Christina Goebel's Blog - Posts Tagged "editing"
Publishing Books with Digital Teams
Many readers want to be writers one day and maybe you are like I was, waiting for the perfect moment to make it happen. When I told author Carolyn See at a book fair that I wanted to write books, she asked me if I had written one. She had me there.
What keeps you from writing? If you are worried about having polished writing, that is what editors and proofreaders do for authors anyway. Some of us need fewer corrections, but every author has areas of weakness that editing and proofreading address.
Lately, I have used Fiverr for many support roles for my book. I look at user reviews to see how happy clients were with the work, as well as at their scores and the number of jobs they have done. In many instances, vendors provide pictures or samples of their work. Services are affordable for almost all budgets, though some are more costly due to the skill and experience of some Fiverr vendors.
No matter what you wish to write about, don't let the small things get in your way. Write the book. Find or hire the support team later.
Blessings!
~ Christina Goebel
What keeps you from writing? If you are worried about having polished writing, that is what editors and proofreaders do for authors anyway. Some of us need fewer corrections, but every author has areas of weakness that editing and proofreading address.
Lately, I have used Fiverr for many support roles for my book. I look at user reviews to see how happy clients were with the work, as well as at their scores and the number of jobs they have done. In many instances, vendors provide pictures or samples of their work. Services are affordable for almost all budgets, though some are more costly due to the skill and experience of some Fiverr vendors.
No matter what you wish to write about, don't let the small things get in your way. Write the book. Find or hire the support team later.
Blessings!
~ Christina Goebel
Published on March 14, 2019 05:02
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Tags:
author, christina-goebel, editing, editor, goldenheart-how-to-love-humanity, proofreading, publishing, writer, writing
The Type of Book it Hurts to Read
It has been a while since I viewed writing with the thought that it is right or wrong. Since I have worked with the Chicago Manual of Style, AP Style, and the New York Times Manual of Style, I learned that writers disagree on the proper way to write things. Do I spell out forty-five or use the number? Which manual of style are you using?
What makes a book painful to read is when its language, organization, or punctuation usage loses the reader. In some cases, if the writing has errors, then misspellings and improperly used punctuation can torture the reader. Advanced writers may ramble in an abstract way that thwarts or bores their audience, or they may not organize their writing in such a way that it can be followed.
This is why even advanced writers need editors and proofreaders and no self-publishing author should neglect that detail. Having said this, I have read manuscripts where the author used an editor, proofreader, and Grammarly--and the manuscript had so many errors that I was stunned and little mad at the world.
Here's what you can do to avoid catastrophic reader dumping. Hire or recruit your team carefully. Have them review the book and make corrections. Then, ask someone with a writing degree to look over a couple of chapters. English teachers can do this with little effort. Journalists are trained to minimize meaningless words and get to the point.
Though many authors write because we love it, foremost in our minds we should consider the reader's experience.
Our book is our home. We are inviting our readers into it. Let us welcome them well.
What makes a book painful to read is when its language, organization, or punctuation usage loses the reader. In some cases, if the writing has errors, then misspellings and improperly used punctuation can torture the reader. Advanced writers may ramble in an abstract way that thwarts or bores their audience, or they may not organize their writing in such a way that it can be followed.
This is why even advanced writers need editors and proofreaders and no self-publishing author should neglect that detail. Having said this, I have read manuscripts where the author used an editor, proofreader, and Grammarly--and the manuscript had so many errors that I was stunned and little mad at the world.
Here's what you can do to avoid catastrophic reader dumping. Hire or recruit your team carefully. Have them review the book and make corrections. Then, ask someone with a writing degree to look over a couple of chapters. English teachers can do this with little effort. Journalists are trained to minimize meaningless words and get to the point.
Though many authors write because we love it, foremost in our minds we should consider the reader's experience.
Our book is our home. We are inviting our readers into it. Let us welcome them well.
Published on March 15, 2019 06:17
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Tags:
authors, christina-goebel, drafting, editing, editor, organization, proofreader, proofreading, punctuation, readers, write, writing
Solving Verb Tense Problems
During some recent editing work, I encountered a book that had multiple verb tenses. To complicate issues, the novel had multiple character timelines. Having wrestled with this problem before, I opted for the past tense. Why?
First, understand that there are certain things that readers accept without noticing, such as the common dialogue tags "he said/she said." We read those without considering them, but when we encounter "he extrapolated," that gets our attention. This is why journalists stick with he said/she said so that their message gets through and the reader's focus isn't shifted to which fancy tags they use.
Verb tense is similar for readers. Most books are written in the past tense. When we happen upon a book that uses present tense, our attention shifts temporarily to the writer's verb construction. I do believe that setting a book in the now creates a special experience for readers, just like writing with a first person narrator does. However, when you're writing a book and verb tense is all over the place, revert to the past tense--the most common form we experience--and save the sophisticated verb usage for times when it feels right and is easier to implement. https://www.goodreads.com/author/show...#
First, understand that there are certain things that readers accept without noticing, such as the common dialogue tags "he said/she said." We read those without considering them, but when we encounter "he extrapolated," that gets our attention. This is why journalists stick with he said/she said so that their message gets through and the reader's focus isn't shifted to which fancy tags they use.
Verb tense is similar for readers. Most books are written in the past tense. When we happen upon a book that uses present tense, our attention shifts temporarily to the writer's verb construction. I do believe that setting a book in the now creates a special experience for readers, just like writing with a first person narrator does. However, when you're writing a book and verb tense is all over the place, revert to the past tense--the most common form we experience--and save the sophisticated verb usage for times when it feels right and is easier to implement. https://www.goodreads.com/author/show...#
Published on March 29, 2019 19:08
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Tags:
author, authors, christina-goebel, dialogue-tags, drafting, editing, past-tense, verb-shift, verb-tense, writer, writers, writing


