Yeah, I know...fools rush in and all that stuff.
I am a steel and aluminum kind of guy, but a cheap SOB, so when my buddy got into the granite import game years ago, I built some equipment to unload sheets from sea cans and in exchange got a few sheets. I did a kitchen island with low work and high eating surfaces, fireplace surfaces, some bathrooms, etc. Then several years later did all of the kitchen counter tops (along with whole kitchen).
You need some tooling, equipment, and a LOT of patience, but you should be able to do a decent job. I start out with a very flat trailer deck and lay the sheet down on 1" or 1 1/2" styrene foam sheets. Cutting is done with a water cooled saw (I couldn't find one, so made one up - sacrificial, but ran for the whole of both sessions) and a 4" or 5" length of extruded 6063 1/2" flat bar for a cutting guide. Lay everything out a dozen times on paper, then carefully mark the stone with felt markers. I did the inside corners with diamond drills for 2 x 45s or hole saw for round and did 45 degree trims on outside corners (little kids, need less damaging collisions). Also used saw for 1/2" 45 bevel on top edge. Then, water cooled grinder to clean up and polish everything cut. Also, I HATE holes with sinks in them, took the bathroom ones to water jet for cutting, but chose a top mount very large farm sink with valance on the face to give a clean and simple cut edge to each side. All worked like a darn.