I can see the problem though. What you are describing, Hitch, is much how you would create a document in Sigil. If you can do Sigil, if you want, you can do Word.
But if you have trouble with one you are going to have trouble with the other.
It may be a bit unfair, but I detect among some authors an attitude along the lines of "I am the great artiste, the next Shakespeare, I need not trouble myself with details, my words are golden and must be laid out on the page thus, as I also am the next Leonardo Da Vinci."
Such a person is not going to condescend to learn his/her tools.
If you are Winston Churchill you can truly say, "I am a great man." Most of these people are only illustrative of Ted Sturgeon's law: "85% of everything is crap."
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