Tips for Authors
A Common Mistake In Editing Is Only Thinking About What You Take Out
Author: Mark Walton
The best advice you'll get about editing is that you need to
reduce the word count. Eliminating unnecessary dialogue or description is vital
in keeping your novel punchy and maintaining the reader's interest.
So it comes as no surprise that many writers end up taking so many
words out, they forget that editing can also be about putting words in.
As the author, you know the story backwards. You know what's
happened, what's going on now and what's about to transpire. Your reader,
hopefully, does not.
So when you edit, you are at risk of taking
out some essential data that you don't see as necessary - but the reader
absolutely needs to be able to link the story together. You remember the full
plot, even when the passage that describes a key event is removed. Your reader
does not have that luxury.
Removing plot elements is a basic
editing mistake, and with a little effort, you can spot these mistakes quite
easily.
A harder mistake to spot during editing is the lack of
transition.
In the real world, we leap from subject to subject
during a conversation. A pause here or a gesture there and the listener knows
instinctively that we've changed track. Even simple body language can indicate
that one topic is now closed and a new one is about to start.
In a
similar way, a book has to jump from scene to scene but does not have the luxury
of a few sentences in between, to set up the new passage.
Transition is about smoothly linking one scene to another.
Sometimes, in editing, this means adding words, not simply taking them away.
An ideal transition would be one word - if it conveys the change.
As with the rest of editing, the trick is to add as few words as possible that
allow the reader to quickly see what's happened.
No transition
means that it can take a reader quite a few lines to realize that the characters
are no longer in the jungle but on an ocean liner. The reader will assume that
whatever is happening, is happening in the jungle - and it will really confuse
when the cry of a seagull is heard halfway through a conversation.
TV and film have such an advantage here. They can fade to black
and show a new scene for a few seconds before the action restarts. The fade to
black is easy to show in print - a chapter or scene break can be easily read.
It's that opening shot that is so difficult to get right.
Too many
words and you can lose the reader. If someone confronts the hero with a gun as
an opener to the new scene, the reader will not expect a few paragraphs about
the scenery to follow before we find out about the shooter.
Similarly, if we spend half a page talking about the landscape and
then mention that someone has the hero at gunpoint; it won't sit right with the
reader.
So please, when you're wielding the red pen in an effort
to cut out unnecessary words, remember there are two common definitions of edit:
1. To eliminate; delete
2. To prepare (written
material) for publication or presentation, as by correcting, revising, or
adapting
Please keep in mind that in preparing a manuscript for
submission, the process is best reflected by the second description. The first
is simply a part of that wider definition. If you can remember that
editing is as much about what you add as take away, then your final manuscript
will benefit greatly.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/writing-articles/a-common-mistake-in-editing-is-only-thinking-about-what-you-take-out-423978.html
About the Author:
Mark Walton is the author of 19 Ways to
Dramatically Improve Your Manuscript Editing, a self-help guide for writers. If
you want to improve your chances of getting a story published then visit
http://www.betternovelwriting.com/Editing.htm
and see how quickly and easily your writing can advance.



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