Sunday 1 February 2015

The Editing Process: 4 Top Tips

 2015 is Authorpreneur Almanac year. 

Join me in my 365 Adventures in Writing and Entrepreneurship...

This week, I finished the first draft of part 1 of my third book, Gabriel's Game.

This story is in two parts, written as two novella's.

Book 1: The White Queen

Book 2: The Black Knight


I saw an interesting reference recently that sums up the drafting process:

The first draft is filling the bucket with sand, you only have a sandcastle when you've tipped it out and molded it.

Getting your story out of your head and onto the page is just the start. Next comes the lengthy and sometimes traumatic editing process.

For me, there are four key stages in the process of going from first draft to something publishable. I've plotted them out on a flow diagram below:

1) 1st Draft and 2nd Draft. On the image, I show a double headed arrow because I edit as I go. I'm not one of those writers who writes without making corrections as they go along, I've tried it, it doesn't work for me, I get distracted by obvious typos and spelling mistakes.  

2) Word-Loss-Edit. At this stage, I go through and tighten the narrative. Here are a couple of helpful links that I've used when going through this stage:

I found this link on Pinterst. In it Justin McLachlan has a list of six things to look out for in your writing:http://www.justinmclachlan.com/804/common-writing-mistakes/


I also found this link on Pinterest but I dip regularly into Litreactor.com. This article suggests eight words to seek and destroy and often they are words that, once removed, take several other unnecessary words with them: http://litreactor.com/columns/8-words-to-seek-and-destroy-in-your-writing

I have a copy of The Word Loss Diet  to keep handy as I edit Gabriel's Game: Part 1, The White Queen.



 These are the words I 'find' in my manuscript and delete or replace them:


  • That
  • Really
  • Very
  • Suddenly
  • Words that end 'ly' (blitz those pesky adverbs)
  • Then
  • Is, am, was, were (use powerful verbs and fewer words instead)
  • Started
  • Like
  • Smile (make each 'smile' count)

 
3)  Testing Cycle. At this stage I test my writing on a pool of eager Beta Readers. These are people I know who have enjoyed my books and frequently ask me when the next one is out. People who's views I trust, who are also avid readers and often grammar geeks. In this cycle various reads and re-reads take place and I filter the feedback and complete any appropriate re-writes

4) Fourth Draft. At this point I am confident that the book is ready to be seen by professionals. I'll work with editors to proof read and look at structural edits and complete final checks and edits



In his fantastic book On Writing, Stephen King recommends cutting your word count by 10%, even when you think you've finished.





Here are my Top 4 Editing Tips:


1) Less is more when it comes to word count. The skill of a good writer is to say a lot with very few words, never use three words when one will do. Tighten your writing by keeping it active and punchy.

2) Look for useful tips and content online. A crucial part of developing your craft as a writer is to identify the common mistakes you make and find ways to rectify them. I collect useful links for future reference using Pinterest

3) Take your time but don't aim for perfection. No one writes a perfect first draft, even the professionals who've been doing it for years. Take your time to produce a good quality book before you publish it. I made the mistake of rushing my first book, The Bronze Box and getting some bad reviews. I sought professional help with my second book, Solomon's Secrets and it made all the difference.

 

That said, it will never be perfect, because perfection is a fallacy.  Yes, you'll look back on it in years to come as your craft improves and cringe at your early work. It's OK, we all do it, but don't let that put you off.

There will always be work out there that's worse than yours and there will always be stuff that's better.

All you can do, is create something that's good enough at that point in your life and the only way you'll ever get feedback so you can learn, grow, develop and improve as a writer is to get the independent feedback of real readers who's lives you've touched, even in a small way, by sharing your vision with them.



4) Take Action


  • Start a Pinterest board for writing
Here's mine:

Follow Amy Morse's board Writing on Pinterest.


  • Follow related boards for new and useful Pins


  • Add a Pin It button to your toolbar and Pin useful content.



No comments:

Post a Comment