A book is never finished is what they say, and they're right. You get to a point where you have to be satisfied with the work. There will always be things to change, scenes or descriptions to add, bits to change... but you have to let go. So a book is never finished, it's abandoned.
I've just finished my book, having a thorough self-edit more than once.
Things I needed to sort out:
nodded occurred 53 occasions; I reduced them to 18.
smiled - 58, reduced to 24
grinned - 30, reduced to 12
sighed - only 7...!
laughed - 14, reduced to 6
just - 104 (but that included inclusion in other words, such as 'justified') - reduced to 48
down - 90 (but the same applied, with words like 'downstairs' etc) - reduced to 30
Then I did the final spell check to eliminate any oddities.
And I have just sent it off to my publisher.
Now, it's the waiting game.
(While I get on with another book, which I'm already 18,000 words into...)
Showing posts with label edit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label edit. Show all posts
Tuesday, 25 March 2014
Thursday, 24 October 2013
Editing tips – Abandoned babies
Writing
a novel is a lot like having a baby – easy to conceive, hard to deliver…
I've used that analogy in talks about writing. Sometimes a mother points out that writing is nothing like childbirth, and of course she’s right. Still, the analogy holds up, after a fashion. Writers view their newly created books very much like a new baby – and worry about sending it out into that wide world (i.e. to publishers, editors et al).
I've used that analogy in talks about writing. Sometimes a mother points out that writing is nothing like childbirth, and of course she’s right. Still, the analogy holds up, after a fashion. Writers view their newly created books very much like a new baby – and worry about sending it out into that wide world (i.e. to publishers, editors et al).
Truth
is, a book is never finished, it’s abandoned.
No
matter how professional, dedicated and thorough you are, there will always be
things to change. It’s a given.
Some
authors are so aware of this pressing urge to improve the book that once it’s
published they don’t read it again, ever. They don’t want to spot the mistakes or
that less than perfect prose. True, in this digital age, it should be possible
to correct errors. And a few publishers might oblige in that respect; it means
that more than one version of the book will be out there; maybe the earlier
version will become a collectors’ item, complete with errors! Purists might say, Well, get it right in the first place. There is no perfect book despite the 5-stars. Many come very close.
I’m
brought to this realisation after having just read through a final edit of Spanish Eye from Crooked Cat. Granted,
many of the outstanding issues relate to versions of English. The book started
out in UK English, was changed to US, and now it’s being changed back to UK.
Writing for both sides of the Pond, I sometimes wonder if perhaps I’ve a
tendency to write mid-Atlantic English, if there is such an animal! Even so, despite
the American spellings and words, I’m sure I’ll find a better way to write a
particular phrase or scene – always. So I must resist that impulse at this late
stage – or it will never get published. I must abandon it.
Spanish Eye - Crooked Cat - 29 November 2013
It’s
a great achievement to finish a book. No mean feat. All praise to anyone who
does it. Still, don’t rush.
No
matter how anxious you are to send out your book, leave it alone for a few
days. Allow it to gestate. Come back to it fresh, with ‘new’ eyes, and give it
one final read. If the gestation period is long enough, maybe a week or so, you’ll
find that you’re more critical, and not as wrapped up in the work as its
creator, skimming words and scenes since you remember them so well. It’s fresh
and has to be read, word for word. That’s a hard call – to wait, to re-read. But
I do recommend it.
Yes,
if it’s accepted, there’s the publisher’s editor available to spot errors or
inappropriate words and phrases. But that doesn’t mean you should be cavalier
about your contract with the next reader of your manuscript. Strive to make it
the best you can. It will always fall short, in retrospect. But strive,
nevertheless. Because the next reader of your book is the publisher or agent.
If glaring errors jump out, then they might just be sufficient to turn off the
publisher. I’ve seen careless errors on the first page of a submission – which should
have been spotted after the gestation stage. If the story has a hook, then I’ll
read on; not every acquisitions editor or agent will, however.
So,
you must abandon your baby – but only after the gestation period and the final
check.
Good
luck!
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