Friday, October 11, 2013

Today has afforded me an opportunity to actually *think* about the editing process. I was asked, in my everyday job, to defend some choices that I'd made in primary source documents, and so I had to think about how and why I narrowed down an infinite field of reading material to just those 200 articles. As the hours passed, I began to think about the editing process, as it applies in my business...

Every author has a story to tell. My job as an editor is to help them tell that story so that it appeals to the broadest audience possible -- after all, the ultimate goal is to SELL the book. Sometimes that makes me a mechanic, tinkering with the nuts and bolts, the grammatical errors, the punctuation, the word choices. At other times it makes me a gentle adviser, forced to suggest changes to a character or a storyline.

There are a few steps that almost every good editor takes, every time they take on a new project:

1. Set a goal, with the due date as an end, and divide the assignment into roughly even portions. You don't want to be up all night trying to edit a manuscript at the last moment - it won't get your best effort.
2. Have a separate word document open to take notes. Use this to keep track of character notes, locations, plot holes, overused words, etc.
3. You might consider using a checklist of common issues: commonly misspelled or misused words, items to search and replace, trademarks, etc.
4. Make it a point to leave positive comments for the author. If you laughed out loud at a certain line, say so!

Also, it's important to keep track of the work that you do. A spreadsheet, or some other tracking system, noting the title, author, word count, publisher, and date of edit will ensure you receive the proper payment for each work. We'll discuss this in more detail next time!

Thursday, August 29, 2013

"I Could Care Less..."

Best quote I've seen today referred to that line - "I could care less" - and the response was: yes, it's grammatically correct, it just doesn't make sense! Can I make a screensaver with those words? 

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

They Don't Say That Here!

If you're going to write a book, or a series of books, set in Tennessee (say...Ellery, TN?), you may want to get an American, perhaps even a Southern, editor. They won't miss phrase like "have a lie-in" or "in hospital" ---I promise you, no one in Tennessee says it like that! 
Those are just the glaring errors that take a reader completely out of the story...which tends to ruin the sheer pleasure of reading. Boo.

Monday, August 19, 2013

Break Time is Over

Sometimes we need to take a break from our lives...emotionally, physically, mentally...but eventually that break has to end, and we have to resume our progress toward a goal. Without a goal, we never have a feeling of accomplishment, of achievement. 

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Sometimes. editing is like being a detective. A sentence can be "technically" correct, but it doesn't "sound" right, it doesn't flow well as you read it. And if the sentence is grammatically correct, should you make a change to improve the sentence, and perhaps improve the paragraph as a whole? Or is this the author's voice, and you, as the editor, need to leave it alone?

Usually, it's best to make this sort of "correction" as a comment - thus leaving the decision up to the author. Perhaps the sentence was a mistake, and they didn't see the form it could have taken. It may in fact be the way they write, but they are open to suggestions for improvement. Or, this may be their preference, and they'll reject your suggestion. And that's fine too!

Sunday, July 21, 2013



I think of editing more as a "conversation" with the author -- and try not to use the delete key quite so much. Most of the publishers I contract with have the utmost respect for an author's voice...l have come to believe that should be paramount in every project I undertake.

Friday, June 28, 2013

My Daughter - The Author?

Just when I had given up all hope that the oldest daughter would share the bibliophile genes of the rest of the family...she announces that she's had a book accepted on contract. And then another, and another...oh my.

It seems that the language skills which served her so well during her debate career (9th in the Nation in International Extemp, thank you very much!), now allow her to create stories of BDSM Erotica that one reviewer described thusly: I think Robin McKnight may have written the most sensuous and emotionally charged description of a kiss I have ever read. Anywhere. Kudos, Robin. Secret Love isn't going to melt Kindles, it's going to make them burst into flame.

Well now! Allow me to introduce you to Robin McKnight

Her current list of books includes Red Light Christmas, Striptease, and the Devil's Boudoir trilogy: Secret Dom, Secret Desire, and Secret Love, all with Horny Devil Publishing.