Here are a couple of scripts that I wrote two years ago.  They are very 
simple, but it took quite a while to figure-out all of the command-line 
options that were needed.  They rely upon the PSUtils package 
(specifically, "pstops") to reformat your Postscript files.  They are 
hereby placed into the Public Domain in the hopes that they will be 
useful to someone.
The first script (make_book) creates booklets, you know, a normal 
letter-sized piece of paper turned landcape and folded in half, with all 
of the pages stapled along the spine.  You create a normal file (i.e. in 
StarOffice), with normal portrait-oriented letter-sized pages (no 
shrinking, no rotating).  There is nothing about this document that is 
special to making booklets, except that you might want to use a 14pt or 
18pt font (it is going to be scaled-down), and: Make sure that the 
number of pages is evenly divisible by four (4,8,12,16,24,...); add 
extra blank pages if you have to.  You can decide the best place to add 
the blank pages.  Maybe the page after your Title Page or after your 
Table of Contents should be blank.  After you have invoked some sort of 
"Print to File" (simple in StarOffice and most other programs), you run 
"make_book original.ps newfile.ps".  The script: shrinks the page images 
to fit on the half-page area, turns the paper orientation to landscape, 
and re-shuffles your pages so that the left-hand side of the first sheet 
of paper contains "page 24" and the right-hand side of the same sheet of 
paper contains "page 1".  The next sheet of paper contains "page 2" on 
the left and "page 23" on the right, and so on.  You can use "lpr" to 
print this new Postscript file, or use "ps2pdf" to create an Acrobat 
file (which you can even give to a Windoze user for printing!)
The second script (make_card) takes a four-page Postscript file (see 
above on creating Postscript files from StarOffice and others).  It 
creates one of those cheesy four-fold greeting cards that PrintShop made 
famous.  Before folding, this is a normal sheet of paper, that contains 
four "page images".  The top two page images are upside-down.  First you 
fold the paper in half (so that 8.5" x 11" becomes 8.5" x 5.5"), then 
you fold it in half again (to 4.25" x 5.5").  The make_card script 
ensures that "page 1" of your StarOffice document is the front of the 
card, "page 2" is the inside left panel of the card, "page 3" is the 
inside right panel, and "page 4" is the back of the card.  If you want a 
more Hallmark-ish card, use make_book with a four-page source file (you 
get a greeting card that is 8.5" x 5.5").  The best thing about the 
cheesy four-fold card is that you don't have to print on both sides of 
the paper to get a card with printing on all four panels.  I wrote the 
make_card script when my wife complained that Linux couldn't do what 
PrintShop did.
If you are going to do this a lot (for printing, not PDF files), you 
could even create new /etc/printcap entries that invoke the scripts (use 
stdin/stdout, get rid of the "cat $1" and "> $2" parts).  You could have 
a printer named "booklet" and a printer named "greeting_card".
make_book:
#!/bin/sh
cat $1 | pstops -pletter -b 
"4:1L@.7(8in,0)+-2L@.7(8in,.5h),-3L@.7(8in,0)+0L@.7(8in,.5h)" > $2
make_card:
#!/bin/sh
cat $1 | pstops -pletter -b 
"4:3U@.5(1w,1h)+0U@.5(.5w,1h)+1@.5(0,0)+2@.5(.5w,0)" > $2
--ronan
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