[Aliventures newsletter] Two quick tips to make self-editing your work much easier

Published: Thu, 06/29/17

 
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Hello!
It's been a busy couple of weeks here, but I'm plugging away with the edits to my novel. I've been lucky enough to have rigorous feedback and suggestions from my lovely editor (Lorna Fergusson, of fictionfire.co.uk) ... but of course I've done my own editing along the way too.

If you're facing a manuscript that needs a fair bit of work, here's how to tackle it.
 
Two Quick Tips to Make Self-Editing Your Work Much Easier
Let's face it: most of us have to edit our own work. Unless you want hand over a small fortune to an editor, you're not likely to send them everything you write (and if your first drafts are anything like mine, you won't want to send them anything resembling a first draft either...)

Editing is quite a different skill from writing, though, and it can be a tricky one to master. Here are two simple but vital ways to make it much easier:

Tip #1: Separate the Different Stages of Editing

You wouldn't try to write your first draft while proofreading every sentence as you go along, would you? (If you would, stop!)

"Editing" encompasses several different stages, and it's best to keep them separate – especially if you're editing a big, complex project like a novel. These stages are:

Stage #1: Revision (literally "re-seeing") – this is when you make radical changes to your first draft. For me, this usually means cutting whole chapters, changing around which characters are in which scenes, switching viewpoints about, and even occasionally erasing characters from the story entirely.

Stage #2: Line-editing – this is when you go through your story paragraph by paragraph, line by line, and make smaller tweaks. This is what most people think of as "editing" – rewriting a clunky sentence, switching around some words to avoid unintentional repetition, making a line of dialogue sound more realistic. 

Stage #3: Proofreading – this needs to come last or you risk undoing all your good work by introducing an error as you edit! Proofreading means making sure that you actually wrote what you think you wrote! It's where you catch typos, iron out grammatical errors, and make sure that you're consistent about capitalisation and punctuation.


Of course the stages will overlap a little – as you're rewriting the entire ending to a scene, you may well fix a clunky sentence or two along the way – but you do need to treat them separately. There's no point line-editing a chapter that you later cut entirely.

Tip #2: Don't Edit Straight Onto the Screen

I draft straight onto the computer, but when I edit, I convert my manuscript into a Kindle document and pop it on my Kindle. Then I curl up with a cup of tea and a lot of chocolate and get busy! I read through, making notes about any big changes needed during the revision stage – then I tackle these.

I repeat the manuscript-onto-Kindle process when I line-edit and when I proofread.

The big advantage to this is that it helps separate editing and writing, both in your own head and physically on your work itself. It's easy to end up with an editing mess if you start chopping and changing your manuscript (always keep a separate copy of the first draft!) and by reading through the whole thing before enacting any of your planned changes, you can get a good sense of the overall flow (or not!) of your work.

When it comes to line-editing and proofreading, many authors find that it's easier to see mistakes or clumsy bits of writing when they're reading on a tablet or on paper, rather than on a computer screen. Even something as simple as changing the font of your manuscript  can help. 

If you have the time and you can stand it, reading aloud is a brilliant way to spot clunky sentences: you're forced to slow down and you can hear the cadence of your writing.


However you choose to edit, the most important thing is that you do edit! While I absolutely love the first draft stage, with all its exploration and potential, I also really enjoy revising then polishing my work so that it's the best I can make it. (Then it goes to my editor who makes it even better.) Embrace editing as the part of writing where you get to shape your raw material into something beautiful. Happy editing!
 
Happy writing,

Ali

PS - Don't forget to check out this week's post on the Aliventures blog: What Are Content Mills … and Why Should Freelancers Avoid Them?

 
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