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Editing Tips!
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Brianna, So get up. Get up and FIGHT BACK.
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Sep 26, 2014 07:33AM

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Something that helped me greatly is learning the use of who and that. It's simple: humans are who and everything else is that. So if you're saying "she was the girl that..." wrong. It's "she was the girl who." Simple, but extremely tricky when everybody messes it up!


Also, a grammar mistake that I see MANY writers make is then/than miss-usage. ThEn is for whEn. I will do this thEn that. ThAn is for compArison. I can do this better thAn you.
@haley very good point! I do the opposite all the time. Haha and sometimes it's more fun editing (I use the Microsoft track changes and I love seeing red) so it's always a good reminder!


:-)
Anyone have a good editing program. I know word was mentioned but I am currently unsure whether to buy it... is it worth the price? I have heard many say no.
The thing that gets me with editing the most is this little guy right here... ' such a tricky critter!
It's = It is
His ankle = possessive (no ' right?!)
Richard's ankle = possessive (now there is one!)
Desks = Plural (no ')
The Desk's drawer = possessive (Now there it is again!)
So anyone got an easy tip to remember all this? After editing 10 chapters my mind begins to fuzz...
The thing that gets me with editing the most is this little guy right here... ' such a tricky critter!
It's = It is
His ankle = possessive (no ' right?!)
Richard's ankle = possessive (now there is one!)
Desks = Plural (no ')
The Desk's drawer = possessive (Now there it is again!)
So anyone got an easy tip to remember all this? After editing 10 chapters my mind begins to fuzz...
Apostrophes sure can be tricky!! If you find any tips for them, be sure to share it here! I'm afraid I won't be much help... ;)


If anyone is interested, Scriv gives half-off codes to NaNo winners, and they've been doing that for several years; so a lot of winners already have Scrivener from past years, so they're happy to pass their codes along to newcomers. This is perfectly allowed, and benefits Scrivener makers because it allows writers who would not have purchased it otherwise to give them half the regular price, and makes new converts so it's a win-win.
I've facilitated other Scriv code re-homings, (already gave mine away from this NaNo!) so if anyone is interested, I'd be happy to contact a few winners and find an unused code that needs a loving home. ;-)
Just let me know! :-)
Elizabeth
I've been interested in Scrivener. How much does it cost? It sounds like an awesome program for not only writing, but school also.

Yes, it ends up costing about 20 bucks, so that's pretty economical for writing software. It's not got as strong a thesaurus as Word, (a feature I do use a lot there!!! ;-) ) But it's certainly worlds better than OpenOffice, and the structural flexibility is way different than anything traditional doc programs can offer. So it's pretty neat... I am very glad that I got it with my Scriv code last year!!! :-)
If you're interested, I can see about scrounging a languishing code for you! :-)
Elizabeth
I would definitely be interested in giving Scrivener a try. It's bound to be better than the free version of Word and right now that's all I got. I'd use a code if you found another.

I'm looking for someone to do just basic editing (correcting grammar etc.) and like writing down suggestions such as: "reword this because I felt it broke the flow of the story" or "This was hard to understand; explain better" or "this character felt a little flat..."
SO not wild critiquing. It's my story. A story from my heart. I want it to stay that way. But I would appreciate someone pointing out little things I missed, to help me polish for publishing!!
If anyone can help, I would be so grateful!! :)
Shantelle Mary wrote: "Hey, so speaking of editing... would any of you know of a good (relatively cheap) editor?
I'm looking for someone to do just basic editing (correcting grammar etc.) and like writing down suggestio..."
I am not a "professional" editor but I do have 8 years worth of College level grammar studies for creative writing, novel writing, and writing for publication. I received a diploma for each of the two four year courses.
Assuming you don't find anything and you were willing to let me take a crack at it I'd be up for it. Editing and proof reading is something I have wanted to try to get into doing but just never known where a good place to start was.
I'm looking for someone to do just basic editing (correcting grammar etc.) and like writing down suggestio..."
I am not a "professional" editor but I do have 8 years worth of College level grammar studies for creative writing, novel writing, and writing for publication. I received a diploma for each of the two four year courses.
Assuming you don't find anything and you were willing to let me take a crack at it I'd be up for it. Editing and proof reading is something I have wanted to try to get into doing but just never known where a good place to start was.

With that, do you know what you would charge? (It is quite a long book).
Thanks again for your interest, :)


Thanks again! :)

If you don't go with anyone else and let me have a go of it I can discuss any reasonable option for pricing. I'm not looking to make a bunch of money, just get into doing it and see if I could build a client base.
Just off the top of my head I would throw out $175 for the length of your book.
Just off the top of my head I would throw out $175 for the length of your book.
my editor, Jeanne Leach, charges around $200 for a final run-through edit. She does more critiquing, but let's you keep the story. She helped me make mine better while keeping it mine. J I'm sure she would look through for grammatical errors though. She's spectacular.

I've used her before and she was spot-on with her work. I'm currently trying to schedule her for the final rounds of editing for my book, The Bow of Destiny.
E. wrote: "Hey Brianna!
Yes, it ends up costing about 20 bucks, so that's pretty economical for writing software. It's not got as strong a thesaurus as Word, (a feature I do use a lot there!!! ;-) ) But it'..."
Great! Thank you! I thought it was a lot more money, so maybe I will get myself a Christmas present. :)
Yes, it ends up costing about 20 bucks, so that's pretty economical for writing software. It's not got as strong a thesaurus as Word, (a feature I do use a lot there!!! ;-) ) But it'..."
Great! Thank you! I thought it was a lot more money, so maybe I will get myself a Christmas present. :)

Also..."
Whoa! I didn't think you could "edit/markup" in a kindle eBook! What a great idea Kendra!

You can't edit the file, but you can leave notes, like taking a red pen to the story after you've printed it out. I've done this with four out of six of my books, and I'm working through it for my seventh, and I love it.

Oh. That's what I meant. (lol) Great idea, though.

I would just like to know how long people are going to need, so I can plan likewise.
Thanks!! :)
It would probably take me about a month, personally, but I've never beta-read, so don't go on what I say

I'm not sure this quite answers your question, but this is an editing tip, so I think it counts ...

Kendra, my own speed would be to have finished it weeks ago. :) I want to know how WP,FP ends.

Either way, congrats on getting your novel written! :)

Yes, it is an enormous amount...not sure how it got so long! O.O I'm trying to cut down the word count; but really what I want is a good story, not a "perfect-length" story. We'll see. I'm reading it over to try to see if it drags anywhere and what I can take out without disturbing the story! :)
I've thought about gift cards and whatnot, but I'm not sure I have the money at this point. Hmm. Thanks for the feedback, all! I will keep thinking on it, and try to figure out what to do! :)

Provided you've finished editing on your end, of course.
Morgan wrote: "Kendra, my own speed would be to have finished it weeks ago. :) I want to know how WP,FP ends. "
I'm working on getting part 4 ready to send to you ... Oh, but the tension's growing. Emotions run high in part 4, that's all I'm saying.
*scampers off before I can get in trouble for going off topic*

It's called The Story Grid: What Good Editors Know by Shawn Coyne. Coyne used to be an editor and has worked on multiple bestselling books. Now, he's not a Christian and there's a bit of foul language in the book, but his advice on writing is invaluable. He advocates that all writers should be their own editors, provided they learn the essentials of story and follow the fundamentals of editing.
It's a great read, especially if you aspire to be an editor!

How do I do page numbers and headers? Number 1 is showing up on my Prologue page, but here's no pages after that! If I put 2 in the page after the Prologue, it makes a 2 on all the pages under it.
And with headers. How do I delete headers from chapter pages and blank pages??
I am so, so confused, guys. I've been researching and researching, but when I try whatever people say to do, it just doesn't work.
Do you have any youtube videos or whatnot that explain step-by-step and thoroughly how to do this? (I'm wondering if I did something wrong with the page breaks).
Help!! :p

First, you have to use section breaks, not page breaks. Make sure with the page numbers you used the "insert page number" feature and that it's linked to the previous section.
For the headers, you have to edit them to have a different first page. To do this, you have to make sure you put a next page section break between each chapter. You can find the features to edit the header to have a different first page in one of the tabs that pops up when you double click on your header. Then you just delete it from the pages you don't want it on. If you have something different on the odd and even pages, you'll need to make sure to tell it to have a different odd and even. And when you need a blank page, the easiest way is to make it a new section and make sure it's not linked to the section before or the section after.
Headers and footers are so difficult to work with. And sometimes they just refuse to work, even when you're doing what you're supposed to. When that happens (and it even happened to me on Creighton Hill) I generally restart the program and sometimes the entire computer. A lot of the time that seems to help.
Let me know if this doesn't work, or you need more tips!


@Lena, I'm using Microsoft Word 2013, I believe. And I actually downloading createspace.com's basic template.
@Morgan, I made sure the numbers started at the Prologue, but they just don't continue after that!! I don't know what I'm doing wrong.
Hmm... I shall go try again, and then get back to you guys! :)
Thanks SO much for the responses!! :)

Hmm, not sure what's going on with the page numbers. I would probably remove them entirely, close it and open it again and then put them back in. Sometimes that works. And if it doesn't, it's probably some setting on the footers or page numbers. But try it, and if it doesn't work, then I'll look at the settings on Word and try to figure out where you might have gone wrong.
Headers and footers are evil. :P

However... numbering is still a big problem. I've tried closing it down--doing it all over again. Tried downloading the basic template again, and doing EVERYTHING over. It's just not working for me. Grr. :/
Yes... I now know personally that they are quite evil, XD
Also, I'm doing a page break between the title page and the second title page thing, and its showing in the preview that I have two blank pages between those two. Why is it adding an extra blank page?? Not showing that on my document.
*sigh* Off to do some more experimenting...

You may have accidentally inserted an extra page break. Turn on the formatting symbols, the little paragraph symbol in the paragraph section of the home tab, and it should have a dotted line that says page break where there are some. It strangely doesn't always show up if there's more than one blank page. Or there could also be a section break too and it's just printing funky. Look at it in the print preview before you print to PDF. It often looks quite different.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Light Horse (other topics)King of Aethon (other topics)
The Story Grid: What Good Editors Know (other topics)