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Self-Editing – Treating Your Writing Like a Professional

August 25, 2016 By Lou

Everyone writes. Don’t deny it. Even the weekly grocery list counts in this regard. Seriously. You make your grocery list and what do you do with it before you go to the store? You look it over. Double checking every item. (Or triple checking it if you’re like me. Then leave it at home like an idiot.) You remember something you need. You realize three tubs of ice cream probably aren’t necessary and make it a more advisable two. That is self-editing at its core and it is the most crucial part of the writing process.

I’ve shared my feelings on self-editing previously. It’s no secret I find it extremely painful as a process. But a completely necessary one. Self-editing is the true first step to turning your favorite Buffy fan-fiction into a dynamite draft ready to be seen by others. Not publication (HECK NO) but a step closer. And it’s because self-editing forces you to look at your work like a professional.

Those that can see the flaws and find solutions to them are the ones ready for primetime. Defending your first draft, riddled with typos and logic problems will not help you succeed. It will hold you back. It did for me for a long time.

How did I learn to cope with self-editing?

I developed a system. The same way every writer should. For EVERYTHING. Plotting. Drafting. And especially Editing.

With a first draft I do a cursory spell check, cursing at Word for wasting my time. Then I print the bugger off and tuck it in a three-ring binder. I used to just paper clip sections of the behemoth – not a smart way to go – so I have to thank Joanna Penn for the binder idea. From there I start my first readthrough.

First readthroughs are scary. You’ve spent months putting your draft together and aren’t quite ready to pull it apart yet. You gloss over grating details and choppy sentences because you KNOW they work. Except they don’t and you hover over them for a full minute (more like ten) trying to figure out what the hell you were talking about.

Highlight it. Underline it. Question it.

self-editing
My favorite is when a minor character’s name changes halfway through the story…

Question Everything.

That’s the key. Question everything. Setting. Staging. Movement. Motivation. Dialogue. Dialogue tags even. If questions come up for you, even small ones, they will definitely come up for your readers.

Note funky sentences, poor transitions, generic descriptions of locations and characters you probably haven’t thought enough about yet. Most importantly take your time with it.

Once the first readthrough is done I go through everything and make my changes. Easy ones first. Changes that require a major overhaul or solving a logic problem I typically highlight for a second pass. It gives me time to think about the best approach depending on the situation and doesn’t hold me up from other corrections.

Circle back to your highlights when the answers are clear. You may have broken more than you fixed but solving the fundamentals of your draft, the logic of your story is critical to moving forward with the next pass (or three).

Save constantly and under a new filename. For every draft. And keep the physical copy of that first draft. You will not regret this.

A second set of eyes

For a second full pass through the manuscript I use AutoCrit, a handy tool I will be talking about in detail on Monday. I upload the revised draft into their system and run every report imaginable to clean up my prose. I would be lost without this tool and it really helps me catch overused words and other silly things I should be able to realize on my own. (I’m getting better at it, dammit.) It also keeps me from passing it off to my wife to clean up. I’m sure she appreciates the reprieve.

Three is a magic number.

The third readthrough occurs on the computer. Sometimes I print it out and work it the same as the first. It depends on how confident I am about the draft. Sometimes it takes four or five or twelve passes but by this time I’ve typically hacked the crap out of myself and am working on the nitpicky (yet still incredibly important) parts of the narrative.

Was Soriya injured on her right side or left? Did Loren shave today? Who is holding a gun and who has the ice cream cone? (Two ice cream references? I should probably eat before I write these posts…)

Once again, it all comes down to questions. Never be afraid to ask them and never back away from every potential answer. If something is holding you back from passing the draft off to your beta readers there is a reason behind it. You may destroy that “perfect” first draft, that heavenly vision you held in your mind for your book but it will make it stronger in the end.

That’s how you take your writing to the next level.

Thanks for reading.

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Filed Under: Editing, Writing Tagged With: AutoCrit, Joanna Penn, self-editing, writing

Signs of Portents – On Sale NOW

August 22, 2016 By Lou

Signs of Portents is on sale now!

Today is the day!!

Wait. Didn’t I say this book was coming out on the 30th? It’s only the 22nd. Did I lose my calendar? Or my mind? (Probably the latter…)

There’s a story in there…

It’s a learning game with certain things. I have complete control over my schedule, writing, blogging, editing, etc. When it comes to distributors and how they handle things? Let’s just say I’m still figuring all that out.

I clicked a button. Createspace, an incredibly user-friendly service that I will be using in abundance for as long as I write, doesn’t do pre-orders when ready to publish. As far as I’ve seen anyway. Maybe there is a trick I am missing, some link embedded in a secret html code to be deciphered by Robert Langdon. (I don’t have Tom Hanks’ talent to find it.) I went through the proof process until the book looked perfect and I hit the approve button.

WHAT WAS I THINKING?

All of a sudden my book was on Amazon and ready to go. Not the worst news ever EXCEPT…

The Kindle version wasn’t uploaded yet. I had set that for pre-order (because you can for some reason) so it wasn’t going to ready until the 30th. Thankfully I could change it and the 22nd became THE DAY of choice for both.

For Amazon.

Everything else? I needed a little more lead time than I gave myself. Another lesson definitely learned for the next book. (coming February 2017, hint hint) For the Nook readers, the Barnes and Noble shoppers, iBooks, Kobo, local bookstores, libraries and everything else in the world? Signs of Portents is coming. SOON.

When that day arrives, as soon as word trickles down from my distributor overlords (whom I love and respect greatly) you will be the first to hear it.

So good news, bad news thing but let’s circle back to the good news since I never tire of typing it:

Signs of Portents, the first book in the Greystone series, is on sale NOW.

Get it. Read it. Love it. And REVIEW IT. (Please and thank you.)

Signs of Portents on sale NOW

 

 

BONUS DIGITAL EDITION

Anyone that purchases the paperback of Signs of Portents through Amazon is also eligible for a FREE Kindle version of the novel!! It is through their Kindle Matchbook program. I thought it was a nice bonus and a way to thank you for taking a chance on a new author. Speaking of thanks…

A Word of Thanks

It’s taken quite some time to get here. More than I would have liked and more than certain family members too. (You can read about that nightmare here.) I could not have done it without the love and support of my family and friends, always pushing me to work and to get better at creating, at writing, and everything I do.

The first cycle of the Greystone has just begun. Come along for the ride.

And thanks for reading.

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Filed Under: Greystone Tagged With: Amazon, free digital, Greystone, paperback, Signs of Portents, writing

Writing Update – August 18, 2016

August 18, 2016 By Lou

I like to take stock on where I am with my work and I feel it’s important to share that with you here. Every two weeks you can find out what I’m currently writing, what I’ve been reading and other interesting factoids I have found on the interwebs instead of doing my work. (I actually stole the concept from my wonderfully talented sister, Sara Frandina. You can read her delightful coffee + content blog at sarafrandina.com.)

Currently Writing:

I am hip-deep in the self-editing process with Tales from Portents, a short story collection you’ll be hearing quite a bit about in the coming months. I’ve already set my deadline and a pub date for February 17th, 2017 so mark your calendars! There are six short stories involved pulling at different threads from Signs of Portents so I’ve been busy tweaking each tale, making sure it lines up with what’s come before (this is a prequel of sorts) and bridges the gap between the first novel and what is coming next summer.

Speaking of what comes next, I’ve started pulling notes and researching for my next novel. By research I mean reading a bunch of Superman comics so I can make Detective Greg Loren’s patented references. I should probably do some actual research too.

Finally, the best news of all:

writing - Signs of Portents proofs

The FINAL PROOFS CAME IN!! With two weeks to spare I have the final proofs for Signs of Portents. There is nothing sweeter than holding the book in your hands. More info on this coming in the next couple days!!

What I’ve Been Reading

Brad Meltzer and Tod Goldberg’s The House of Secrets – I’m a big fan of Brad Meltzer. I’ve read the majority of his books and am always excited for another adventure. I’ve always been fascinated with secrets hidden in history. The Freemasons, the Culper Ring, the Illuminati, all of them spark my imagination and I get sucked right into the story. The House of Secrets is no exception, this time focusing on Benedict Arnold’s bible and the conspiracy surrounding it. The book took some time to get rolling but by the second half I was fully engrossed. The nod to his previous trilogy was a nice touch. Always love those subtle connections between “worlds.”

Jason Aaron and Russell Dauterman’s Thor – I know. COMICS. I could pretend to be sophisticated and call them graphic novels but they’re not and Jason Aaron doesn’t pretend they are either. His Thor is AMAZING. I fell off the wagon a couple years back during The Accursed storyline re-introducing Malekith, the dark elf. (From Thor: The Dark World. Don’t pretend you didn’t see it.) I lost touch, always with the intention of catching up. Big mistake on my part.

Ever since Jane Foster became Thor (WHAT? Thor is a woman? Yes and it is great.) the stories have been top notch, work-building and cosmic in scope. Russell Dauterman’s art is indescribably astounding. I never want him to leave the book.

Have a great book recommendation? Want to tell me how Walt Simonson’s run on Thor was WAY better than Mr. Aaron’s? Shoot me a message.

The Web

Jason Aaron talks all things Thor – Not straying too far from my love-fest for Thor is an excellent interview with Jason Aaron on the book and where it’s going. I love the enthusiasm he has for the character and the world he’s playing with.

Tiny Goals – Shaunta Grimes guest posted on Jeff Goins site with a great article on setting tiny goals rather than big, impossible ones. As a stay at home poppa bear with two wee ones this is something I wholeheartedly agree with and need to be reminded of way to often. With nap time, late nights and weekend mornings my only real outlet for writing, creating smaller, tangible goals rather than big, lofty ambitions is the only way the work gets done. AND I get to create checklists. I love checklists!

I’m checking this off my list right now, in fact! Ahhh, satisfaction…

Thanks for reading.

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Filed Under: Editing, Reading, Writing Tagged With: Brad Meltzer, Comic Book Resources, Jason Aaron, reading, Sara Frandina, Shaunta Grimes, Thor, writing

Balancing Your Love/Hate Relationship with Self-Editing

August 11, 2016 By Lou

You did it. The draft is set. You’ve typed The End and can finally put this beast of an endeavor to bed. Never to be plagued by its myriad paths, the subtle turns or its exceptionally developed characters again. Time for your readers to see your masterpiece and shower you with praises.

Let me know when you wake up from that dream. That wonderfully, deceptively, beautiful dream. Take your time. I can wait.

Sigh.

You know what comes next. What has to come next. It’s painstaking. It’s torturous (not for all but definitely for some). The self-editing process. (dun dun DUN.)

It’s necessary. Absolutely necessary. Some walk away from the work for awhile, focus on other things – blogs, cooking classes, those pesky kids that haven’t seen you clean shaven in three months – and then come back to the draft refreshed and energized. Some barrel in, list in hand at the problem areas they noted during the first draft. How you do it and when you do it are dependent on you.

But you have to do it.

Self-editing is crucial.

And when it comes to that time it is important to remember your attitude. In my case? I hate editing. Not because I’m so great it isn’t needed, though early on I thought this (a topic I’ll be chatting about soon because of how unprofessional it made me at the time and how it stymied any and all growth as a creator). No, I dislike the process because it is SO needed with my work. I hate catching errors in story logic worse than catching the flu. Typos? Missing words? The multitude of grammar errors? Fine. So be it.

But the big ones? The ones that make you question the entire work? UGH. That’s why I do it though. I have to. It bolsters everything else up. That brilliant reference to Krypton exploding might be the best quotable in the manuscript but if your character says it while being choked to death IN SPACE, it might not work.

You should love your writing, in as much as you love the art OF writing. Not your genius at solving racial discrimination in Chapter 314 of a 900 page opus. Just putting thought to paper (digitally is preferred these days though I love a good legal pad) is such an accomplishment in and of itself. Walking away from a draft thinking it is plated in gold and should be hung on an altar surrounded by statues of you is where most writers get off track.

Hating yourself helps a little.

Cursing the inconsistencies, screaming at the lack of logic, is the best thing for your book. And for you. Fiction, be it short or epic, is the ultimate word problem. (Math, I know.) It is though. Looking at it from a critical standpoint first – noting every question, every leap that fails to land – gives you your starting point for your self-editing. Love blinds you to this but hate, a true critical outlook – brings the work back to earth and you can see the places that need work.

Love comes back into play for revisions. You’ve pulled it apart. You’ve ripped your greatness to shreds. Now it’s time to put Humpty Dumpty back together again and the hater has no place in the equation.

But balance is the key.

Pull it apart. Put it back together. Do it enough times and you start to ask less questions, your notes lessen until it is all nit-picky garbage that is only keeping you from moving on. Getting to that point though takes time, time necessary to build a better book, a more powerful tome for your readers to enjoy.

And that’s why we do this, right?

Love your work. Hate it too. You’ll be better for it. And for the love of God hire an editor when you’re done. They make everything even better.

Thanks for reading.

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Filed Under: Editing, Writing Tagged With: rewrites, self-edit, self-editing, writing

Great Motivators

August 8, 2016 By Lou

No one cares.

I come back to this story every once in awhile and I wish I didn’t. It’s upsetting but more than that – and why it always circles back in my mind – is that it is the greatest motivator in my arsenal.

In college I majored in creative writing but I was also a member of the Honor’s Program. Not a bad thing to be part of, it opened doors to new ideas, different philosophies. But it took over my workload and writing became a memory. So I dropped the program.

During my exit interview the head of the department asked for my reasons. I gave them easily enough. Writing is my passion. If I’m not doing it why bother being here? His response?

No one cares.

When asked for what he meant he replied earnestly:

No one cares about your writing.

I couldn’t believe it. This man, teaching about the greatest philosophers in history telling me no one cares about the written word? I had no response, other than to check to make sure my ears weren’t bleeding.

Then he repeated it.

No one cares.

It certainly made dropping the program that much easier.

It gave me doubts, that statement. Doubts about my self-worth, about my goals in life, about everything. It still does to some degree, every time a family member asks when I’m going to get a real job, people that have never bothered to crack open one of my books because of a Big Bang marathon on the tube. (Hey, it happens.) How could I not feel that this man, this oh so wise professor, was correct?

To some degree he was and still is. Some people won’t care. I’m not here to win over the world. I’m here to write and I’m not alone in that regard.

The power of the written word is in everything we do, in everything we take in, from books to television to film to theater. Our culture is dependent on it. On our need to express ourselves and our individuality. To find our own voice in the wilderness. It is why social media has such a hold on us. It is why people love to create. To put everything they have into some tangible product, some all encompassing message.

It is why EVERYONE cares.

Where this lovely little tale comes into play – and coming back full circle to the beginning of this rant. This man hurt me that day so long ago. He belittled the power of what I could do because I wasn’t doing what he wanted me to do. It made me angry and it drove me to keep writing. Not just to remain stagnant but to keep improving, to keep learning about my craft and how to create better and more interesting stories.

Anger, while sometimes leading to the dark side of the force, can be a great motivator but flip it around and it becomes hope. Hope that this man genuinely is wrong about the world – how it is today and how it can be an even better one with my voice in it.

Use what you have, use what you’ve experienced, not always in the tale you want to spin but to drive you to tell the one that is bursting inside you. Let it motivate you. Let it drive you. Because we need more voices in the world. Bigger and brighter and unceasing, no matter what you’re told.

Thanks for reading.

Some great writing books to motivate you:

Steven Pressfield – Nobody Wants to Read Your Sh*t: Why That Is and What You Can Do About It (how appropriate)

Jeff Goins – You Are a Writer (So Start Acting Like One)

And the gold standard on the subject –

Stephen King – On Writing: 10th Anniversary Edition: A Memoir of the Craft

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Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: Jeff Goins, motivation, Stephen King, Stephen Pressfield, writing

A Writer’s Journey

July 26, 2016 By Lou

I made a promise to myself to keep these long diatribes about who I am and my so-called humble beginnings wandering the Earth in search of the unknown – wait, that wasn’t me. Anyway, I’m much happier to talk about anything other than myself, a little habit I’m trying to break with you here.

I mentioned on the wonderfully created About Lou page the genius of eight year old me with my first opus tucked away. But where was the second? And why am I, a thirty-something so-and-so just getting my crap together?

This little endeavor of mine started in late 2013, with just about the greatest trigger known to man:

DADHOOD.

I quit my job, never to miss cubicle walls again, and prepared myself for poopy diapers and a seemingly endless supply of drool. It was no big thing – leaving my job I mean. A decade of tolerable professions had left me cold inside – desperate for a new start.

I still have nightmares about this view…

Babies are magic that way.

It wasn’t to say I hadn’t been writing in the decade since college. There were countless scripts, false starts, misshapen messes and even the occasional treasure in my personal slush pile. Writing, however integral in my happiness, had been a hobby instead of the dream to end all dreams.

It was time to change that.

Since 2013 I’ve produced more content in the scant hours available (praise be to nap time) than the decade previously. And while I will unfortunately always miss a regular paycheck, or binging on Supernatural while eating dinner on the couch, I am more fulfilled with thirty minutes of solid writing time than an eight hour shift doing something less than meaningful.

I’m not special in this regard. Jeff Goins (an insanely inspirational fellow that I recommend following – not down the street) can tell you the same tale. Except he was much faster and much smarter about it. Family changes things. But that’s me.

I look at my lost decade and I cringe. How much more could I have done, should have done during that time?

What’s keeping you from writing?

What’s holding you back from your goals?

How can you overcome them, reposition them, shift the schedule to make writing, reading, and whatever your passion is take the top spot it deserves?

Make it happen. Make it work. Tell yourself that there is nothing else going on in the world. It is just you and your goal. You and your dream.

At least until nap time is over.

Thanks for reading.

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Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: dadhood, following dreams, inspiration, Jeff Goins, writing

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