Bookshare 
books to be as accessible to everyone as possible, we strongly encourage adding 
in three asterisks after the chapter number or name. I know there has been a 
lot of confusion about this. From my understanding it is not a new idea, but it 
has never been enforced, which is likely why some people do it and others donât 
and have never been aware that they should. We want to encourage it going 
forward.
 
Please contact me directly with any questions or concerns. 
 
Thank you all so much for your hard work and dedication!
 
Best,
 
Madeleine Linares
Volunteer Coordinator
Bookshare, a Benetech Initiative
650-644-3459
madeleinel@xxxxxxxxxxxx
 
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