Having just finished reading Vanity Fair, I was fascinated by the
observations of the editor of my 1983 Penguin version. Besides providing helpful notes
at the end of the novel, J.I.M. Stewart offered an entertaining and
enlightening introduction.
This may be of interest – or,
indeed, may offer some amusement – to writers (as well as readers!)
Thackeray wrote the book in
serial form, which was quite normal for the times – the 1800s. Often, the author
may have been writing one installment while the previous episode was being
published, a veritable production line with tight deadlines. This did, however,
present problems.
As Stewart observed, ‘strange
inadvertences were sometimes its consequence. Characters change their Christian
names and even their surnames as the book goes on; they turn up at impossible
times in impossible places; they even turn up alive after being dead.’ (Vanity Fair, p9)
Naturally, most of these discrepancies
can be corrected when the serial book is collected into a novel for subsequent
publication. Thackeray revised his novel’s text in 1853, addressing
inconsistencies of place and time and other errors.
It’s worth noting that even
modern classics persist in containing errors. Henry James’s The Ambassadors was published in 1903
with two chapters in reverse order, and the error remained undetected until
1950! My copy of To Kill A Mockingbird was a reprint dated 1997; and it had been
reprinted no less than 42 times in this paperback format. There are easily
thirty typing errors in the text – even one on the first page – yet no
publisher considered correcting them in all those years. A shameful way to
treat a modern classic; it looks as though later editions have been
re-scrutinised, thankfully.
Self-edit until you’re
satisfied, then hope the publisher’s editor will spot anything you’ve missed.
But don’t expect the finished published product to be without error. Sadly,
some errors prove to be very elusive indeed. But take heart, you're not alone...
2 comments:
Interesting - I occasionally find spelling errors or time and place inconsistencies, but not often. Great post.
Thanks, Neil! Do share, if you wish... :)
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