Support for Indie Authors discussion
Physical Book Publishing
>
The Problem with Proofing: When are you done?
date
newest »

message 51:
by
Leah
(new)
Mar 13, 2018 01:58PM

reply
|
flag

YES! We can find proofers on Fiverr, or an eagle-eyed high school English teacher, but a good content editor is worth their weight in gold, or at least contracts. Those are the ones who can tell you a whole chapter is useless and does nothing to move the plot along, and notice that another scene is flat and needs to be punched up. Like Donald Maass advised in his book, Writing the Breakout Novel, always punch up what's at stake.

For example, one woman hates fantasy of any kind. My fractured fairy-tale is fairly realistic, but she still would never have picked it up off the shelf. She found dozens of problems that neither I or anyone else had found. Plot holes that no one saw, vagarities that we never realized were there... It was wonderful, and even if I obsess over the forgotten comma on page 34, I know my story is much more solid and clear of errors for her having read it.
(I should add that I don't always take her advice - someone who has a hard time with a make-believe world shouldn't try to tell you how to fix it, only what, if that makes sense.)

For example, one woman hates fantasy of any kind. My fractured fairy-t..."
I always say that the best negative criticism is from someone who cherishes your genre, and the best positive criticism is from someone who mocks your genre.

It's staying there.

Paige - I laughed and laughed. I'm so with you.
