Entry tags:
Seeking Editing Advice
So. There has been a recent "meme" of sorts about the all the cool people's blogs about "how to write a novel." (In case you don't read, it can be found here, here, here, here, and here, at the very least and in the order I saw them.) And really, that's great.
I've already (technically) written a novel, though. And while I don't think I'm cool enough to share the process, I will say that my brain did conjure something very similar to the spreadsheet idea as a cookie for me (it was a notepad file, started off by keeping wordcount, and then evolved to keeping the names of the chapters - Glamour's not the sort of book where I need to keep track of the POV). In any case, I have a fairly "set" method for writing novels that is differently-evolved from my method of writing short stories or essays, and I'm pretty happy with it. It works for me.
What I don't have is a way to actually get myself to look at the book again. I can think about it, make a list of all the things that are broken and need to be fixed - even, on occasion, how I can fix them, but I can't bring myself to open that bloody file labelled "Glamour Draft 2.doc" and get to work. I dread it. I'm absolutely sure it'll be horrible, and I'll hate it and won't stand to even edit it and will destroy my own creation in a blaze of madness.
Rationally, I know it's not that bad. I know where it's broken, but I also know where the strong points are. It is fixable, but I actually need to be willing to fix it. I'm willing to bet that it'd be nice work if I could get it. And if you can get it, please won't you tell me how?
I've already (technically) written a novel, though. And while I don't think I'm cool enough to share the process, I will say that my brain did conjure something very similar to the spreadsheet idea as a cookie for me (it was a notepad file, started off by keeping wordcount, and then evolved to keeping the names of the chapters - Glamour's not the sort of book where I need to keep track of the POV). In any case, I have a fairly "set" method for writing novels that is differently-evolved from my method of writing short stories or essays, and I'm pretty happy with it. It works for me.
What I don't have is a way to actually get myself to look at the book again. I can think about it, make a list of all the things that are broken and need to be fixed - even, on occasion, how I can fix them, but I can't bring myself to open that bloody file labelled "Glamour Draft 2.doc" and get to work. I dread it. I'm absolutely sure it'll be horrible, and I'll hate it and won't stand to even edit it and will destroy my own creation in a blaze of madness.
Rationally, I know it's not that bad. I know where it's broken, but I also know where the strong points are. It is fixable, but I actually need to be willing to fix it. I'm willing to bet that it'd be nice work if I could get it. And if you can get it, please won't you tell me how?
no subject
My first novel (back in the 70s) went through 13 drafts in four years. I have every draft with all it's markup and edits, thinking when I did it that someday when I was a famous writer a PhD student would be thrilled to look at all the drafts and analyze my working process. Talk about the conceit! The 14th draft, which actually had promise, I didn't finish. I wrote two sequels to that novel during the same time that I was editing it. Then real-life closed in and I started dealing with the issues of putting food on the table and making mortgage payments. I started re-writing last year's Nano with a radical revision. It all went well until about two chapters from the end. At that point I was simply stuck on how to revise my ending, and it has been sitting there two chapters away from a submission for six months while I planned this year's. If you find a way to get you into editing those that doesn't require retirement, please let me know. But then... retirement is only a few years away!
no subject
It's not about the time for me - it's totally about the inclination. I expect to hate my work, so I'd rather not face it. For writing, and editing I like, I make time - it keeps me sane in the workplace, because one simply can't do science all day day in and day out - it will pour out of your ears. There's always more work. I, at least, need to step away and express myself in other means for a bit.
It's good that you kept those notes - it'll help you understand your process in the future.