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Cozy Authors > Silly Mistakes in Book Drafts

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message 1: by Susan (new)

Susan (mysterywriter) | 201 comments Whether you're fighting deadlines or holiday crowds or you're on a cleaning marathon getting ready for guests, take a break and share a little silliness!

Just this morning, I realized I killed off a character and then had him talking three scenes later!

So, to all my fellow writers here: what silly mistakes have you made while working on a book or story draft?


message 2: by Tracy (last edited Dec 20, 2013 02:40PM) (new)

Tracy Weber (tracywe) | 345 comments I'm writing my second book now. Don't want to give anything away, but on the 7th draft, I realized that I had submersed my protag head-to-toe in water, fully clothed. Then had her hang out all day in a closed room being questioned by the police without ever drying off. AND not mentioning that she'd appreciate a towel. ;-)


Leslie aka StoreyBook Reviews (hugbandit7) | 170 comments I can't wait to hear more...these are funny! :)


message 4: by C.A. (new)

C.A. Newsome (canewsome) | 2 comments I block most of mine out. but I have had people join a group AFTER they have participated in the group conversation.


message 5: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 217 comments My favorite was changing the name of the town between the first and second chapters of The Ninja Librarian. I never even noticed until about the second round of revisions.


message 6: by ஐ Katya (Book Queen)ஐ, Cozy Mysteries Group Owner (new)

ஐ Katya (Book Queen)ஐ (katyabookqueen) | 1576 comments Mod
I contacted an author once to let her know about a weird error in my copy of the book. I didn't know how to contact the publisher. Incredibly, 70 pages of the book, repeated! I was missing a whole section, but the first section was repeated. She actually collected copies of her books with errors in them and this was a first for her. So she sent me an autographed copy to replace mine and I sent her the messed up one for her collection.


message 7: by Susan (new)

Susan (mysterywriter) | 201 comments ஐ Briansgirl (Book Sale Queen)ஐ wrote: "I contacted an author once to let her know about a weird error in my copy of the book. I didn't know how to contact the publisher. Incredibly, 70 pages of the book, repeated! I was missing a whole ..."

Wow! That could have been a nightmare for the author. Love how she turned it into a special moment for you!


❂ Murder by Death  (murderbydeath) ஐ Briansgirl (Book Sale Queen)ஐ wrote: "I contacted an author once to let her know about a weird error in my copy of the book. I didn't know how to contact the publisher. Incredibly, 70 pages of the book, repeated! I was missing a whole ..."

I have an old hard cover copy of God Save the Queen! by Dorothy Cannell that has two pages somewhere in the middle printed backwards - so all the writing is a mirror image of 'normal'. I love that copy for some reason. :)


message 9: by Kathy (new)

Kathy Finfrock In my novel, House of Redemption, I had my character, Dee, with her hands deep in sudsy water washing dishing. I had forgotten that this would be impossible since her hand was bandaged from multiple slices. I caught that on my final edit - 7 sounds about right.
Also, when I went to upload it for the Kindle - that was when I discovered a full page missing. Didn't see it at first as everything was aligned so pretty. I have no idea why Word decided to delete that section.


message 10: by Pam (new)

Pam (pamthebikerbabefan) Susan wrote: "Whether you're fighting deadlines or holiday crowds or you're on a cleaning marathon getting ready for guests, take a break and share a little silliness!

Just this morning, I realized I killed off..."


roflmao!!!! I'm not an Author but I read a really good book that gave three different shades for the guys hair.


message 11: by Susan (new)

Susan (mysterywriter) | 201 comments Pam wrote: "roflmao!!!! I'm not an Author but I read a really good book that gave three different shades for the guys hair."

Glad I made you laugh, Pam! I'd like to think we catch most of our mistakes before we go to print, but sometimes the weirdest things slip past us--and our editors!


message 12: by ☯Emily (new)

☯Emily  Ginder | 58284 comments A lot of books written today about the 50's and 60's talk about cell phones, answering machines, etc., which did not exist or were used in limited ways not accessible to the general public. Hate that!


message 13: by ஐ Katya (Book Queen)ஐ, Cozy Mysteries Group Owner (new)

ஐ Katya (Book Queen)ஐ (katyabookqueen) | 1576 comments Mod
These are all things spellcheck can't correct. :)


message 14: by Barbara (new)

Barbara Early (barbaraearly) | 69 comments Sorry I'm late to this thread. (I was under deadline.) I was going through page proofs for my upcoming April release, and suddenly realized I stink at vehicles. (And apparently so do my critique partners and editors.) I had cars morphing into vans changing into trucks and back again, and one of my characters drove a new truck of a kind not manufactured since the 1950s. I used to be so much more critical about book editing problems until I saw how easily these things can get by you...
Funniest thing I've seen in a published book is people ordering and paying for their food at a fast food counter, eating, and then a waitress coming by and presenting them with a bill. I'd avoid that restaurant...


message 15: by Rebecca (last edited Jan 11, 2014 10:24AM) (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 217 comments LOL, Barbara! I get around the car thing by making my protag as vague about cars as I am :) Though she (and I) can tell the difference between a sedan and a pickup :D

But that restaurant. . . yeah, avoid that one!


message 16: by Carolyn (new)

Carolyn Mahony | 18 comments I agree about the restaurant but the rest is so easily done! My protag slipped of the pram 'break' instead of 'brake' and no-one picked it up until a random reviewer reading my book commented on it! (And I'd read that darned page about 50 times!)


message 17: by Marja (new)

Marja McGraw (marja1) | 994 comments Well, I put a rose "peddle" instead of a rose petal in a new book. Thankfully someone caught that. I really do know the difference. LOL


message 18: by Lynda (new)

Lynda Wilcox (lyndawrites) | 60 comments English was always my best subject at school, but I swear that, since my stroke, I've got dyslexic fingers.

Not sure that that explains, 'stop medalling in my affairs', or the Mr Bracket that metamorphosed into Mr Bartlett, half through. Ooops.


message 19: by Barbara (new)

Barbara Early (barbaraearly) | 69 comments Oh goodness. I had to stop back by to let you all know I just removed a "toe-headed toddler" from the novel I'm editing. So glad I caught that one. Poor kid!


message 20: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 217 comments Lynda, I had a character whose name waffled back and forth between two versions for a long time. So Mr. Bracket/Bartlett makes sense to me!

And Barbara--that's funny! I'm getting visuals here. . .


message 21: by ஐ Katya (Book Queen)ஐ, Cozy Mysteries Group Owner (new)

ஐ Katya (Book Queen)ஐ (katyabookqueen) | 1576 comments Mod
All things a spell-checker program would miss. :)


message 22: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 217 comments Oh, yeah! Though I did finally realize that I could add character names to my spell-checker, so that they'll on,y get highlighted when I misspell them. Very helpful when using made-up names and difficult-to-spell place names (Pismawallops Island, anyone?).


message 23: by Susan (new)

Susan (mysterywriter) | 201 comments Barbara wrote: "Oh goodness. I had to stop back by to let you all know I just removed a "toe-headed toddler" from the novel I'm editing. So glad I caught that one. Poor kid!"

I laughed out loud when I read this. Imagine if this were an illustrated thread!


message 24: by Leslie aka StoreyBook Reviews (last edited Jan 15, 2014 07:23AM) (new)

Leslie aka StoreyBook Reviews (hugbandit7) | 170 comments Thank you for the chuckles this morning...I definitely needed them!

Susan - an illustrated thread, now that would be funny!


message 25: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 217 comments Can't match the toe-headed kid, but I just caught (in about the 10th draft) the police chief being surprised when the MC tells him something they had discussed at some length two chapters before.

On reflection, this is a thread I added in my last edit. Now I don't feel quite so bad. Still: proof that every time you make changes, you have to edit three more times to fix the errors you introduce!


message 26: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 217 comments And this isn't a mistake, but the fun of editing: coming on comments in the margin (my own, even!) that highlight a sentence and just say "fix this!"


message 27: by Lynda (new)

Lynda Wilcox (lyndawrites) | 60 comments lol, Rebecca. Glad to know I'm not the only one who does that.

When I'm reading through my MS, I often find ##more here, or ##check facts. It's supposed to stop me breaking the flow. Sometimes it works. :)


message 28: by Cheryl (new)

Cheryl Colwell (mailcheryllynncolwellcom) | 7 comments I received my ms back from an editor pointing out the fact that my cold character shuttered. That wasn't near as bad as the sad character whose continance fell. I still LOL.


message 29: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 217 comments Ooo. Watch for that falling continence!


message 30: by Lynda (new)

Lynda Wilcox (lyndawrites) | 60 comments Isn't this editing lark fun!

I've just come across a woman with a well shaped head (perhaps she knows the toe-headed boy) who lives in a flat with a pair of marching sofas!

Tee hee.


message 31: by Tracy (new)

Tracy Weber (tracywe) | 345 comments Marching sofas! Makes it hard to sit down....


message 32: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 217 comments They are trying to keep from ending up over-stuffed.


message 33: by Moonlight (new)

Moonlight | 49 comments In one book I read the author relocated Lake Michigan from the western shores of Michigan to the eastern shore. Same author wrote about watching the sun set on Lake St. Claire....when the hero and heroine were in Michigan. The only way to watch the sunset on Lake St. Claire is if you were in Canada. As far as I know she never corrected the geographic errors in later editions of the book.


message 34: by Charlene (new)

Charlene (charlenethestickler) I have a good friend who will go unnamed here; in his book on a theological topic, everyone missed a typo until he found in the final printed copy a reference to the "diving God." That made me feel better when my academic book was printed with a few mistakes.


Leslie aka StoreyBook Reviews (hugbandit7) | 170 comments even God likes to swim! LOL


message 36: by Barbara (new)

Barbara Early (barbaraearly) | 69 comments What a fun thread!

I was just reminded of a book I copy-edited for a small press. A sentence went something like: The island was a wild and dangerous place, the cook had said as he stirred the soup, fill with villains and pirates.

Needless to say, that did not make it in the final edition.


message 37: by ☯Emily (new)

☯Emily  Ginder | 58284 comments Must have been a yummy soup.


message 38: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 217 comments Obviously one of the Cannibal Islands.


message 39: by Beverly (new)

Beverly Allen | 2 comments I did it! I've mastered teleportation. Or cloning, maybe. Main character sees the police chief drive off just before she goes into a building. Guess who's already inside?

Maybe I should be writing sci-fi?

Just fixed that one...


message 40: by Lynda (new)

Lynda Wilcox (lyndawrites) | 60 comments More groan-inducing typos found today:

"...is a darn site better than..."

"It's a prefect likeness."

Dammit! I'm sure the blighters breed each time I close the file. ;)


message 41: by Marja (new)

Marja McGraw (marja1) | 994 comments I have to admit that the mistakes people are fessing up to are pretty entertaining. I've made so many that I can't remember them all, but I think I caught them before publication. I sure hope so. : )


message 42: by Susan (last edited Feb 03, 2014 02:18PM) (new)

Susan (mysterywriter) | 201 comments Lynda wrote: "lol, Rebecca. Glad to know I'm not the only one who does that.

When I'm reading through my MS, I often find ##more here, or ##check facts. It's supposed to stop me breaking the flow. Sometimes it..."


In the past, I liked to use a series of three characters to mark a comment so I wouldn't break the flow. I chose a letter key I could hit quickly and wasn't often used in many words. And there I went for years, until one day I inadvertently sent off a manuscript with an XXX still in place! The editor was not amused.

I've since switched to *** but it's not nearly so much fun... ;)


message 43: by [deleted user] (new)

Susan wrote: "Lynda wrote: "lol, Rebecca. Glad to know I'm not the only one who does that.

When I'm reading through my MS, I often find ##more here, or ##check facts. It's supposed to stop me breaking the flow..."

Susan that's brilliant made my day :) xxxx


message 44: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 217 comments Hmm. I use square brackets, but they are even easier to miss! Or else I scribble a note on a piece of paper, referencing the page number. I then lose the paper, and/or am unable to interpret my note when I return.


message 45: by Barbara (new)

Barbara Schlichting (barbschlichting) | 37 comments I spend more time worrying about POV and tenses, that I get all messed up. POV is much better now, but tenses! Yikes!


message 46: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 217 comments My latest was having a reader point out that characters (including the narrator) didn't refer to other characters in a consistent way--sometimes first name, sometimes last, with or without title. Some of that can make sense, but it was totally random. I'm busy fixing it now. In the process, I've discovered two cases of misspelling a character's name.


message 47: by Charlene (new)

Charlene (charlenethestickler) In one book I recently read, I found that a character chose a seat apposite. Also, one person was supposed to partition someone (or a group, I forget)....

When I taught, my students' bloopers were sometimes dandies, but that would be changing the subject of this thread.


message 48: by Susan (last edited Mar 06, 2014 05:34AM) (new)

Susan (mysterywriter) | 201 comments Rebecca wrote: "My latest was having a reader point out that characters (including the narrator) didn't refer to other characters in a consistent way--sometimes first name, sometimes last, with or without title. ..."

I hope that was a beta reader who caught that for you, Rebecca!

At least you didn't change a character's name twice on a single page, as I did in yesterday's draft.

Hmmm...maybe that's a clue I need to rename this guy. After all, if I can't keep it straight from one paragraph to the next, I doubt my readers will find him memorable!


Leslie aka StoreyBook Reviews (hugbandit7) | 170 comments I always wonder how authors keep all of their characters straight! I'm reading a book now (not a mystery) and there are so many people and I'm not sure how they all connect, at least not yet!


message 50: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Douglass (rdouglass) | 217 comments That's a good point, Susan! And yes, it was a beta-reader, or at least a reader of an ARC, with time to fix it still. I have straightened it out, mostly.


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