I Love Editing
I should make that my bumper sticker. I know it's not a favorite pastime of a lot of writers, but it's one I personally adore because it teaches me so much.
There's editing the draft, that version your CPs carve into little pieces for you to cobble back together with spit and shoelaces. And then there's the polished draft where you wait like a death row inmate while your editor decides how much trouble you're going to be.
I won't kid you. I've been very lucky when it comes to editors. The first ones were absolute sweethearts for being so patient with me, and even more gracious when they took the time to answer my syntax questions. (I always have to understand why a sentence is parsed a certain way.) But the fun stuff is when we discuss story.
There's editing the draft, that version your CPs carve into little pieces for you to cobble back together with spit and shoelaces. And then there's the polished draft where you wait like a death row inmate while your editor decides how much trouble you're going to be.
I won't kid you. I've been very lucky when it comes to editors. The first ones were absolute sweethearts for being so patient with me, and even more gracious when they took the time to answer my syntax questions. (I always have to understand why a sentence is parsed a certain way.) But the fun stuff is when we discuss story.
The improvements my editor asks me to make drives me giddy with expectation. Things like: Tell me what's in the room. Give me more tension here. Or my perennial favorite: Shut off the waterworks (for when the heroine brims with tears for the nth time). Oy!
Some editors can be brusque with their instructions. But I never take it personally. This is their job. They must look at hundreds of stories and they're not there to hold your hand. When my editor says add tension *here*, I snap to it like it was an imperial mandate.
I trust my editor and I trust her instincts. She makes me look better. But the icing on the cake is that every time I work with an editor I learn something new about writing a better story. I love that!
There are many things I dislike about publishing. But editing isn't one of them. It's like getting a second chance to score in the big game.
Why am I talking about editing today? Because I just finished edits for Apocalypse Rising. Huzzah! It won't be long now.
Why am I talking about editing today? Because I just finished edits for Apocalypse Rising. Huzzah! It won't be long now.
***
I'm feeling more human today. Greg came up to check on me over the weekend and I'm glad he did. Canada decided to pay us a visit and dropped an arctic blast on us. We have snow! I know--it's not a big deal to most of you, but snow is kind of a novelty down here.
Greg blew out all the water lines (to prevent them from freezing) then went out and loaded the chicken feeder to the brim so I wouldn't have to go out there so much. He took good care of me while he was here. But now he's gone again.
I've been lax visiting some of you because of this flu, but I should be back on my game this week.
What's new? What are you writing or reading?
I started the new Tracy Anne Warren books and I'm enjoying them very much. I will definitely read more of her work.
Comments
I have to say that I LOVE editing too. It's my favortie part. It's the actual "putting those first words on the page" that is a killer.
I wonder if it had anything to do with living five days like a cavewoman.
My problem is fleshing. Most every book ends out as 50,000 words before editing. It always looks finished to me, but when my CPs look at it, they tell me: Add more here, dummy.
--Well, they don't actually say, dummy. But I can hear it in their crit. LOL
Glad to hear that you're feeling a little better.
Right now I'm reading "Home For A Spell" by Madelyn Alt and "Thieves!" by Hannah Dennison.
I'm glad someone else tends to write short on their first draft - I find it a lot easier to flesh out afterwards than slowing dowm my pace - I get too excited about finishing the story!
Anyway, take care of you x
It's fascinating reading about your relationship with your editor. At the moment I've only submitted to small press publications, but when they've sent me proofs to check, I've carefully noted any changes they've made - it's like getting professional advice for free!
Right now I'm reading Saddled, a memoir about how the author's horse really turned her life around and saved her from her own destruction.
Mason
Thoughts in Progress
I’m currently reading "True Believers" (I wonder who wrote it, haha). It’s the first sci-fi book I’ve ever read, but not the last. I really like it. I also just finished reading “Rawhide and Roses” by Maddie James and that was a pretty good book. As of last month, I review at “Happily Ever After Reviews” so that gives me a great opportunity to experience new authors.
It's a little like dressing a Christmas tree. You just keep going over it until it's shiny. :)
Joanne: I hope you'll post a review of Saddled when you're finished. I love books with animals.
Mason: Ref: visit from the snow fairy--LOL. I love that. It does look like a fairyland around here.
Ref: I’m currently reading "True Believers" (I wonder who wrote it, haha).
:grin: I dunno. But I hope that author doesn't let you down.
How cool that you're reviewing for HEA! I'll go look them up.
***
Sarah: I think recovered a little faster than normal considering it was the flu. It was probably because of all my clean living. :eye roll: LOL.
Thanks, Sarah.
But I feel so much better today. I have to go off and see what you guys have been up to.
I'm not so crazy about editing myself but I guess that's because I'm still in the "doing it on my own" phase. I'm sure it will be different when I have all that great editor input to work with. Someday...
Like you, I tend to write short and more or less rely upon my fab crit partners to help me sort out where things should be expanded. Without adding fluff!
As for what's happening here in the frozen but snowless north (we recently had a bout of rain that melted much of what was on the ground), I recently finished a ms and will start on edits soon. Also mulling the plot of the next book.
Glad you're feeling better!
Ref: editing
They do make it enjoyable, don't they? I really look forward to it.
That's all I'm saying.
Well, that and hope you feel better soon :)
Editing-I didn't think I'd enjoy it as much as I did, but having a boffo editor helps. My crit partners are key in getting the ms ready, however, so they deserve a lot of credit.
The irony of that? I used to edit for a publishing house... lol...
If I could finish a draft and give it to my evil twin to edit, I'd be great with that. Yeah, I learn every time I do edits. Yeah, I grow. I get better. Blah blah.
I still hate editing.
And -- send us some snow, please. My DH is VERY cranky at not being able to go snowmobiling and I don't like a cranky DH.
Glad you're feeling a little better. :-)
Ref: We're usually wetter and warmer here (boy, that sounds a little dirty)
Why, yes. Yes it does. LOL. Where is your husband right now, Cathy? I have a feeling he better stick close to home. :)
Ref: The irony of that? I used to edit for a publishing house...
You gotta wonder if that has anything to do with it.
I'll see what I can do about the snow. It's pretty, but we're not equipped for it down here. The traffic accidents have been epic today.
Blog about your book when you're done. I'd like to hear about it.
Not actually reading anything at the moment :gasp:
I keep saying next up is Jordan Summers' Crimson but then I also want/need to start a re-read of Karen Marie Moning's Fever series so everything will be fresh in my mind when the final installment comes out on the 18th...
So many books...so little time
Making you an "I love editing" bumper sticker (well, a virtual one, but I guess you could print it out and slap it on a car!) will be my next adventure in photoshopping :)
Congrats on finishing AR edits!
Glad you're feeling better, Maria.
Jenny: Whaddya think? We could be sisters under the skin. :grin:
Thanks for coming over guys!
And, uh...sorry about the snow. My arms ache from shoveling and honestly, it's so cold the boogers ran screaming back into my sinuses just stepping outside. Do you know how much frozen sinuses hurt? A lot. We had to send some of it somewhere.
Ref: snow
When you live in the north, you get used to it. Doesn't make it any better--but you get used to it.
I find I complain more about the cold now (living in Texas) than I ever did when I lived in Chicago.
I have to agree about editors. All of mine have taught me so much. I don't understand writers who fight the editing process.