I just read a blog
written by Brenda Whiteside at www.theromancestudio.blogspot.com
. She writes about authors working with
or as editors. Rather than add a comment I thought I’d express my own thoughts
on the subject from a different point of view.
I’ve worked as an
editor for some eleven years now and as Brenda mentioned, it is a hard job. You
really have to know all those little nuances of writing – the grammar,
spelling, punctuation, and, something most people don’t think too much about
... sentence structure. Have you ever read a sentence where one word was in the
wrong place and it changed the whole meaning of the sentence? It’s pretty much
on the same premise as using commas but it can be a lot more hilarious.
Today, I’d like to
introduce you to my internal editor, appropriately known as Eddie Books. Eddie
knows I like to sprint, that the process keeps me focused when I write. Eddie
also knows that by rights, he’s supposed to take a hike during those sprints
but he rarely does. People in the know have always said, when you write, you
should turn off the internal editor and let the words flow. You can go back later
and edit your work.
Eddie rarely, if
ever, takes a vacation. He doesn’t believe in doing something a few times if
you can do it once or twice. Since he’s been around more years than I care to
count (lots more than eleven) we’ve developed a tight relationship. When I write,
he automatically steps in and corrects something before I get two words past
it. It might be a misspelled word, or something left out. More often it’s a
word or two that works better than what I’ve typed. It might take a little more
time that way but in the long run it’s a job we’re both proud of. Actually, the
process works so smoothly now, it really doesn’t take any time at all. Eddie
can point out a problem and before you can say ‘sprint’ it’s fixed.
Internal editing as
you go isn’t something everyone can do. It takes a solid knowledge of the
English language (or whatever language you write in) learned over many years.
It’s something that becomes a part of you and sometimes tends to take over. There
are some changes in the language Eddie has to make adjustments for and others
he refuses to acknowledge – with good reason. It comes down to a matter of
knowing the difference and accepting or rejecting accordingly.
When it comes to
editing other authors’ work, Eddie has the uncanny ability of being able to see
through the author’s eyes and understand what they’re trying to say. Editors in
general don’t always understand where the author is coming from. (I’ve had
personal experience with that when my work has gone through the process.) It
can be frustrating.
As smart as Eddie
is he’s far from being the know-it-all internal editor we’d all love to have.
He continues to grow, to evolve...and the only way he can do that is working
with others. Every writer has, or should have, an Eddie. Work with him, watch
him grow and see how much your writing improves.
1 comment:
I like Eddie. I always ask that he let me have my say first, then I let him come in and do the first read-through. We work well like that.
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