Putting together a clean, useful metadata packet for a PDF like 'The Bold Novel' is one of those little joys that pays off for readers and librarians alike. I always include the obvious bibliographic bits first: title, author(s), translator (if any), publisher, ISBN/ASIN, publication date and edition. Then I add a concise synopsis and genre tags so someone skimming a download page knows whether it’s literary fiction, fantasy, or something
odder.
Beyond those basics I pack in technical and rights info: file format (PDF), PDF version, file size, page count, MIME type, checksum (MD5 or SHA-256), whether fonts are embedded, and if the file is tagged for accessibility or PDF/A compliant. I also note DRM/password protection status, license or copyright statement (for example, 'All rights reserved' or 'CC BY-NC'), and provenance/source URL.
Finally I attach extras that readers appreciate: cover image, table of contents/bookmarks,
recommended reading age, language, series name and number, editor/cover artist credits, and a short author bio. Throw in a few keywords and an APA/MLA citation string and I’m happy — makes downloads discoverable and respectful of creators. I usually finish with a casual note about any known errata so readers don’t trip over formatting quirks, which I find reassuring.