Gallery Items tagged Book
Whether you’re writing fiction or non-fiction, a short story or long textbook, these templates and examples provide a fast and effective way to start composing your latest work. All the required components – such as chapters, sections, title pages, glossaries, acknowledgements -- are set out ready for your content. Just open the template and start writing!
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Krantz book template
Krantz book template for CRC / C&H.
Slava Lyubchich, Shashi Kumar

Thesis Template
This is a Book version of my "All-in-one" template, designed specifically for those who are working on more extensive projects, like a thesis (thus, the template name). Like "All-in-one", it is designed to be versatile and customizable, making it suitable for various academic and professional purposes, looking minimalistic yet keeping the professional feel.
Should you have any questions, you can check the repo: https://github.com/mariovilar/Thesis-Template. Also, you can reach me via e-mail. Hope you find it useful!
Mario Vilar

Little Book
Template for a PDF e-book that fits on a phone screen.
Originally created for the "Little Book of Deep Learning" by François Fleuret (2023): https://fleuret.org/francois/lbdl.html
License: Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
François Fleuret

Preprint Book Manuscript Template
The "Preprint Book Manuscript Template" is a LaTeX document template designed to assist authors in preparing professional and aesthetically pleasing book manuscripts for preprints or draft versions. This template is ideal for researchers, academics, and authors who want to share their work in a book format with a professional touch.
Agni Datta

Fiction Template
A simple template for writing fiction, set up in eBook format. Includes line break and major break macros and a folder of reference files for storing information on characters, plot and setting.
Oz Locke

D&D 5e LaTeX Korean Template
A Korean version of D&D 5e LaTeX Template,
originally created by rpgtex
github repo: https://github.com/ShoyuVanilla/DND-5e-LaTeX-Template-Korean
last updated: Apr 26, 2020
License: The MIT License (MIT)
Shoyu Vanilla

Sprint Beyond the Book (2016)
Emerging technologies continue to transform the ways we collect, synthesize, disseminate, and consume information. These advances present both hazards and opportunities for the future of scholarly publication and communication. During this book sprint—presented by the Center for Science and the Imagination at Arizona State University and the Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP) and embedded in SSP’s 2016 annual meeting in Vancouver—we discussed issues of increasing scholarly impact and accessibility, wondered whether computers can make scholarly contributions that warrant co-authorship, speculated about what forms scholarly books may take in the future, and more.
Tackling ambitious and often ambiguous questions like these requires a diverse group of thinkers and writers and an innovative approach to writing. The book sprint method provides this innovation. Throughout the annual meeting, we held six miniature book sprints. During each sprint, we convened a group of four to six writers to tackle one of six big questions. Each sprint began with a facilitated conversation, followed by time for our writers to reflect and compose a piece of writing inspired by the conversation. Each piece was composed on Overleaf using this template specially created for this undertaking.
Conferences like the SSP annual meeting and scholarly publications themselves are often undergirded by spontaneous, inspiring, thought-provoking conversations among colleagues and collaborators, but those conversations are rarely captured and shared, and are often clouded in memory, even for the participants. The book sprint process hopefully absorbs some of the kismet and energy of those initial conversations, right at the start of a big idea, and makes it part of a more durable intellectual product—and a possible springboard for additional conversations in a broader range of times and places. The work would not have been possible without the contributions of our four core sprinters—Madeline Ashby, Annalee Newitz, Roopika Risam, and Ido Roll—who participated in every session, and the many SSP members who participated in the individual sprints and shared their expertise.
All of our content is free to read at http://sprintbeyondthebook.com, and free to download and share under a Creative Commons license.
Created collaboratively in 72 hours at SSP2016 — see PDF for full author and contributor lists

Machine Learning for Trading
Document describing basic economic and statistical analysis and how to apply them to machine learning
Ryan Babaie and Neil Hardy

Eugène Sue - Los Misterios del Pueblo
Tomo IV. Traducción al español
Juan D'Adamo