Support for Indie Authors discussion
Fun
>
Grammar Police!!! (In Color)
date
newest »


Pretend person and information:
sally walters
123 hollow ave apt 123
sonoma, ca 43846
Employer:
johnsons pharmacuticals
Emergency Contact:
jon berry

However on social media I don't think policing grammar is expected. It's informal, like speech, so correcting SPaG just for the sake of it is kinda missing the point.
This distinction is evident on the online critique site I belong to. When you put up work to be critiqued then mistakes are fair game. But when people post in the discussion forums associated with the site (similar to the discussion groups here) people occasionally nitpick SPaG and usually get taken to task for it.

I always thought basic literacy and numeracy, as well as critical thinking, were foundational to a free and fair society, so the standards on show today make me despair.
But there is a difference between noticing, and policing. If a discussion is worth engaging in, then it's more fruitful to engage in the issue at hand, not the writing.



I loved your messed up post. You don't write like that and I know it, but it does point out what you are saying. It's not my job to be the grammar police unless it's a book or something someone has given me to read for critique/correction.
Yeah, after writing and proofreading my 180k (well over 200k in early drafts) manuscript, I can easily spot some mistakes - as someone who isn't native in English...
...but I don't pull out my grammar police badge unless the post is completely undecipherable for me.
That said, I'm more used to the "grammar nazi" term than "grammar police".
...but I don't pull out my grammar police badge unless the post is completely undecipherable for me.
That said, I'm more used to the "grammar nazi" term than "grammar police".

JAKe wrote: "Dwayne, Review the Grammer and spelling in what you wrote, or was it to make your point?"
It was meant to be funny. This is the fun folder. I am seriously curious what people have to say about it, but I'm trying to have some fun, too.
Ha ha?
It was meant to be funny. This is the fun folder. I am seriously curious what people have to say about it, but I'm trying to have some fun, too.
Ha ha?
I've been reading your responses. I'll get back into the conversation in a couple of days. I just wanted to see some responses, first.
I am commenting now because some of you are talking about the professional arena. Don't even get me started on the headaches there. Some of you might know, outside of this writer gig I also work as a human services supervisor for a company that houses dependent adults. There is tons of documentation and tons of texting and emails and so on. It's painful to try to read some of the documentation. Some of our employees are not native to the US and speak English as a second or third language. I can forgive their mistakes a bit easier as, hell, I barely speak any other languages myself. But, the ones who grew up speaking and writing English since childhood? Yeah, it's painful.
I am commenting now because some of you are talking about the professional arena. Don't even get me started on the headaches there. Some of you might know, outside of this writer gig I also work as a human services supervisor for a company that houses dependent adults. There is tons of documentation and tons of texting and emails and so on. It's painful to try to read some of the documentation. Some of our employees are not native to the US and speak English as a second or third language. I can forgive their mistakes a bit easier as, hell, I barely speak any other languages myself. But, the ones who grew up speaking and writing English since childhood? Yeah, it's painful.

It is really funny when these people can't even type a complete sentence without major errors and then wonder why others scoff at what they wrote.

I worked as a legal secretary for many years. Accuracy was of paramount importance in legal documents. Myself and my fellow secretaries and paralegals used to cross-check each other's work to eliminate typos and make sure it was legally accurate too.

Even if a writer hires an editor, it is best to read what the editor has changed so as to make sure the meaning and intent of the author is intact.

Like you, I will point out that they needed to edit the book. If I stop before I finish the book, I will give that book a low review and then say why. Usually it's for editing, but I've read a few that were on the level of a 5th grader in how it was written. Those I find are the worst to leave a review on because I don't know the education level or anything about the author or if it is a first book, etc. For those, I recommend a critique group and developing a thick skin while learning how to write better.
I still have difficulty with those who don't think they need an editor then get upset when the review says the book was riddled with typos, misspellings, wrong word usage, mixed up sentences, left out parts of a scene, in general, the book is like a first draft thrown up there when they finished it. Then they wonder why indie authors are not as respected as the traditionally published authors. It's simple--too many don't care about the quality of their work.

I hope that one day the stigma around self-publishing will go away. I should also mention that I've read several traditionally published books with dreadful errors in them. Not only typos but inconsistencies like a woman trying to run in high heels on one page and on the next, she's wearing sensible medium-heeled shoes, yet no indication of a change of footwear in the narrative. In another book, a father and son were drinking beer out of cans, but they seemed to forget that fact and clashed their glasses together. In yet another book, a character changed name part-way through the story. It was not explained in the narrative, so I can only conclude it must have been a consistency error not picked up by the five (yes, five!) editors thanked by the author.

Unfortunately, I think that as long as there are many self-published authors whose books are riddled with errors, self-publishing may have that reputation for many readers. But that doesn’t mean many readers won’t seek out the well-written well-edited self-published books anyway. Readers that want to read decent well-edited books with interesting stories usually know how to seek them out. 🤓🧐😀

The trouble is, some self-pubbed authors can still be very successful (i.e. large following of readers waiting for their next book) even when they don't believe in editing. Someone commenting on another group on GR (can't remember which, it was a while ago) was trying to finish her book in time because she wanted to publish it that weekend. Finish ... as in finish writing it!

Thanks for all your replies.
So, my hot take.
Some years ago when the Internet was fairly new and I was younger and I was a bit more snobbish about my love for the English language and what not, I was always quick to point out people's spelling and grammatical errors. I've come down from my high horse since, realizing I was being a snob and an elitist jerk.
It does still bother me to see people making mistakes they should have mastered years ago, especially native speakers of the English language (ie a coworker earlier today sending out a text that said, "your welcome"), but I keep it to myself.
I have one exception. Social media. I do revert back to my snobbery if someone makes a mistake, especially if it looks like a typo, someone else comments, attempting to correct them and being an ass about it, and the person doing the correcting makes mistakes, too.
So, my hot take.
Some years ago when the Internet was fairly new and I was younger and I was a bit more snobbish about my love for the English language and what not, I was always quick to point out people's spelling and grammatical errors. I've come down from my high horse since, realizing I was being a snob and an elitist jerk.
It does still bother me to see people making mistakes they should have mastered years ago, especially native speakers of the English language (ie a coworker earlier today sending out a text that said, "your welcome"), but I keep it to myself.
I have one exception. Social media. I do revert back to my snobbery if someone makes a mistake, especially if it looks like a typo, someone else comments, attempting to correct them and being an ass about it, and the person doing the correcting makes mistakes, too.


I'd like to know which Trad. Publisher let that go through. A typo here and there, but any editor worth paying better catch those types of errors, which makes me think one of the tiny, you-pay-for-editing, publishers.
My favorite was the couple making love in the kitchen and in the same paragraph they are pulling the covers up over them with pillows behind their heads. When I pointed it out to the author, her comment, "Just use you imagination as to how they got there." Talk about an I-don't-care attitude. And that wasn't the only error. My review was 1 star. I wrote, "This author doesn't care how poorly her books are edited, stating when notified of several errors that needed to be corrected for me to use my imagination. Okay. I am. I'm imagining her at the bottom of Amazon's ratings for her lack of caring about her writing. I'll never read another of her books because I'm not fond of reading first drafts published as a finished book."
She attempted to get it removed. It's still there and she is way below me and I'm not all that high on the lists. You would need to go to the very last page of that genre to find her books.
I pay a copyeditor for all my books. She catches all my stupid errors including a timeline error. It's worth the $100/1000 words to know the book is the best I can make it at that time.

I didn't mean to infer the Grammer problems are solely in the realm of indie authors. When I put my two cents in I wasn't thinking of any particular type of author. Heck, I've read newspaper articles which are difficult to follow or understand due to poor sentence structure and grammatical errors.

So, my hot take.
Some years ago when the Internet was fairly new and I was younger and I was a bit more snobbish about my love for the English language and what not, ..."
Everybody makes too errors, while I refuse to take any notice of "grammar police" who cannot correctly use subjunctives.


I'm sorry. Would you prefer this?


I need you to beta read for me. I'm so, so bad with passive voice. I'm working on it, but it's still there along with telling and not showing.

Harper Voyager in the case of the character name-change error and the five editors. It was an epic sword and sorcery novel by a long-established well-known author.
The other two, I can't remember. But they were Big Five, or subsidiaries thereof. They were both murder mystery/police procedural books.

I didn't mean to infer the Grammer problems are solely in the realm of indie authors. When I put my two cents in I wasn't thinking of any particular type of author. Heck, I've read newspaper..."
Understood. I suppose I might have come across as a tad defensive. It's a pet peeve of mine when I see so much criticism of self-published authors. The majority opinion seems to paint us all as over-enthusiastic, unprepared, disorganised and barely literate amateurs. An opinion which is undeserved.

The best way to remember when and how to use subjunctive is the old Fiddler on the Roof song "If I WERE a rich man". The subjunctive expresses wishes and theoretical concepts. Some consider it a mood rather than a tense. I love the subjunctive.

I'm sorry. Would you prefer this?
"
I missed this one, Phillip! Laugh for the day! Thank you (bowing)

I'm sorry. Would you prefer this?
"
I missed this one, Phillip! Laugh for the day! Thank you (bowing)"
I'm glad you liked it.

I was just curious about something . 1st, I have to confes I spend a lot of time on facebook. to much, in fact. I seen a lot of people making spelling and grammer mistakes and than when someone corrects it, the some one always gets chastised by they're peers for beingthe "grammar police" or some similar term. Depending on my mood, the poster, how much time I have to wound, my mood, ect. i sometimes put on my grammar police badge and sometimes I don't.
Wondering how many? Because maybe are writers worst grammer police or are we most of us above that kind of think.
Hello.