The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Writer #11

5th April 2012
Blog
4 min read
Edited
8th December 2020

As advertised last time, I’m going to plunge back into the editing process.

Evisceration or enhancement – the wild and wacky world of the edit

As advertised last time, I’m going to plunge back into the editing process.

Before that, one key psychological point.  Until signing the contract, I had been, as far as the book was concerned, master of all I surveyed.  After signature, it became a joint enterprise.   I was not ready for this.  In the most frustrating moments, the plaintive wail “Whose fucking book is this anyway?” could be heard resonating around my house.

The publisher had always expressed reservations about the ending; I was prepared to consider removing the appendix, as explained last week.  We agreed to delegate the final decision to their editor.  If she thought it should go, I would remove it and deal with the (significant) fallout for the narrative itself.  Well, she did – so the first thing I had to do was purge my hero’s testament, discovered post-mortem.  That took out around 7,500 words and I added back around 2,000.

Next, the editor went through the manuscript line-by-line, submitting her tracked changes and questions/comments for my consideration and, where necessary, rewriting.  This was intensive, challenging and not entirely pleasurable.  But it needed to be done.

I was surprised by the number of errors she found.  They tended to fall into three broad classes: errors of fact, plot inconsistencies and some less-than-excellent writing.  The errors of fact were very annoying, though I do comfort myself in thinking I’d have caught them with a thorough check had I pressed ahead with self-publishing.

The plot inconsistencies were more problematic.  I’m not sure that I would have picked those up, being so deeply immersed in the book.  It is, of course, an imponderable now but I have to be honest and say that there was probably no way they’d have been spotted without the objective and distant eye of my editors.

Then, most painfully, were the eruptions of poor writing.  These really shocked me.  All those countless read-throughs, improvements and revisiting had still left shards of incompetence that stuck out like sharp thongs which scratched my eyes when they were drawn to them.  Most frequently, there were far too proximate uses of the same word. Other times, it was overwrought writing that just seemed to scream from the page.  On some occasions, I realised there were better ways of expressing things.

Once I had worked through her forest of red, I sent the corrected manuscript back for final checks and sign-off.

Quelle naïveté!  Then the publisher herself got busy, and she was much tougher and demanding than the editor.  Twice.  Both times face-to-face, her with marked-up draft, me with my laptop.  This process was new to me.  From my own days as an editor and in the toing-and-froing over executive speeches, think-pieces and the like, such discussions were always based on pre-exchanged views.  This was something altogether different – and challenging – as I listened, made notes on screen and retired to consider, submitting a new version with changes highlighted after each session.

We got there, of course, or I wouldn’t be writing this blog.  Is the novel better for the input, if not the process? Yes.  Would I have liked to understand all that was entailed before it started?  Most definitely.  I have no idea whether this is the standard way of working, so this element of sharing may be of no relevance to anyone else.

But the exposure to the business of publishing fiction has certainly had many more upsides than down, of which more next time.

Ian Phillips is a freelance writer for businesses whose first novel, Grosse Fugue, will be published by Alliance Publishing Press on April 11th. Further information is now available at www.alliancepublishingpress.com.  He’s tweeting developments @Ian_at_theWord.

Writing stage

Comments

Hi Ian.

I am curious as to what stage in the editing process, control over your manuscript was taken away from you. Although we have to listen to the experts, they are not always right.

It is brave authors whose original ideas usually start the next trend. I am thinking of the technical merits of a novel and its potential for commercial success. One may outweigh the other. I can think of examples of commercially successful novelists who lack critical acclaim. They still managed to get published.

How concerned was your publisher with the technical merits of Grosse Fugee?

Did you submit three consecutive specimen chapters, a synopsis and a letter of introduction?

Did you receive an enthusiastic response, and on that basis rush to sign a contract as I believe most hopeful authors would only be to eager to do?

Once you had signed was that it? Could you have still pulled out if you wanted to?

There is a danger of being trapped in an unhappy situation if all concerns are not thoroughly discussed at the outset.

Philip Pullman was pleased with the stage adaptation of his highly-acclaimed Dark Materials Trilogy, but very disappointed with the film version.

What if you strenuously disagreed with some of the editing process?

Johannes Brahms. 'It is not hard to compose, but what is fabulously hard is to leave the superfluous notes under the table.'

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Adrian
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Adrian Sroka
08/04/2012

Thanks, Anthony. I'm delighted the experience has come over so clearly.

EXTENDED ANALOGY ALERT!!!

You know, it's often said that, apart from the odd large kidney stone, men can never know the agony of childbirth. That may be true, but there were certainly times when I was shouting that I'm ready to push, and my editors would plunge their hands up my creative cervix only to tell me that I was only 1 or 2 centimeters dilated. My sense of having gone full term was not met by their, no doubt, accurate reading of the anatomical position.

We authors stroke our huge bumps, complain about piles and varicose veins but only realise what 'labour' actually means when our legs are up in the stirrups and various lights are trained on our portal.

I hope you take this in the best of ways when I say that I hope that you, too, will soon know the pain and joy of this experience.

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Ian
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Ian Phillips
06/04/2012

Having not experienced this (yet! I do hope one day :) ) This has been a real insight.

What I have realised while reading your blogs Ian is that I am a long way off from even submitting to agents/publishers. Yes I have a complete story with a beginning, middle and end and a good footing on the beginning of book two in the series. But they still require a good edit/clean up.

I look forward to the next post. Thanks.

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Anthony Scott
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Anthony Scott Glenn
06/04/2012