Writers Tricks of the Trade Vol. 6 Issue 1 | Page 11
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LAST MINUTE TWEAKS
FRED RAYWORTH
We’ve all heard that tired quote from the NRA’s dear old friend Charlton
Heston about “cold dead hands” and some could say the same thing about a
manuscript. When it comes to your “precious” (okay, another quote, and don’t
make me say which movie), it seems like you can never stop until it’s literally
(oh, what a cliché), pried out of your very much alive hands.
I’ve recently gone through that.
WILL THE EDITING EVER END?
I don’t think I’m revealing any huge trade secrets when I tell you that
although my manuscript from Treasure Of The Umbrunna has gone through
not only my own personal multiple edits, tweaks and read-throughs, including
those with the Henderson Writer’s Group, it’s gone through three (or is it
four?) complete edits by my publisher, once I succeeded in actually obtaining
said publisher. Whew, I just broke a rule with a very long sentence!
What I can say is through all of that, there hasn’t been a single major
change in either story line or plot. I was able to keep true to my polka-dot sewer
(my muse) and use my usual—no—my only method of writing. I knew where I
wanted to start and where I wanted to end. The rest (the middle) was a total
surprise.
FRED RAYWORTH
A MAN OF MANY TALENTS
VISIT FRED’S OWN
BLOG
HTTP://FREDRAYWORTH.COM
CONTRATULATIONS,
FRED ON YOUR NEW
BOOK!
BY THIS POINT I’M NO NEWBIE
I must say that by this point in the game, when I wrote Treasure, I was no
babe in the woods, cliché intended. I already had ten novels under my belt,
even if they were all unpublished. The only one which might have plotting
issues would be the first one, The Cave and even that one might be more of a
problem with writing functionality rather than plotting.
It all boils down to fixing the numerous writing mistakes, tweaking minor
things. Lots of them.
SO MUCH EDITING CAN CREATE MORE MISTAKES
With so much editing, even if the edits are relatively minor, which in my
case, they were, making those edits can also create more errors. When all is said
and done, a final run-through is essential!
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My first edit was for structure and continuity, not so much for grammar. I
made several tweaks and in the process, created some grammatical errors
(mostly too many noun-verb combinations starting sentences). The second edit
was for grammar and I made lots of corrections but in the process also created
some other errors. The third edit was to fix the noun-verb combinations I
created fixing the other issues. Along the way, the editor found more
grammatical tweaks like show not tell and phrasing she thought would work
better.
WRITERS’ TRICKS OF THE TRADE
PAGE 3
JANUARY-FEBRUARY 2016