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Editors in action. |
It was time. I had put it off as long as I could, but
finally, it had reached a point where it couldn’t be avoided. The preparations had all been made and it was
finally time for the surgery. I had
mixed feelings about it, to be honest. I
mean, it was a necessary procedure and my progress was going to be stunted
unless I went through with it. Of
course, I was nervous as hell. Who wants
to go under the knife? It’s scary. The
results aren’t always what we expect and sometimes, there’s quite a bit of work
to do afterward. Still, I had gone as
far as I could go. It was time to just
let it happen and hope for the best.
With a deep breath, I passed my novella off to my three
surgeons-in-residence.
Having someone else edit your
writing is scary, but necessary. I had
been working hard on Reaping the Harvest for the past seven months. It was a horrible short story I had written
in 2009 and forgotten about until the spring of last year. I pulled it back out and decided it was too
much story to cram into 5,000 words, so I divided it up into sections and
started creating chapters. Over the past
seven months, I’ve added subplots, created characters and stretched 5,000 words
into 50,000. Finally, the first draft
was done.
The Editors-in-Residence |
From there, I moved to
revisions. My knife cut out sections
that didn’t work as I added scenes and facts for a better flow. After my second draft was complete, I did a
third and even a fourth. Once I was
satisfied, I did what I called a spit polish.
I read through it one more time, tweaking the tiny blunders I might have
made, such as having Renny Saunders blonde in one scene and brunette in another. At that point, it was time to pass it on to
my editors-in-residence.
You have heard me talking about
these ladies before at The Mess. They
are three ladies I live with that enjoy pointing out what a clueless man I can
be at times. Every manuscript goes
through them before it sees a manila envelope or a computer screen. So, I printed out a fresh copy for each,
punched holes in it and put the story in a three-ring binder for each of
them. They provided their own pens, of
course. They borrow mine enough as it
is, and ink is a precious thing.
Then, I waited.
When in a waiting room while
someone you care about it under the knife, you have two choices. You can either pace the carpet bare with
worry or you can do something to occupy your mind so that your imagination
doesn’t run wild with you. I already had
fears of my manuscript being a waste of a murdered tree, so I didn’t need to
stare at the girls while they tried to concentrate. Instead, I began working on my next project,
Losing Faith, which is already through the first draft.
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My waiting spot. |
Some have asked if having the
ones I live with edit my novella was a good idea. “They’re not going to want to tell you if it
sucks and risk hurting your feelings.”
To that, I can honestly say, I am not concerned. They’ve never worried about hurting my
feelings before and I doubt they’ll start now.
Besides, they don’t want to be embarrassed if I put out a piece of crap
and they have to be associated with it.
No, my success is their success and they need me to provide my portion
of the rent.
Furthermore, I gain the added
feature of three varying perspectives.
Each of the girls read differently and enjoys different things in a
novel. Rarely do they even read the same
genre. Therefore, if I can keep them entertained, I stand a decent chance of
entertaining others. This was made very
clear when I received the notebooks back and began to examine the red marks and
questions. In some chapters, they each picked out something different that was
wrong with my manuscript. Some I agreed
with and fixed and some I stuck to my guns and left it as is. However, the few times all three zoned in on
something, I knew I needed to make changes.
Passing the manuscript off to
another, or even a set of others, helps give me a break from it for a
while. We can look at our own words so
much that we cease to see them. I
did. Rhychard fell asleep in an easy
chair woke up on the couch. I’ve read it
so many times that I’ve ceased reading it and my mind either sees or doesn’t
see what it wants to have on the screen. I need a break, and to paraphrase from
singles all over the world, “It’s not the manuscript; it’s me.”
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Coming Soon...Real Soon. |
When I received the girls’ edits
back, the first thing I did was read through each one. I was surprised at what I had missed and
thankful that they caught what they did.
The story flows much better now, and Renny is definitely a blonde. I spent
the weekend working the edits, putting my patient through revision therapy and
fixed my blunders. Another will read it,
making her critique and then the patient will be released. It’s been an exciting, sometimes
nerve-wracking experience, but one I am eager to go through again. And again.
I am fortunate to have surgeons
skilled in the precision of the red ink.
Don’t go it alone if you’re a writer.
We’ve seen the work of some too eager to publish and the quality of
their writing suffers. Eight eyes are
better than two and four minds are better than one. My surgeons are great and I’m eager to see
how the patient does when released from my care. May it have a long and happy life.
*****
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For Further Reading ~ It's All in the Follow Through
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ReplyDeleteRobbie, you're a lucky man. I wish I had in house editors. I did the best I could on my own, but like you my mind sees what it wants to see sometimes. Of course some of my siblings were quick to point out my little mistakes after my work was already out there on amazon.com. When I asked them to put those valuable eyes to work on the second book, everyone was too busy doing their own thing. Unable to afford a real editor or proofreader, I had to go it alone. Now I'm stuck with the results. So take care of your in house editors and be sure to appreciate them every chance you get.
ReplyDeleteI know what you mean. Once they pointed out some of my errors, I was flabbergasted that I missed them. I plan on treating them nice and protecting my investment. They save me more than anything else lol. Thanks, Robert, for sharing and visiting me at The Mess.
DeleteWow...I think I'm going to have to fly your team of surgeons north to NJ!! What a wonderful thing to have an in-house editing team. I know I can read the same story one hundred times and still make the same mistakes, I see what I want to see rather than what I have really typed. It's so difficult to edit our own work and I have enough trouble proofing my blogs let alone an entire manuscript. I have Laurie proof as often as she can but when it comes to my book, I'm going to have to hire out. Can't wait to read your upcoming new release...
ReplyDeleteThey read even my blogs before I post and the ones with mistakes is the ones I put up without their thumbs up..lol. I couldn't believe the mess ups I had read right over and never saw. It's a humbling experience. Thanks for commenting!
DeleteI love your witty way of taking a lesson and making it fun. Having fresh, honest eyes to read a draft is sooo important to an author who wants to be taken seriously. I do it so well that I have turned it into a business. Sure my clients may curse me when I accuse them of jumping into the story with their characters, but in the end, they come back for more fearless redlining... This is a post that needs to be seen by the masses...I'll see what I can do to help..
ReplyDeleteThank you, Christina :)
DeleteIt's never a fun process, but it is a necessary one, especially with my weaknesses. It pays to have people, especially gifted people, read things through before sending out of the nest. I am sure your clients are made stronger in their work by your careful touch. Thank you, as always, for visiting and commenting.
Sorry for my delaying in commenting… smiles! I would have to agree that this is one of the toughest steps for a writer. You do have to take a deep breath before you begin the flipping through the pages of edits. But you are amazing in making the jump from that fear to reminding yourself that “they are here to help me and help improve on my writing”. You welcome criticism easily… even when it stings… smiles! Sometimes you are even eager for it… laffs! Great post… as always!
ReplyDeleteThank you :) And you can only get better by accepting criticism. Thanks for the kind words and for visiting.
DeleteRobbie,
ReplyDeleteSuch a great post with the surgery metaphor. Of course as a nurse and a writer I loved it! I can't wait to read your book and am wondering if these editors of yours are for rent! I will need some by the end of the summer!
Thank you :) And I'm hoping to keep them busy here again real soon....lol. I have A Confused Life for the end of May and Losing Faith by the end of August.
DeleteThanks for every other fantastic post. Where else may just anyone get that kind of information in such a perfect method of writing?
ReplyDeleteI have a presentation subsequent week, and I'm at the look for such information.
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I'm glad you have enjoyed them and found them helpful. Thanks for visiting!
DeleteGreat blog here Robbie! I wish also that I had your surgeons. I paid 3 editors to find the typos and the errors, and still, there were more. They were not shy about charging me thousands to give me back my book with mistakes. I learned a lot. One of the things I learned is when to use Who's and when to use Whose. :)
ReplyDeleteYou got it good!
Thank you :) They were awesome at helping me see what I had skipped over because I was looking at it over and over for so long. They taught me quite a bit, as well. Thanks for visiting and commenting!
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