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Touching the future of reading – ebooks on Kindle, Nook, iPad (via Steve Umstead: Writer, I think)

You know how you talk to people in your family and they deplore the e-book wave? Okay, I’m really talking about me and my family. And it’s not that they deplore the e-book wave. It’s that they don’t believe in it at all and think I’m “full of little green apples.” (They’re rural and condescending.)

Years of therapy ahead. (Heavy sigh.)

Anyway, I ran across this post that reports from the front of the e-book wave, right where it’s already washed up on shore. Check it out.

Touching the future of reading - ebooks on Kindle, Nook, iPad This past weekend, I promised myself I’d sit down, shut out all distractions, and put together a rough outline for Book 2 of the Evan Gabriel trilogy (yes, it’s nearly official – Gabriel’s Redemption will be the first book in a science fiction/space opera trilogy…no better way to get noticed and have validity as a new author than to have more than one novel for sale, or at least in the pipeline). I packed up the trusty MacBook Air, iPhone, note … Read More

via Steve Umstead: Writer, I think

Filed under: publishing

Eat Your Lima Beans: The Importance of Becoming the Writer You Aren’t (via Albert Berg’s Unsanity Files)

This is such an excellent post that cuts to the heart of achieving any kind of a success as a writer (or any other profession.)

It won’t all be roses, but to do the thing you dislike, to perform the task that bores you or even the thing you fear most: these are the ways to get where you want to be.

Eat Your Lima Beans: The Importance of Becoming the Writer You Aren't When I was a kid, my mom had a rule at the dinner table: "Eat everything on your plate." I was okay with it most of the time. Mom was a great cook who never failed to deliver a stunning meal even when she didn't have much to work with. But sometimes…sometimes that rule was a tough pill to swallow. Especially when Lima beans were involved. But what I didn't realize was that mom was teaching me an important principle way back then: it's just as i … Read More

via Albert Berg's Unsanity Files

Filed under: publishing

Editing Tips Part 1: Story bible

my eye

Image via Wikipedia

Since I’m in heavy edit mode this week, it’s going to be all about editing all week. You asked. I give. And so:

A story bible is a document beside your manuscript where you keep track of characters’ names, ages and details. It will keep you from screwing up too much and make your revision process go faster. It’s very frustrating, for instance, to go through a 450-page manuscript looking for the hero’s little sister’s eye color page by page. It’s the equivalent of losing a productive hour to search the house for a misplaced checkbook.

Keep your story bible close so you can add to it without interrupting your writing flow. I use a yellow legal pad though if you have the document on-screen you could search it, I suppose. (A bible that is too long goes unread but is an excellent device to keep you procrastinating instead of writing and revising.)

Even if you’re less of a planner (the seat-of-the-pants writer) it helps to have some minimal plan or a story bible so you can keep track of characters and key details. It’s better than losing a character along the way. It is embarrassing to write an entire novel and think you’re done only to have one of your beta readers ask, “What happened to Mrs. Haversham? Did she survive the fall to the bottom of the stairs on page 139? And what happened to the alien prostitute who got locked in the truck?”

It’s a huge problem in self-publishing because there aren’t teams of editors and proofreaders combing manuscripts. It happens with traditional publishers, too (and will increase becaus of cutbacks.) For instance, in Lucifer’s Hammer, an astronaut is described as short, but by the end of the book he’s standing tall and commanding in the bow of a boat. In Under the Dome,  Stephen King introduces a supernatural element on the good guy’s side that is never explained and seems forgotten, as if the angels whispered in the hero’s ear and then got distracted and wandered away. (When you write a book that big, it’s easy to lose threads and drop stitches.)

As you edit, things will crop up and it will help you to add edit points to your bible. Edit points are policy issues. It saves you a lot of time, and money, to have a clean manuscript. Decide up front, are you basically going with the Chicago Manual of Style? AP Style? Canadian or American spelling? Serial commas or no?

By keeping a list, you’ll discover some idiosyncrasies will crop up and it may grow to a long list. For one instance, you might type gray when you mean to write grey. In your bible under a heading that reads Editing Points, write in bold GReY NOT GRaY!

When you think you’re done your manuscript, drag out your list of troublesome words.

Use the Search and Replace tool.

You thought you got them all.

You didn’t.

Nobody does.

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Filed under: Books, Editing, Editors, getting it done, publishing, Writers, writing tips, , , , , , , , ,

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