4/22/09

It's The Hard That Makes It Great


E-D-I-T-A-N-D-R-E-V-I-S-E !

Those who know me also know I have a great deal of respect for bestselling author, Margaret Moore and her expertise on rewriting and revising. All you need do is visit her blog and you'll hear her talk about her latest writing project and the grueling editing process she goes through each and every time she writes a novel. I agree with her and spend a large amount of time in edits too. The true revision process is long and not quick or easy. No one said it would be a fast track to the big print publishing houses!


A while back, Margaret wrote an article for eharlequin.com writers and I've included it below. Here's to revising and editing the heck out of our work to make it the best it can be!

Do it yourself Editing by Margaret Moore

"Talent is cheaper than table salt. What separates the talented individual from the successful one is a lot of hard work." — Stephen King

What sort of "hard work" is Stephen King talking about? There's the creating of characters and plot, and the writing of the first draft of your scenes — your original version of what your characters are going to say and do. But that's only the beginning.

After the first draft of a book or scene come the heavy lifting, the grunt work, the final shaping and polishing of the gem: editing your work to ensure that you have used the most appropriate words in the best order to create fascinating, believable characters in a dramatically interesting story.

There are three basic stages in my editing process. The first thing I do when I finish the first draft of the entire novel is to read it through completely, looking at what I've included in the story and the way I've organized the scenes. I'm focusing on the big picture; particularly, the development of the romance and overall pacing.

Have I organized the scenes so that the romance progresses as it should? Have I put the scenes in the order that best maximizes dramatic tension? Do I have any dead ends and "deadwood" — scenes or paragraphs that had a purpose when I first wrote them, but now contribute nothing to the overall story line and developing romance, and in fact, bog it down? Does a scene deepen the conflict between the hero and heroine, or within those characters? Have I shown the scene from the best point of view for maximum dramatic effect?

I input those changes and create another draft of the manuscript, which I read through again. Major alterations may still be made, but I'm less likely to move huge blocks of text. What I'm looking for here is to make sure my previous changes have led to improvements in pacing and tension, and the development of the romance. I check for consistency of mood and tone, and smooth transitions. The reader shouldn't be able to tell that I've moved a scene from one chapter to another, or shifted a chunk of dialogue. The story should flow easily, so that it reads as if I wrote it in one sitting.

I'm also checking the chapter endings to make sure each chapter concludes in a way that's going to encourage the reader to keep reading. (Tip o' the day: never ever end a chapter with a character going to sleep. Talk about encouraging a reader to do the same!)

Another step in the self-editing process is polishing the manuscript: checking for repetition of words and phrases, that details are consistent, dialogue is easy to follow and that I've avoided passive verbs wherever possible in favor of stronger action verbs.

This process isn't limited to the end of the editing process, however. I do this continually, every time I work on a scene. Does that mean that I've polished something that then gets cut? Unfortunately, yes. But the goal is to make my book the very best it can be, so if it's gotta go, it's gotta go.

Here are my basic rules for revising and editing:

Be ruthless. Nothing you write is sacred, ever.
When in doubt, cut it out. If it doesn't "feel" right, it probably isn't.
Never throw anything away. For every draft, I create a "dump" file. Everything I've deleted from a chapter goes there. You never know, you might need it. I seem to recall salvaging a line of prose from a dump file once. I also save every draft. Sometimes I realize that what I had originally written works better than the new version, so I go back and get the original. If you know you can retrieve the original work, cutting and changing isn't so painful.

Know your strengths and your weaknesses. Sorry, folks, but this is something you can really only learn by writing and having someone offer feedback, whether it's a critique partner or an editor. Once you have a handle on that, it will guide you through the editing process. If I have to cut, it's not going to be something that represents one of my strengths. If I know my weakness, that portion of the manuscript's going to be more scrutinized.

So, once I've done all that, I'm finished, right? Nope. Then my editor reads the book and, depending on her feedback, I start the whole process over again.

Writing isn't easy. Rewriting can be downright painful. But remember that line in A League of Their Own? "It's the hard that makes it great."

Or as Somerset Maugham once said, "Only a mediocre writer is always at his best."

4/15/09

All We Need Is Love...


Love is patient. Love is kind. And Love keeps you healthy, happy, and wrinkle-free...


As a romance writer, thinking about attraction and love is second nature. Here are a few true scientific research facts about our sexy world of Love.

Love is like chocolate. Love is a kind of chemical addiction, says Helen Fisher, Ph.D., an anthropologist at Rutgers University. Falling in love activates the pleasure centers of the brain and increases production of the feel-good chemical dopamine. She goes on to say that eating chocolate affects the same brain regions. So that's why it's hard to stop at one piece of chocolate!

Your nose knows he is the one. Did you just know he was the man for you? Thank your sense of smell. Researchers have found that women draw instinctively to the scent of men who are genetically different from them, which is a good thing. What draws you to one guy over another is his pheromones, unique chemical by-products of hormone production.

It is better to be hitched than rich. What makes people happiest? A solid marriage ranks highest on the smile scale. According to a Dartmouth study, having a good marriage is equal to the satisfaction gained from earning an extra $100,000 a year. So you really can be rich in love.

Hugs have a biological benefit. They reduce heart rate, blood pressure and stress hormones; boost the immune systems of the hugger and the one getting the hug.

And my all time favorite:

Love is a wonder drug. No, really -- here's more good news about physical intimacy. During a sensual encounter, your body pumps out 200 percent more endorphins (those feel-good chemicals responsible for a runner's high), according to a recent Johns Hopkins University study. Other research has found that physical intimacy relieves headaches and zaps mild depression instantly. One study even showed it was 10 times more effective than Valium at giving people a calm, contented feeling.

No wonder we like to write about HEA and love, love, love. It makes us feel so darn good!

What about you? Do you agree with the scientists? And do you have anything else to add?

Kaye