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Literary Shop Talk > When the Editors Goof While Lecturing About Proofreading

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message 1: by Ken, Moderator (last edited Feb 23, 2018 07:47AM) (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
While preparing a submission for the poetry magazine, Rattle, I came across this sentence in the submissions guidelines:

"Note that typos and minor changes never effect our decisions—proofreading is what editors are for."

Is it me, or does the editor who wrote this need an editor?


message 2: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 16546 comments Mod
Oh dear. Poor Tim. That’s embarrassing.


message 3: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
It could be that someone other than Tim wrote it, too. You know. Delegating.


message 4: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 16546 comments Mod
If so, it was probably his wife, whose name escapes the brainbox right now, so it's almost equally embarrassing.


message 5: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
Maybe someone should tell him. Then again, maybe not. Tim is notoriously touchy and defensive when he sniffs a criticism of any sort--even when it's not.


message 6: by Doug (new)

Doug | 2834 comments That -- I am deeply affected by.


message 7: by Ken, Moderator (last edited Feb 27, 2018 12:00PM) (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
One poet friend wondered if it might be a joke, maybe. Ha-ha.


message 8: by Doug (new)

Doug | 2834 comments Poetry doesn't require common understanding.


message 9: by Sally (new)

Sally (brasscastle) | 166 comments Doug wrote: "Poetry doesn't require common understanding."
I would hope that it requires some kind of understanding, common or uncommon, provided that the poet isn't trying deliberately to be cryptic.


message 10: by Doug (new)

Doug | 2834 comments Sally wrote: "Doug wrote: "Poetry doesn't require common understanding."
I would hope that it requires some kind of understanding, common or uncommon, provided that the poet isn't trying deliberately to be cryptic."


I don't like being whizbanged either, but not everyone will understand what any particular poet writes because we are all different and have different experiences. If the poet wishes to expound some philosophy then he is not going to reach everyone.


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