I always knew editing was important, and I wrote my first draft assuming that when I was done, the editing would be just as much of a process as the initial writing itself.
I had no idea.
If anything, it's more of a process.
Throughout the actual writing, I came up against my own inexperience again and again. But I pushed through it, holding onto the eventual editing phase as my salvation. When I finished that first draft, and went back and read over it again, I realized something disconcerting: I was way out of my depth.
Having invested far too much time and energy into completing my first book, there was, of course, no way I was going to let it go easily. And the bones were there for it to be a very good story. It just lacked polish, cohesiveness, that sophistication that "professional" writers have. The very thing that makes people willing to pay money for something you've written.
I had some work to do. Okay, I had a lot of work to do.
I realized even before I whipped out my blue pencil that if I was going to effectively edit my manuscript, I needed to learn more about just what it is that makes a professionally-written romance novel. Perhaps more importantly, I needed to learn why mine wasn't. So I started reading.
And I kept reading. I read through every book on writing romance novels I owned, and bought more, and read those. And I took notes. I began compiling checklists to refer to as I went through my manuscript. Checklists for the hero. Checklists for the heroine. Love scene checklists, dialogue checklists, beginning checklists, ending checklists. I have a serious compilation of checklists now, people.
But you know what? In spite of their anal-retentive undertones, they're really helpful, especially to a newbie like myself who, prior to all that reading and note-taking, was really incapable of recognizing the huge, glaring problems in my writing.
So I'm going to share those checklists. They've really helped me out a lot, and I'm convinced at least a few other people could find them helpful, too. I've done all the work (and it was a lot of work!), now I hope others can benefit.
Happy shredding- er, editing!
Great post!! I just wrote about my own editing experience on my own blog. I had no idea what an intense process it was going to be, or how much I was going to learn. I feel like I got more out of my first round of overview edit suggestions from my editor than in my entire education as a writer to date. Checklists are genius. I'm a post-it girl myself. They're everywhere. And reading reading reading is such great advice. Love your blog! I will be following and frequenting you for sure :) here's my blog. i'd love to see what you think: http://www.jadiejones.blogspot.com
ReplyDeletei'm a little challenged when it comes to buttons, etc., but i can't seem to locate a way to follow you...
ReplyDeleteI feel you- if Blogger has a good way to "follow" people, I haven't found it yet...
DeleteI can't wait to do some reading!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the interest! You've motivated me to kick things into overdrive :-)
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