There are mistakes in every book, but there are tricks to avoid some pesky problems. For instance, I’m in the midst of proofing This Plague of Days. In Scrivener, I do a quick and easy

Society collapses around a strange autistic boy with a deep love of odd words, Latin dictionaries and his father The plague is coming. Buckle up.
search for odd mistakes that creep in. Here are a few things I plug into the search box to search and destroy:
1. Hit the space bar twice and eliminate those pesky double spaces that find their way into your ebook (and look like chasms on a kindle.)
2. Put “the the” in the search box. Take one out unless it shows up as “the theme…” It’s startling how easy it is for the human eye to skip over a brain stutter like the the.
3. Search “awhile”. Change it to “a while” when appropriate. Here’s when it’s right to do so.
4. “Exact same” = A redundant expression we use in spoken language and in the excited flurry of our first drafts. Excise from later drafts.
5. Search “..” Double periods appear occasionally, usually from an edit you did instead of a typo.
The fewer mistakes you give your editors, beta readers and proofers to find, the fewer mistakes they will miss.
When you get all your revisions back and make your changes, do these searches again (and whatever common mistakes you discover you are prone to.) After the edit, the act of going back to make corrections often introduces mistakes. This is especially true if you’re working with extensive edits using Track Changes. It’s often helpful to bump up the text size so you can better understand where all the little red lines are pointing for edits. I prefer Scrivener and recommend it for writing, editing, compiling and publishing.
Also check the copy again once it’s published. I have had some file management issues in the past with Scrivener where I published an earlier draft, not the final draft. It was frustrating and embarrassing, but fortunately it was easy to fix quickly. Now that I’m aware of that potential, I’m extra paranoid so things keep getting better. Editing and proofing these little details can be arduous but, like a 10k run uphill, you’ll feel great about your work when it’s done.
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Filed under: Books, Editing, getting it done, grammar, publishing, writing tips, copyediting, editor, finding mistakes in books, Grammar Girl, Manuscript, proofreading, publishing, Scrivener, use of awhile, writer, writing, Writing and Editing