yes, a submitter can submit a poor quality book but you don't have to
take it to proof; Cindy
On Mon, Jan 20, 2020 at 1:53 PM Judy <cherryjam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi Tomoko,
Some of the wish list books are coming through with awful quality. Reject
them. It isn't a proofreader's job to fix an awful scan like the one you
are describing.
When you reject the book, make sure you check "other" and leave a comment
on the field that lets you do that, explaining why you rejected it. The
little codes that you check on that page don't seem to work, but leaving a
comment does.
Judy
On January 20, 2020 2:05:21 PM CST, Tomoko Miles <
dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Recently, I had proofread some “wish list books”. Some of them are too
many misspellings. An example is that a book I had corrected thousands and
thousands misspellings and uploaded. Then, the book which was returned the
proofreading lists. You might say spelling correction is a proofreader’s
job. However, they are too much. Other than misspellings, I think some
“wish list books” are “poor quality”, such as font problem or ... problems.
I’m wondering what a submitter’s job is. Can a submitter submit a “poor
quality” book? In addition, Amanda hadn’t reply soon. I had to wait at
least two weeks.
Don't you have the same kind of problem? How do you think?
Tomoko