By Adele Annesi

Word for Words is by author Adele Annesi. For Adele's website, visit Adele Annesi.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Editors Put the E in E-Publishing


The topic of discussion at this week's Ridgefield Writers Guild meeting was e-publishing whether to, how to, when to you name it. One take-away was the importance of selecting an e-publisher that offers good editing services. E-publishing author and expert Shawn Wilhelm (aka Tarah Scott) made the point that at some stage in a writer's career probably the earlier the better it's important to work with an editor whom the writer is not paying directly. And you're hearing that from someone who makes a living editing.

The point is that an editor whom you're paying, who's not part of a publisher's stable of editors freelance or otherwise instantly has a vested interest in making you, the writer, happy. That usually means the editor is less likely to be completely impartial about your work and your mistakes. E-publishing authors listed having a good editor as the most important facet of their writing.

Whether you opt to self-publish, e-publish or traditionally publish your work, the same principle applies — a good editor is worth her weight in gold.

Happy writing and editing!

Resources: Preditors and Editors and Manuscript Editing   

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Reversal of Fortune: Editing a Story From Finish to Start

A method copyeditors use to edit nonfiction is to read from end to beginning to catch mistakes they might otherwise miss. The technique can work for fiction, too.

For those literalists out there, this isn't meant to advocate reading a work backward word by word, but to start with the last chapter or paragraph and read the prior. Here's what to look for and why.

Timelines that don't track: Characters' ages must work within the time frame of the story and should mesh with the ages of other characters. Events should occur in sequence, like children being born after their parents. Even when you intentionally present events in an order other than chronological, it's important that they occur in some logical order. Actions, too, should occur in logical sequence. You'd be surprised how often characters leave a building before opening the door, and how often they repeat an action within a sentence or two of a scene.

Changes in tone, mood and voice: Whenever time elapses between when a writer begins and finishes a work, changes can occur in tone, mood and voice that don't fit the evolution of the story, and indicate a shift in the writer. Common problems are humor occurring where it shouldn't because it reflects the writer's frame of mind, and characters becoming a lot less sophisticated or more so, depending on what the writer did with the plot. A change in authorial voice is perhaps the biggest problem, and often occurs when the writer grows more accomplished to the point where it shows in the piece.

Character development/arc: One of the most important aspects of a story is the development of each major character, either evolving or devolving, depending on the storyline. Regardless of which occurs, it's important to see this happening and feel it. An uneven arc can give the work an uneven quality, as when a character suddenly goes from good to bad or bad to worse with little development to support the change.

Reading a story from end to beginning can reveal these problems, especially to the writer who's on the lookout for them.

Tip: Read a short piece or a scene from a story you're working on, and list the inconsistencies. Then list possible fixes and where these must occur in the work.