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Revise, rewrite and reconsider…what,
throwing everything back in the drawer?
How many edits does one book require?
It’s very frustrating to think that the
edits are endless, ongoing and forever. Just joking. Sort of. Maybe. Not
really.
My frustration is due to a recent editing
binge. My friend, and personal editor, sent back my book with her usual expert
edits, and after a day and a half, I finally have the book more reader ready.
My friend is very good at picking out my
most common mistakes. All I need to see is her note ‘shift in POV’ and I grimace.
Again? I’m getting better. I should be, after all she’s pointed it out to me
often enough.
And then there’s tense. All that past,
present, future crap. I play, I played, I will play. Or I write, I wrote, I
will write. I screw it up by going I’m writing, I was writing, and maybe on
some future day I will write…good, better, best.
‘I writ it down’, how’s that for good
grammar?
Because I’m still in a learning phase, I
read books and articles on writing.
Writer’s Digest has a newsletter with
interesting articles written by their online editor, Brian Klems. A recent
article was titled “3 Easy-To-Use Revision Techniques”.
Yeah right, Brian. One thing I do agree
with is his comment that the “revision process can be brutal”.
So here are his revision techniques.
Number One: Start on page one.
Follow your story the same way your reader
would.
Number Two: Circle passive voice words
and eliminate.
Passive voice slows down your work and
makes it less exciting for the reader.
Words such as was, were, are, is and have
been.
Number Three: Delete all clichés.
So, I took my recently edited book, Number
TWO in my roster of books and tried his easy
to use number two technique.
This is easily done on the computer with
that neat little feature called FIND.
You can do FIND, FIND AND REPLACE, or FIND
AND GO TO.
I used FIND, what?: have
been, and checked Highlight all items found in: Main Document.
Finally I clicked on Find All and lo and behold, there were 29 places
where I used the words ‘have been’.
All these have beens are making me
feel like a has-been writer.
I went back to the book, started at the
beginning, and eliminated 22 out of 29 of these phrases. Next time I write, I’m
going to do this little exercise chapter by chapter. Maybe I’ll get the hang of
it by the end.
If you were going to try this with your own
writing, have been isn’t a bad start. Don’t go to is, it was a truly
horrifying experience. Apparently I used is one thousand, eight hundred and
forty times. How can this possibly be?
I had to look and see for myself, and was
mildly comforted to see that the computer picked up all incidents of i’s and
s’s, such as whisper, isolated
and television. Phew.
I played one more time and did the Find thing
with the word was. Now I’m absolutely disheartened. One thousand, two hundred
and seventy four times I used the word was, and I didn’t find any words
like washed
or wasted
to make me feel better.
Oh well, It’s a learning curve right?
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1 comment:
Okay, final challenge here. You must read your work out loud. Guarantee it will give you a whole new perspective on phrasing and length of sentences. If you have to stop for a breath, your sentence is too long. Or if you have dialogue doesn't ring true, you'll hear it.
Have fun!
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