How to publish a poetry collection
Poetry is the format most often ruined in production, because the people laying it out treat it like prose. In a poem, the line break is the meaning. Here’s how to publish a collection without breaking the poems.
Build the collection, don’t just gather it
A collection is more than a folder of poems. The order matters: a strong opening, a shape across the whole, sections if the work calls for them, a close that lands. Read it through as one object. Cut the poems that are only “good enough” — a tight, shorter collection beats a padded one.
Place your poems first (it helps the book)
Most poetry careers are built poem by poem, in magazines and competitions, before the collection exists. Publication credits strengthen your standing and many collections list them in the acknowledgements. If you haven’t started, our contests directory lists open poetry prizes and magazines worldwide.
Typesetting poetry is a craft of its own
This is where books go wrong. Watch for:
- Line breaks are sacred. A poem’s lines must break where the poet intended — never reflow or re-wrap to fit the page. The page must be set to hold them.
- Trim size to fit the longest line. Choose a trim wide enough that your longest lines don’t wrap. If a line must run over, use a consistent hanging indent so the reader knows it’s one line, not two.
- One poem per page, usually. Short poems each get their own page; longer poems flow with clear, controlled page breaks that never split a stanza badly.
- Space is part of the poem. Stanza spacing, indents and white space carry meaning. A template can’t make these calls; a typesetter reading the poems can.
The eBook problem — and the fix
A standard reflowable eBook re-wraps every line to the reader’s screen and font size, which destroys line breaks. For poetry you need an eBook built to preserve line breaks and use hanging indents for run-overs — or, for formally complex or visual poetry, a fixed-layout eBook. Don’t let a generic conversion mangle your line endings.
Front matter and permissions
Include a contents list, a dedication if you wish, and an acknowledgements page crediting magazines and anthologies where poems first appeared — standard courtesy in poetry. If you quote epigraphs from other poets, check permissions.
The cover
Poetry covers are usually quieter and more typographic than fiction — but no less considered. Original, never AI.
Where Librum fits
We typeset poetry by reading it — protecting every line break, choosing a trim that fits your longest line, and building an eBook that doesn’t mangle the lines. Plus cover and, if you want to reach Serbian readers, translation.
Questions
How many poems should a collection have?+
A full collection is often 40–70 poems (around 60–90 pages), but quality decides, not a number. A pamphlet/chapbook is shorter.
Why does my eBook break the lines of my poems?+
Because a standard reflowable eBook re-wraps text. A poetry-aware eBook preserves line breaks and uses hanging indents instead.
Do I need to publish poems in magazines first?+
It isn’t required, but credits strengthen a collection and are customary to acknowledge. Our contests directory lists where to submit.