The Importance Of Content
Editing
by: C David
Editing
Secrets
by: Laura Backes
Once you've plotted out your book,
developed the characters and written the last word of text, the
real work begins. As busy editors are bombarded with hundreds
or even thousands of submissions a year, it's more important
than ever that authors apply their own editing skills to their
manuscripts before putting them in the mail. Checking your
basic grammar and spelling are of course important, but authors
need to go beyond surface editing if their work has a chance of
catching an editor's eye.
* Trim, tighten, hack away. First,
second and even third drafts of manuscripts are almost always
laden with extra words and scenes. Take a break from your book
and then read it through with a fresh eye. Write down your
theme in one sentence (what the book is about, such as working
through shyness on the first day of school or showing how
Thomas Edison's childhood experiences influenced his adult
life). The plot (or progression of facts and events in
nonfiction) is your vehicle for conveying the theme to the
reader. Ask yourself if each character and scene advance the
plot toward communicating this theme. And decide at the
beginning that you will give up your precious words and
finely-crafted scenes for the betterment of the book. Pithy
dialogue may be fun to read, but if it pushes your story off
track, it's just a literary dead end. Take the publishers'
suggested word limits seriously: no, you don't really need 3000
words to tell your picture book story about Freddy the Frog's
adventures in the Big Pond.
* The elements of speech. Well-crafted
dialogue can be a writer's most important tool. Dialogue is not
just there to break up the paragraphs or show that your
characters know how to talk; ideally, it adds to character
development, moves the plot along and replaces sections of
narrative. Each character should sound like himself, with
speech patterns and phrasing that are unique. This is
especially true with talking animal books. I see many of these
manuscripts where, if I took away the words that identify the
speakers, each character would sound exactly the same. Don't
have dialogue repeat the narrative and vice versa; "Did you
hear that? Someone's at the door!" does not have to be preceded
by "They heard a sound at the door".
* Show don't tell. How many times have
you heard this? It's still true. Comb through your manuscript
for sentences that tell the reader how a character felt (Sara
was sad) and replace with sensory descriptions (Hot tears
sprang to Sara's eyes and rolled down her cheeks.) Avoid
telling the reader what to think about the story (Jason
foolishly decided to trust Mike one more time.) Instead,
present your character's actions and decisions to the reader,
and let the reader draw his or her own conclusions
(incidentally, this is how you "teach" without
preaching).
* Wipe out passive writing. Search for
verbs preceded by "would" (would go, would sleep, would eat)
replace with the past tense (went, slept, ate). Also look for
actions that seem to happen out of thin air. "The door was
opened" is passive, because the sentence lacks a "doer".
Remember, the reader needs to visualize what's happening in the
story. "The wind blew the door open" is better, because the
action can be attributed to something, and it puts the most
important element (strong wind) at the beginning of the
sentence. Simply rearranging the words ("The door blew open
from the wind") puts emphasis on a door that won't stay closed,
making that the subject of the sentence.
* Be precise. One of the best ways to
make your writing come alive for the reader is to use exact
nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs. One well-chosen word is
always better than three vague ones. Adjectives like big,
little, cold, hot, beautiful, scary and silly; adverbs such as
quickly, slowly, loudly, and softly; and general verbs like
walk, went, stayed and ate don't draw a vivid picture for your
reader. Of course, sometimes these words are appropriate, but
try as a rule choosing words that describe specifically what
you want to communicate. Words that sound and look interesting
are also a plus. Tremendous, tiny, frigid, scorching, plodded,
sauntered and gulped are more fun to read, and they each lend
an emotional overtone to the sentence (if your character gulps
his food, you don't have to tell the reader he's in a
hurry).
And finally, make sure there's a logical
cause and effect relationship between the scenes of your book.
Each event should build upon the ones that came before. The
plot should spring intrinsically from your characters;
nonfiction should unfold because of the nature of your subject
and your slant on the material. It's when everything comes
seamlessly together that you have a winning book. Make it look
easy, but don't skimp on all the hard work it takes to get
there.
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