Copyright page—Usually the verso of the title page, this page carries the copyright notice, edition information, publication information, printing history, cataloging data, legal notices, and the books ISBN or identification number. In addition, rows of numbers are sometimes printed at the bottom of the page to indicate the year and number of the printing. Credits for design, production, editing and illustration are also commonly listed on the copyright page.
This page and its contents are the way your book is represented to
librarians, bibliographers, other publishers, quantity sales buyers, writers
wishing to use quotations from your book, and production planners of future
editions.
The single most important element on the copyright page is, no surprise, the copyright notice itself. It usually consists of three elements:
Together, it should look like this:
© 2009 Joel Friedlander
Many of these items may not be applicable to your book, but this is where the publisher has to fit all the legal notices and other information for use by the book trade. Keep in mind that a reservation of rights is vital, and the publisher’s contact information is practical and appropriate. So here’s the rundown of other elements on the copyright page:
When you come to creating your own copyright page, pick the elements that seem most suitable to your book. Keep the whole thing as unobtrusive as possible and you can’t go wrong.