Lioness Press

Lioness Press Professional book formatting, editing, and production services for independent authors preparing to publish. Every. Single. Time. Revise fierce. Finish proud.

We specialize in the final stages of the publishing process for print and eBook editions. Lioness Press is a creative haven for writers who refuse to whisper. LP drops bite-sized quotes, real-talk writing tips, and the occasional loving nudge to shove you back to the page. Whether you’re wrangling a first draft or chiseling a final scene, LP reminds you that bravery beats perfection. W

hat you’ll find here:
• Daily quotes that light a fire under your prose
• Pep-talks pulled from the 5P Novel Method and years in the trenches
• Updates on workshops, retreats, and writer meet-ups
• A community that celebrates messy middles and triumphant endings

Write loud.

Uploading your book should be the easy part. But for many authors, it’s where things start to fall apart.Files get rejec...
05/20/2026

Uploading your book should be the easy part. But for many authors, it’s where things start to fall apart.

Files get rejected. Margins shift. Spacing looks fine in Word, then completely different once it’s uploaded.

That’s why I focus on creating platform-ready files.

At Lioness Press, I format your manuscript to meet KDP and IngramSpark specs before you ever hit upload, so you’re not fixing errors at the last minute or trying to figure out what went wrong.

You’ve done the hard work writing the book. This part should feel straightforward.

If you’ve ever had an upload go sideways, you’re not alone.

Most books don’t start as polished pages.They start like this: notes, drafts, pieces that don’t quite fit together yet.B...
04/29/2026

Most books don’t start as polished pages.

They start like this: notes, drafts, pieces that don’t quite fit together yet.

Before formatting ever begins, there’s an important step that often gets skipped: making sure the structure is settled.

• Chapter breaks
• Scene flow
• Where things begin and end

Formatting works best when the manuscript already knows what it is. It's complete! Otherwise, every change later means reworking layout, shifting pages, and fixing things twice.

A little clarity early on saves a lot of time down the line.

Typography shapes the reading experience more than most people realize.Readers rarely stop to think about margins, spaci...
03/16/2026

Typography shapes the reading experience more than most people realize.

Readers rarely stop to think about margins, spacing, or type choices, but they feel the difference when those things are handled well.

Balanced margins keep the page comfortable to read. Consistent fonts guide the eye naturally through the text. Proper spacing prevents the page from feeling crowded or chaotic.

Good typography lets the reader stay inside the story.

That quiet control is part of what makes a book feel professionally produced.

If you’re preparing a manuscript for publication, this is the stage where decisions matter most.✔️Interior formatting.✔️...
02/27/2026

If you’re preparing a manuscript for publication, this is the stage where decisions matter most.

✔️Interior formatting.
✔️Editorial refinement.
✔️Production readiness.

When those pieces are handled with intention, everything downstream becomes easier, from upload to print to reader experience.

Lioness Press is currently booking new formatting and production projects.

Details are available on the website when you’re ready.

Readers can tell when a book has been professionally produced.They may not be able to name why, but they feel it.Margins...
02/18/2026

Readers can tell when a book has been professionally produced.

They may not be able to name why, but they feel it.

Margins are balanced. Chapters open cleanly. Typography is consistent. Nothing pulls attention away from the story.

Professional publishing is about control and consistency, not flash.

When the structure is solid, the reader never has to think about the mechanics. They stay inside the book.

Many manuscripts slow down in production not because they’re messy, but because key style decisions were never fully loc...
02/11/2026

Many manuscripts slow down in production not because they’re messy, but because key style decisions were never fully locked in.

Things like spelling preferences, punctuation choices, capitalization rules, or subtle shifts in voice can seem minor on their own. When they’re inconsistent, they create friction later during editing, formatting, and proofreading.

One of the most helpful things authors can do at this stage is decide what they want to be consistent about, even if they don’t know how to enforce it yet. That clarity makes professional editing faster, cleaner, and definitely less costly.

Grammar and style work best as preparation, not cleanup. That’s what allows the rest of the publishing process to move forward smoothly.

Grammar and style matter most when they stop being noticeable.If a reader pauses to reread a sentence, trips over phrasi...
02/09/2026

Grammar and style matter most when they stop being noticeable.

If a reader pauses to reread a sentence, trips over phrasing, or feels like something is “off” but can’t name why, it’s usually not the story—it’s the language getting in the way.

Here are three things authors often miss in otherwise strong drafts:

1. Inconsistency
Names spelled two ways. Numbers switching styles. Hyphenation drifting. None of these ruin a book on their own but together, they quietly break immersion.

2. Sentence fatigue
Good sentences can still be doing too much. Long constructions, repeated rhythms, or unclear emphasis can wear a reader down faster than you’d expect.

3. Language that distracts instead of supports
Overexplaining, unintentional repetition, or awkward phrasing can pull attention away from the story even when the writing itself is solid.

This is the stage where a manuscript stops sounding like a draft and starts reading like a finished book.

When the language is doing its job, the reader isn’t thinking about it at all—they’re just inside the story.

One question that comes up a lot in self-publishing is the difference between copyediting and proofreading.Copyediting h...
02/04/2026

One question that comes up a lot in self-publishing is the difference between copyediting and proofreading.

Copyediting happens while the manuscript is still flexible. It focuses on language: clarity, consistency, flow, and making sure the writing reads smoothly from sentence to sentence.

Proofreading comes later, after the book has been laid out. At that point, the text should already be set, and the goal is to catch small errors before printing or upload.

They’re two different stages, meant to happen in a specific order. When they get swapped, it often creates extra work instead of saving time.

A manuscript can be clear, engaging, and well written—and still need editorial work.Grammar and style focus on consisten...
02/03/2026

A manuscript can be clear, engaging, and well written—and still need editorial work.

Grammar and style focus on consistency and clarity, so the language supports the story instead of pulling attention away from it.

That’s often the difference between a draft that reads well and one that feels finished.

A manuscript can be strong and still stall.When things stall, its often because steps are out of order not because the w...
01/30/2026

A manuscript can be strong and still stall.

When things stall, its often because steps are out of order not because the writing isn’t good.

When revision, editing, and formatting happen out of order, the work gets harder, more expensive, and less effective than it needs to be.

Each stage is meant to prepare the manuscript for the next one not replace it.

Good publishing outcomes come from doing the right work at the right stage, with clear intent.

That’s how a book moves forward cleanly.

Many writers reach a point where the manuscript feels finished, yet something still feels uncertain.That uncertainty usu...
01/26/2026

Many writers reach a point where the manuscript feels finished, yet something still feels uncertain.

That uncertainty usually isn’t about talent or effort, only timing.

Manuscripts move through stages for a reason. Each stage prepares the work for what comes next, whether that’s deeper revision, formatting, or publication.

When editorial work is scoped thoughtfully, the book moves forward with fewer setbacks, cleaner decisions, and better long-term results.

At Lioness Press, the focus is on helping authors understand where their work is in the process, and what support will serve it best at that moment.

Strong books are built with intention, never rushed.

Address

Houston, TX

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+12814029282

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