WHY I CAN'T EDIT MYSELF by Ilene Schneider
The other day, I noticed the name of a salon:
[something]’s Kutz. Why, I wondered, would anyone want to get a haircut at a
place called Klutz?
A
while later, I read about the formation of an organization, but I thought the article’s
author had written “fornication.”
There are three things going on here. One, I have a very
disturbed subconscious. Two, it’s time to go to the optometrist and get my
prescription for the reading part of my lenses changed. And, three, we see what
we expect to see.
It’s
because of the last factor that I am completely unable to edit myself. (It’s
also because that same pesky subconscious is convinced that every word I write
is perfect and should not be changed or cut even if it is misspelled or unnecessary.)
Each
of my books underwent numerous edits, readings, re-readings, re-edits, re-re …
the same as all works by all authors do (or should). Inevitably, though, typos
and worse still existed in the final printed copies. The nonfiction TALK DIRTY
YIDDISH has at least one repeated paragraph. The first edition of CHANUKAH
GUILT had several typos and an inaccurate place name. (I’m afraid to read the
actual book of the second edition, which went through six edits. During the
course of each I discovered more errors.)
Within the first few minutes of his
beginning to read UNLEAVENED DEAD (also printed after six edits), my husband
asked if a time change was a red herring. It wasn’t. I then noticed a name
error on the first page (I was sure I had done a search-and-replace when I
changed the character’s name later in the book). An astute reader alerted me to
another inadvertent name switch (of a location, not a character) a bit later in
the book.
I am a
good editor of others’ works, finding typos, inconsistencies, and other errors
even (particularly) in books published by the Big Presses. And I have been
known to stop reading self-published books that are poorly edited because all
the mistakes interfere with the story.
So, if
I can find others’ mistakes so easily, why am I blind to my own? As I said
before, we see what we expect. I know what I meant to write, how I meant to
spell a word, or the name of a character; so those words are what I read when
I’m trying to edit my own works. If I know the word is supposed to be “striped,”
I won’t notice I typed “stripped.” Or if someone led a class, I don’t realize the
word should not be “lead;” after all, the mineral is pronounced the same as the
past tense of the verb. (I just misspelled “pronounced” as “prounced” and couldn’t
figure out why it was underlined with a broken red line!)
Shouldn’t
the publisher’s editor find all those errors? Theoretically, yes. But it is
also our job as writers to make sure our manuscripts are as “clean” as
possible. When I submit a manuscript, I “know” it is as good as it can be. Then
I receive the layout, review it, and find dozens of errors that I never saw
before. And neither did the editor, who is not reviewing my manuscript only,
but mine plus another dozen or so. After a while, we’re (or I am) on autopilot,
skimming rather than reading.
I know
some authors read their manuscripts backwards to find typos without being
distracted by the plot or the syntax. I’ve tried it. I gave up after a page. It
just didn’t work for me.
What
techniques work for you? I’m willing to try anything. Except reading backwards.
Bio:
Rabbi Ilene Schneider, Ed.D., one of the first women rabbis
ordained in the U.S., has finally decided what she wants to be when she grows
up. She recently retired from her day job to devote herself to writing. She is the
author of the Rabbi Aviva Cohen mysteries, Chanukah Guilt and the award-winning Unleavened Dead;
the 3rd, a work-in-progress, is titled Yom Killer. She also wrote the nonfiction Talk Dirty Yiddish:
Beyond Drek.
Website: http://rabbiauthor.com/
Comments
If you could really teach self editing to others, you;dmake alot of money.
JL Greger,
author of Ignore the Pain
But there are always those that do catch them. I had someone point out a spelling error in my first novel that went undetected, and then another reader pointed out two errors that should have been really obvious, but just as obviously weren't.
I guess ultimately nothing is perfect, and we can only hope to self-edit as much as possible and then get another set of eyes to catch what we don't, realizing of course that some reader will catch something that no one else caught.
As a side note, I try to pass my errors off as irony or word play.It doesn't work, of course, but it helps me sleep at night.
Now I am rereading this multiple times because I am paranoid there is something I missed.
www.GreenerPastures--ACityGirlGoesCountry.blogspot.com
And, not that it makes one feel any better, an editor at HarperCollins said every book has typos. They're like cockroaches.
I don't think any of us can successfully edit ourselves. I recently finished "Desperate Deeds," the third novel in my Malone mystery series, and, believe me, I went through that manuscript with a fine-toothed comb. Still, my editor found a few mistakes. I'm thankful for my critique group and my editor!
Tho it seems I obsessively pore over the M/S and am sure it's as perfect as can be, a funny thing happens when I cut & paste it to an email to
beta readers. I always find errors in the email version. My theory: EVEN CHANGING THE FONT will make errors more visible than in the font we customarily work in.
Tho it seems I obsessively pore over the M/S and am sure it's as perfect as can be, a funny thing happens when I cut & paste it to an email to
beta readers. I always find errors in the email version. My theory: EVEN CHANGING THE FONT will make errors more visible than in the font we customarily work in.
sallybosco.com
Marja McGraw
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