Translate a Book from English to Italian
Who This Guide Is For
Authors launching an Italian edition who want natural Italian tone and stronger market fit than literal translation.
Typical Cost Examples by Word Count
Book translation is roughly 1 credit per word per target language.
- 40,000 words -> about 40,000 credits
- 80,000 words -> about 80,000 credits
- 120,000 words -> about 120,000 credits
Use How Pricing Works for full pricing details.
Step-by-Step Workflow in Bookshift
- Prepare DOCX/EPUB/TXT/HTML file and confirm minimum length.
- Submit in Translate a Book.
- Select Italian and compare title alternatives.
- Submit and monitor job status in dashboard.
- Download Italian EPUB/DOCX and marketing outputs.
- Proofread before publishing.
Language-Pair Pitfalls (English -> Italian)
- Direct carryover of English sentence structure.
- Register mismatches (too formal or too casual for genre).
- Dialogue style inconsistency across chapters.
Title and Subtitle Localization Tips for Italian Market
- Keep titles fluid and idiomatic in Italian.
- Prefer genre clarity over strict literal equivalence.
- Check subtitle length so it remains readable in storefront cards.
Metadata and Keyword Tips for Italian Market
- Start from generated keyword sets and adapt to natural Italian queries.
- Keep blurb rhythm conversational but clear.
- Match metadata voice to your genre expectations.
Cover Localization Notes for Italian Market
- Translate title/subtitle/series text on the cover.
- Rebalance text if Italian phrasing is longer than English.
- Use Translate Cover if you need quick cover text localization.
Common Mistakes
- Publishing without checking dialogue punctuation consistency.
- Reusing English keywords directly.
- Skipping final metadata quality review.
Troubleshooting
- If prose feels rigid, run proofreading translation mode.
- If cover text overflows, simplify subtitle wording.
- If keyword performance is weak, iterate with native-style phrasing.
FAQ
Is Italian supported as a target language?
Yes, Bookshift supports Italian in the translation workflow.
Can I keep my own Italian subtitle?
Yes. You can edit title/subtitle choices before submission.
Should I proofread after translation?
Yes, especially for tone and idiomatic phrasing.
Related Guides
- Translate by Language Hub
- Translate a Book: Step-by-Step
- Proofreading Modes Explained
- Translate Cover
Next Step
Move to Publishing by Market for listing prep, then start your Italian submission at Submit.