Why editors are important

A volume by definition uneven. Twelve chapters, thirty authors. Task, a medium copyedit. Pace, proofreading. And then twenty pages of this—

The predominant mix of all generations of mostly Latino of Mexican or Central American origin mean that often they come from places where despite experiences with slavery and a substantial group of people who are descendants of sub-Saharan Africans, the erasure of blackness in national ideologies means that many immigrants and their descendants see blackness as a “foreign” construct and something very different from themselves.

Mercifully, this chapter is short. Still.

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Pleonasms

Required reading for everyone, writers and editors in particular. Compliments of the Bookshed: http://www.bookshed.eu/blog/hunting-down-pleonasms

Allen Guthrie, an acquisition editor for Point Blank Press, wrote up a white paper three years ago called ‘Hunting Down the Pleonasms’ that has become a cult classic. Guthrie gave Adventure Books of Seattle permission to reprint this document wherever they liked. It is a permanent download at their site. It is very specific. Over at the AB site, it’s been downloaded hundreds of times, and every writer should consider posting this on the wall near their computer.

The article—

Hunting Down the Pleonasms

I can’t stress strongly enough that writing is subjective. We all strive for different goals. Consequently, we all need our own set of rules—and some of us don’t need rules at all! Personally, I like rules. If nothing else, it’s fun breaking them.

1: Avoid pleonasms. A pleonasm is a word or phrase which can be removed from a sentence without changing its meaning. For example, in “Hunting Down The Pleonasm”, ‘down’ is pleonastic. Cut it and the meaning of the sentence does not alter. Many words are used pleonastically: ‘just’, ‘that’ and ‘actually’ are three frequently-seen culprits (I actually just know that he’s the killer can be trimmed to I know he’s the killer), and phrases like ‘more or less’ and ‘in any shape or form’ are redundant.

2: Use oblique dialogue. Try to generate conflict at all times in your writing. Attempt the following experiment at home or work: spend the day refusing to answer your family and colleagues’ questions directly. Did you generate conflict? I bet you did. Apply that principle to your writing and your characters will respond likewise.

3: Use strong verbs in preference to adverbs. I won’t say avoid adverbs, period, because about once every fifty pages they’re okay! What’s not okay is to use an adverb as an excuse for failing to find the correct verb. To ‘walk slowly’ is much less effective than to ‘plod’ or ‘trudge’. To ‘connect strongly’ is much less effective than to ‘forge a connection’.

4: Cut adjectives where possible. See rule 3 (for ‘verb’ read ‘noun’).

5: Pairs of adjectives are exponentially worse than single adjectives. The ‘big, old’ man walked slowly towards the ‘tall, beautiful’ girl. When I read a sentence like that, I’m hoping he dies before he arrives at his destination. Mind you, that’s probably a cue for a ‘noisy, white’ ambulance to arrive. Wailingly, perhaps!

6: Keep speeches short. Any speech of more than three sentences should be broken up. Force your character to do something. Make him take note of his surroundings. Ground the reader. Create a sense of place.

7: If you find you’ve said the same thing more than once, choose the best and cut the rest. Frequently, I see the same idea presented several ways. It’s as if the writer is saying, “The first couple of images might not work, but the third one should do it. If not, maybe all three together will swing it.” The writer is repeating himself. Like this. This is a subtle form of pleonasm.

8: Show, don’t tell. Much vaunted advice, yet rarely heeded. An example: expressing emotion indirectly. Is your preferred reader intelligent? Yes? Then treat them accordingly. Tears were streaming down Lila’s face. She was very sad. Can the second sentence be inferred from the first? In context, let’s hope so. So cut it. If you want to engage your readers, don’t explain everything to them. Show them what’s happening and allow their intelligence to do the rest. And there’s a bonus to this approach. Because movies, of necessity, show rather than tell, this approach to your writing will help when it’s time to begin work on the screenplay adaptation of your novel!

9: Describe the environment in ways that are pertinent to the story. And try to make such descriptions active. Instead of describing a book lying on a table, have your psycho-killer protagonist pick it up, glance at it and move it to the arm of the sofa. He needs something to do to break up those long speeches, right?

10: Don’t be cute. In the above example, your protagonist should not be named Si Coe.

11: Avoid sounding ‘writerly’. Better to dirty up your prose. When you sound like a writer, your voice has crept in and authorial intrusion is always unwelcome. In the best writing, the author is invisible.

12: Fix your Point Of View (POV). Make it clear whose head you’re in as early as possible. And stay there for the duration of the scene. Unless you’re already a highly successful published novelist, in which case you can do what you like. The reality is that although most readers aren’t necessarily clued up on the finer points of POV, they know what’s confusing and what isn’t.

13: Don’t confuse the reader. If you write something you think might be unclear, it is. Big time. Change it or cut it.

14: Use ‘said’ to carry dialogue. Sid Fleischman calls ‘said’, “the invisible word.”

15: Whilst it’s good to assume your reader is intelligent, never assume they’re psychic.

16: Start scenes late and leave them early.

17: When writing a novel, start with your characters in action. Fill in any necessary backstory as you go along.

18: Give your characters clear goals. Always. Every scene. And provide obstacles to those goals. Always. Every scene. If the POV character in a scene does not have a goal, provide one or cut the scene. If there is no obstacle, add one or cut the scene.

19: Don’t allow characters who are sexually attracted to one another the opportunity to get into bed unless at least one of them has a jealous partner.

20: Torture your protagonist. It’s not enough for him to be stuck up a tree. You must throw rocks at him while he figures out how to get down.

21: Use all five senses in your descriptions. Smell and touch are too often neglected.

22: Vary your sentence lengths. I tend to write short, and it’s amazing what a difference combing a couple of sentences can make.

23: Don’t allow your fictional characters to speak in sentences. Unless you want them to sound fictional.

24: Cut out filtering devices, wherever possible. ‘He felt’, ‘he thought’, ‘he observed’ are all filters. They distance the reader from the character.

25: Avoid unnecessary repetition of tense. For example: I’d gone to the hospital. They’d kept me waiting for hours. Eventually, I’d seen a doctor. Usually, the first sentence is sufficient to establish tense. I’d gone to the hospital. They kept me waiting for hours. Eventually, I saw a doctor.

26: When you finish your book, pinpoint the weakest scene and cut it. If necessary, replace it with a sentence or paragraph.

27: Don’t plant information. How is Donald, your son? I’m quite sure Donald’s father doesn’t need reminding who Donald is. Their relationship is mentioned purely to provide the reader with information.

28: If an opinion expressed through dialogue makes your POV character look like a jerk, allow him to think it rather than say it. He’ll express the same opinion, but seem like a lot less of a jerk.

29: Characters who smile and grin a lot come across as deranged fools. Sighing and shrugging are also actions to avoid. Eliminating smiles, sighs and shrugs is almost always an improvement. Smiling sadly is a capital offence.

30: Pronouns are big trouble for such little words. The most useful piece of information I ever encountered on the little blighters was this: pronouns refer to the nearest matching noun backwards. For example: John took the knife out of its sheath and stabbed Paul with it. Well, that’s good news for Paul. If you travel backwards from ‘it’, you’ll see that John has stabbed Paul with the sheath! Observing this rule leads to much clearer writing.

31: Spot the moment of maximum tension and hold it for as long as possible. Or as John D. MacDonald put it: “Freeze the action and shoot him later.”

32: If something works, forget about the rule that says it shouldn’t.


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Malaprop’s

In the midst of reviewing, editing, and revising, one reads. Sometimes further afield than others. Malaprop’s (www.malaprops.com) is amazing in many respects, not least for the writers who flow through. Friday is Yann Martel (The Life of Pi). I missed, but deliberately (why?), Elizabeth Gilbert when she came through town. Tonight we listened to Malcolm Jones, long-time editor with Newsweek, read from his captivating memoir of growing up Southern and trying to figure it out. He was introduced by Elizabeth Kostova (The Historian, The Swan Thieves). The other week was Ron Rash (Serena), a local writer who teaches at Western Carolina, a ways over in the Smokies. I love this place.

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Skip by jingo

Right. Right. Hayfoot, strawfoot, raw from the country, skip by jingo, left, left. Left my wife and forty-’leven kids, an old gray mare, and a peanut stand. Did I do right? Right. Right …

This on finishing a 615-page (155,000-word) manuscript well enough written that I spent the vast majority of my time untangling nine uniquely disasterous sets of citations, endnotes, and reference lists. Memories of accounting work for the finance and accounting branch of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Frankfurt-am-Main roll out from the corners of thirty years ago. Right brain, left brain. The twain alas meet in editorial work, certainly at the bottlewasher grade. Details details. Consistency. To what avail?

Twenty-files now uploaded to my server, waiting for a client to retrieve them. Haven’t written client. I know perfectly well that I simply must compare all the reference lists against each other to be certain that shared entries are identical.

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Health care et alia

The topic of whether to use a hyphen for health care as an adjective is endlessly debatable. Leaving off the word care, however, is scarcely a viable option. Health-care reform. Health reform.

If we were reforming health, no one would be at risk (as a colleague observed) for diabetes, heart disease, or hypercholesterolemia. Even for anything as mundane as arthritis, psoriasis, eczema, or plantar fasciitis, to strike a more mundane note.

Brevity is one thing, but common sense trumps. As Hattie McDaniels (leaning out the window in Gone With the Wind) said some time back, “It jes’ ain’t fittin’.” Nearly 80 years later, it still ain’t.

It may rile the editors of this manuscript, and the various authors of the various chapters, but every instance of health reform is getting changed to health-care reform. I think. At the moment.

Mercifully, all edits are suggestions. The authors can, if they don’t like it, change it back. I may do so myself before I submit the manuscript, for that matter.

The lingering question, of course, is the important one. Is the usage here to stay? It looks likely. Alas.

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Blind faith

Occasionally, in the midst of exasperation and nitpicky academics, come breaths of fresh air.

The first set of documents may come to me as soon as two weeks but that really depends on how fast the first writer works. For now, I would estimate that something will definitely start within a month and will continue throughout the winter. I know for tax purposes you wanted to be paid before the fiscal year. Depending on how you would like to be paid and when, I’d like to submit the paperwork sooner so you don’t have to wait so long, even if it’s way before you actually start or finish.

If you can get an estimate to me before the end of the month I can work on getting a contract to you quickly. Don’t worry so much about the start and end dates not being accurate. And remember, if we need to, we can always set up another one later if the work is more than you and I expected.

Fresh air, blind faith … lah lah.

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A little awkward?

Between observing Golden Tamarind monkeys at the zoo and giving a tour of the Old Pension Building, I address author changes to a first edit of a journal article. Ahem. Yes. Author is striving to make author’s intent more clear.

Overall, the finding that increased racial heterogeneity is associated with reduced involvement in violence among blacks, in combination with results from the mediation analyses, suggests that racial friendship networks are largely homogenous and this structural component of friendship networks may be especially detrimental for black youth. This is because racial homogeneity acts to perpetuate racial disparities in violence since many black adolescents do not have access to the same resources through their friendship ties as other non-black adolescents.

Right. Yeah. Okay.

It’s my last issue. I refuse to care.

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Loss

The bad news was the letter telling me that the next issue of the journal, which had made up about 25 percent of my annual income, would be my last. The good news included impeccable reasoning for the change that had nothing to do with my editing or efforts. It also included, even particularly, the way the letter was coached.

The really good news, of course, was that the next issue will be my last.

I no longer need to wonder how I might wiggle out of the job with honor intact. Reinforcement of the goodness of all this…

The current study argues that the nature and intensity of a person’s relationship with God creates a transposable cognitive schema that shapes people’s views toward public policies such as executing convicted murderers.

A well-written sentence by one of the superior, if utterly difficult, authors.

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Dull knife

Several hours later, I look for the sharpener…

Overall, the finding of increasing racial heterogeneity being associated with reduced involvement in violence among blacks, in combination with results from the mediation analyses, suggest that racial friendship networks are largely homogenous and that this acts to reproduce racial disparities in violence, as black adolescents lack the same friendship opportunities as white and Asian adolescents.

…to…

Overall, our finding that increased racial heterogeneity is associated with reduced involvement in violence among blacks. Our results from the mediation analyses suggest that racial friendship networks are largely homogenous. This homogeneity reproduces racial disparities in violence because black adolescents do not have the same opportunities for friendship as their white and Asian counterparts.

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Knife needed

On a marvelously rainy first day of the loveliest four months of the year …

One mechanism through which social capital is generated is social embeddedness in friendship networks. Not only does social embeddedness in friendship networks generate obligations and expectations for behavior, but it also encourages the transmission of information and norms and the employment of sanctions. For adolescents, friendship networks are unique social contexts that generate these different forms of social capital that can be used to fulfill adolescents’ particular needs for social acceptance, personal identity, and a sense of place in the adolescent hierarchy.

Need I say more? Well then.

Social embeddedness also encourages learning and behavioral norms and sanctions. For adolescents, friendship networks are unique social contexts that can fulfill particular needs for social acceptance, personal identity, and a sense of place.

Again, not poetry but perhaps …

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