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#51 | |
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Why is a raven like a writing desk?
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: West Spiral Arm
Posts: 3,756
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#52 | |
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Plotting
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 709
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I edit nonfiction, so take this with a grain of salt, but I have to echo what a lot of people have said about trying to trust the editor. Their name isn't on your work, and they're not getting any money or fame out of it. They're just trying to make your work as good as humanly possible, and they've got the advantage of an outside and informed perspective.
Having said that, editors are human and sometimes they don't always make perfect suggestions. That's why it's great to discuss when you don't agree. It's nice when writers can argue back in a humane fashion, rather than getting upset and insisting the editor is trying to bury their voice/ruin the piece/calling their mama names. We're open to discussion, I promise, but we're a lot more likely to work with you if you're not calling us names (I once got told an edit I didn't even make looked "cheap, ugly, and lazy.") If you seem to have stumbled upon a truly bad editor who's just messing with your piece, take a step back and give yourself a bit of time to think. Are you knee-jerk reacting to criticism, or is the editor going all red-pen-happy on you? It does happen, particularly with newer editors. If that's the case, then you may need to escalate the issue or walk away, but I'd say more than nine times out of 10, this isn't the case. Also, this: Quote:
ETA: In my experience, it's the good writers who respond the best to editorial suggestions. I can only assume it's because they feel confident in their work and don't have ego issues. Which is not to say they take everything lying down, mind you, but they tend to recognize when something is a good suggestion and incorporate it. Last edited by Niiicola; 03-09-2012 at 06:35 PM. |
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#53 | |
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Classy, eloquent, shit like that...
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: wisconsin
Posts: 7,048
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not an accidental troll, but even the part in bold is flawed. Yes, you can't edit it (you can, of course, edit a painting by painting over/shadowing/whatever, but giving you the benefit of the doubt here, it IS a different process) but at the same time, you can show off your nice, shiny painting of six spiders playing poker and the gallery owner/buyer can say "I like it, but make them dogs instead" and you're off to revise. They can say "I love what you've done with the chapel, but I am of the 'fat, cherubic angel' school, and you have them looking like creepy Abercrombie models; fix it" and you either lose the job or you fix it. bottom line, writing is a product. so is painting. those who insist "but, but it is AAAARTTTTT!" don't get that the two are not mutually exclusive, or that, if you intend to sell, you need to offer a product the buyer wants, regardless of integrity and whatnot, OR be willing to forego the sale. There is no reason you can't say "I will NOT paint clowns molesting starfish" because you don't want to, but if that's what the buyer is looking for, you aren't entitled to some divine right of art to sell him your cats on tricicles painting just because it is art. the more we argue this, the LESS unique I think writing is. just a product, and you need to 1) make it what someone wants, 2) find someone else who wants what you have, 3) change it into what someone wants, or 4) just accept that it isn't going to sell. All 4 are valid choices, but you can't force a buy.
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Three words that convey the meaning of six will always look better than twelve.... |
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#54 |
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Why is a raven like a writing desk?
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: West Spiral Arm
Posts: 3,756
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I would probably buy a clown-molesting-starfish painting. But that's another story.
It makes perfect sense to have editors. I was just "playing devil's advocate" or "making people mad" or whatever you want to call it .But yeah, you're right. I think it's common in the writing process to reach a point in editing of 'lost objectivity.' That's where other voices come in, yes? Although, I would argue writing far exceeds the role of 'just a product,' though certainly it is a product in most cases. |
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#55 |
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is Envy Augustine
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: The Normandy
Posts: 1,064
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I would argue that the editors of the visual arts community are the gallery owners. They curate the space. Editors curate the page.
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Bound for Trouble on Liquid Silver Books on Amazon. Like vampires? Like sex? Like the near future in an alternative history where humans have overthrown their bloodsucking overlords and use them for slave labor? This novella might be for you. |
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#56 | |
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Friendly Neighborhood Mustelidae
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: In the room next to the noisy ice machine, for all eternity.
Posts: 891
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But I think it's also important to emphasize the fact that the writer does have the right to walk away when asked to paint clowns molesting starfish, so to speak, and that there are situations where walking away is the right decision. The primary goal of the editor/publisher will always be to sell books. That's their job, and there's nothing wrong with that, but a writer may have different goals. Of course writers also want to sell books, but most of them also have some sort of artistic vision; a particular story they're trying to tell, because they feel that it's important. Maybe not in a huge world-changing way, but in a way that might have significant personal meaning to some readers. I mean, if a writer is in it just for the money, they're in the wrong field. There are going to be cases where a writer is asked to change their story not to make it better, but to make it more marketable. These two things are not the same. I've read some wonderful books which struck a very personal chord with me, but which never gained widespread popularity because the subject matter was too niche. And I've read some books which sold very well but were pretty bland and mediocre as art. Sometimes, bland and mediocre sells like hotcakes, because people like what they're used to. I've seen cases where writers have been advised to make changes that water down the essence of their characters or the story they're trying to tell in order to make it more acceptable to the mainstream palette. There've been cases where writers have been told to make their gay characters straight in order to avoid offending anyone. Or to make their characters more "conventionally attractive." Or to insert loads of sex scenes into a story that's not meant to be erotica in order to make it sell better. I've never had an editor suggest such intrusive changes to one of my stories. A good editor will help you tell your story better, not try to rewrite it into a different, more sell-able story. But the latter situation does happen. I want to be a successful writer, but I want to be successful as myself. If it comes at the price of writing stories that I don't believe in, that aren't mine, then I don't want it. I don't think that's golden word syndrome. And I think part of maturing as a writer is learning to recognize the difference between golden word syndrome (which afflicts us all to some degree) and being true to yourself as an artist...and being willing to work with people in the publishing world, to be flexible and have an understanding of their goals, while not betraying your own.
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Feet of Clay, my novella, is now available from Torquere Press. |
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#57 |
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Feeling lucky, Query?
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: New Hampshire
Posts: 8,684
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I've had a bunch of different editors and liked them all. But I've also hit direct choices where we've got down to the real issue here. A writer can always walk away from having something being published. A publisher/editor can always refuse to publish something. Contracts ultimately just limit the remedies that can happen in this situation.
Let me give you three examples: Example A: I'd written an article for a magazine of somewhere around 2,000 words. It was all set and ready to go, and then the magazine sold another ad. Editor calls me up and says I can either cut 500 words from my article and it will run as scheduled, we could substitute another article (it was a question and answer format and the editor often had extra questions for me to work from), or we could skip this issue and publish it in the next issue. My choice, but those were the options. Period. No discussion, no wiggle room. Example B: I sent my manuscript for EQUINE LIABILITY to my editor. It waddled into her office at 140k and so she politely called me up to say it was way too big and I needed to cut it for them to publish it. My choice. Cut and be published by this publisher, or don't cut and find a new publisher. Example C: EQUINE LIABILITY is nearing the end of the process and is just about ready for publishing. I wanted to include two indexes -- one general index and one index listing cases by specific states. Editor calls me and says no can do, the second index is going to require another signature and would increase the costs. What she didn't say is that it would also cut their profit margin. I explained why I thought keeping the state index would be worthwhile, increasing the critical acceptance of the book, but it wasn't a breaking point for me. Publisher's choice. Add an extra signature and increase the costs while making a 'better' book or don't increase the costs and risking some lost of sales as a result. So push can come to shove, and ultimately it comes down to money. But most of the issues between editors and writers are minor adjustments, where the editor and writer listen to each other and figure out the best way to make the book better. Because ultimately the goal for any commercially published book is sales. And the best way of getting sales is to have the best book possible. Anything I've had published hasn't been quite my original vision. Instead, they've all been better, and that's because of my editors. Best of luck, Jim Clark-Dawe
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EQUINE LIABILITY: WHAT EVERY HORSEOWNER NEEDS TO KNOW Published 2002 sold through ![]() THE PICTURE Might be my next project. |
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#58 |
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is not the avatar thief
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Where the Wild Things Are
Posts: 7,625
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I think that any and all editorial suggestions, other than simple changes in phrase (unless that changes the tone, of course) should be taken and mulled over. Many times a writer hears from an editor (or agent, I think this happens quite a lot during the submission process), and immediately rebels against it. But, after a little thinking it over, they see the wisdom in the suggestions. I think if they are a professional and have aspirations of getting anywhere in this business, that's what they need to do.
I know that has happened to me a few times. But usually the editor or agent is right, and I end up with a better product. ONCE in a while, the editor will make a suggestion and I don't want to follow it because their change impacts what I mean, and then we work together to come up with a clearer way to say it, or she may leave it as is. Never had an editor try and change the voice of a piece. Thank goodness
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Christine Young Adult Fantasy Author The Sword of Danu (The Library of Athena, Book Four): Get yours TODAY! YA Historical Fantasy/Fairy-Tale Adaptation - HAS AN AGENT! I tweet Young Adult Authors You've Never Heard Of |
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#59 |
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writer, rider, reader
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: NC, USA
Posts: 3,038
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What I meant was making changes so radical that they transform the work into a different story.
I suppose when I said that I was remembering the agent who loved my writing, but wanted a different story than the one I'd told. I gave his suggestions considerable thought, but in the end, I walked away. And found an agent who loved it exactly the way I'd written it. And yes, I know we're talking editors here, not agents. But OTOH, I have friends who've had some iffy experiences with editors wanting to make sweeping changes in a story, and not for the better.
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The Stone River Last edited by BethS; 03-11-2012 at 08:14 PM. |
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#60 | |
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writer, rider, reader
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: NC, USA
Posts: 3,038
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A friend in the business told me that anthology editors were notorious for doing this kind of thing and it was just something we had to put up with. Not sure I agree that we should. If there's ever a next time, at least I'll know to inquire up front how the edits are going to work and what the editor's expectations are.
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The Stone River |
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#61 | |
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That hairy-handed gent
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Who ran amok in Kent
Posts: 26,229
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Editors ain't pefrect. As for me, I have no "golden word syndrome". My problem is at the opposite end of the spectrum: I have an "osmium word syndrome." Osmium is possibly the most useless naturally-occurring element, the heaviest known and, exposed to oxygen, produces a foul-smelling deadly poisonous gaseous oxide. My words tend toward literary osmium. caw |
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#62 | |
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present
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Richmond UK
Posts: 1,466
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'Wolf Blood' : N M Browne '...has all the vividness, violence, passion and strangeness of a first rate historical/fantasy writer on top form.' The Times |
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#63 |
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practical experience, FTW
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 109
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I only just received my first set of suggested revisions by an editor, and I was delighted with them. They were insightful, and immediately pointed out things that neither me nor my betas had spotted (as we all rather had the benefit of having spoken about plot points, backgrounds, and assorted other things), and were just incredibly helpful to me. Working on the revisions now.
That said, while all of them were spot on in intent and insight, there are a couple of places where I'm going to try and address the problems without implementing the exact suggestions, for reasons related to theme and the narrative arc. I think an editor should be accorded the same sort of respect and careful consideration as any other professional expert; they may not be right all the time - few people are - but the vast, vast majority know what they're talking about, and more, it's their job to help make the best book possible. |
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