| S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| « Sep | Nov » | |||||
| 1 | ||||||
| 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
| 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 |
| 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 |
| 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 |
| 30 | 31 | |||||
- Blog Posts (30)
- Contact (1)
- How To book reviews about writing (3)
- Links (1)
- Reviews & Interviews (1)
- Writing Advice (18)
- 24. January 2012: Self-Publishing Picture Books?
- 6. January 2012: CICADA is publishing my short story!
- 10. December 2011: I’m Not Proud: All the Wrong Ways to Deal with an Agent
- 27. November 2011: Why I Struggle While Reading Self-Published Work
- 7. November 2011: Hiatus on my Education
- 26. October 2011: Should You Pay to Have Your Work Critiqued?
- 17. October 2011: The New Face of Publishing?
- 4. October 2011: Revision 411
- 9. September 2011: Sentimental Writing
- 1. September 2011: Getting my Masters Degree Part 1
Revision 411
One of the most difficult parts of being a writer–ahem, a good writer–is the revision process. You’ve probably heard the term, “Killing one’s babies.” If not, you will eventually. It means (in a rather morbid fashion) that you will be removing a beloved portion of your story for the greater good of your novel/short story/essay.
Yes, you heard me correctly. Sure, you may be thrilled with a sentence you’ve written. It has pizazz! It has symbolism! It has the mark of a creative mind!
But then someone points out that it has no place in the storyline.
It slowly dawns on you (and by “slowly” I mean it may take a few days to settle in) that your critiquer is correct. Although it’s an awesome sentence–perhaps the best you’ve ever written–it doesn’t add to the story. In fact, it may even take the reader out of the story, it’s so profound.
Delete sentence. And sob.
But first? Copy and paste it into your “word dump” file. You do have one, don’t you? The place where you keep all those phrases that you love but can’t keep? You know, those babies? Because good writers don’t really kill their babies. No. They send them to a foster home in the hopes someday they’ll be adopted.
In the meantime, you will return to your work, cutting and pluming as if the piece is an unruly bush that needs trimming before the neighbor’s complain. Yes, there are mixed metaphors in my post. Another problem for writers.
This is why I am going to start up a new blog for those desperate to understand how to revise and trim. I call it “Revision 411,” and the link is here: http://revision411.wordpress.com/
I will have it up and running soon.
Help is here. And hopefully all your babies will be adopted soon.
5. October 2011 at 16:56
I don’t actually mind editing because it always turns out better than when you started.
5. October 2011 at 20:47
Janet, that’s a good attitude! Once I get into the groove, I’m happy, but sometimes it seems so overwhelming at first. But I agree, it usually means a stronger story.
8. October 2011 at 16:50
Too funny! My post scheduled for monday talks about killing your darlings. There must have been a vibe going through the universe.
I love the revision process. I’m not so fond of writing the first draft, but I love to revise and make it shine. It’s the best part of writing.
I totally agree that there are some pieces/sentences/scenes/elements/etc that just don’t belong in a story, no matter how good they are. The best we can hope for is to store them away to possibly use in another story.
10. October 2011 at 00:26
So glad you love the revision process, Tabitha, and thanks for your response! I have to say I love the first draft experience the best…but maybe that is unusual? Though revising does remind me of playing with Play-doh. Sometimes you can mash it and mold it and it turns out better than expected, other times no matter what you do it looks like a pile of mush.
(If anyone is interested in reading Tabitha’s post for Monday you can find it here: http://tabwriter.blogspot.com/)