Tag Archives: Revisions

What Happens When an Author Gets an Edit Letter

26 Apr

So, there you are, minding your authorly business.

You may or may not be refreshing your inbox more than is strictly necessary because you are expecting An Email. You may or may not be putting off all other tasks by watching old Strong Bad Email videos. You may or may not be eating lots of cheese.

Then, it happens.

One of those thoughtless, knee-jerk refreshes summons forth from the cyberabyss An Email. Yes, That One.

It’s your edit letter. From your editor. An edit letter from your editor, who is editing that book you wrote.

At first, you stare at it. You don’t breathe much.

This hot, panicky feeling starts spiraling up from your bowels. You break out in a feverish sweat.

In a frenzy, you start texting/calling/emailing/IMing everyone you know, whilst tweeting and posting to Facebook cryptic declarations of angst, whilst rotating between 1) digging through the cabinets for food, 2) nervous bathroom activity, and 3) every other task you have been putting off in favor of waiting for this letter, each of which is now infinitely more appealing than opening said letter.

None of these people you’ve texted/called/emailed/IMed **understand** what you’re going on about except for your fellow writers. You cling to them like those foam peanut things cling to every available surface, or like bad luck clings to the Stark family.

Finally, the moment arrives. You’ve done everything you possibly could have to delay doing it, but now you have to. You open the letter.

You read.

It starts out nicely, with a greeting from your editor. “Hay gurl!” the editor says. You smile fondly. “Oh, Editor,” you think. “You old so-and-so, you.”

The editor goes on to say how much he/she enjoyed the book, and how this character is awesome, and this part was really flippin’ cool, etc. This makes you feel a bit warm and fuzzy inside. “Oh, Editor,” you think. “LET’S GET CUPCAKES.”

Then you continue reading, and here’s where things get dicey, because the editor has softened you up, see, only to shortly thereafter RIP YOUR MANUSCRIPT TO BLOODY SHREDS (with bone bits hanging off of them!).

Said ripping can come in various ways. Perhaps via bullet points, or notes in the manuscript itself, or plain old paragraphs exhaustively detailing your book’s every flaw. Regardless of method, the point is that you are stupid and that thing called logic, that you thought your book was so full of? Yeah, it’s not, and you don’t have it. And your editor is probably laughing at you somewhere with all the other editors over vodka and macarons, and wondering what it is with writers that they can’t write books that make sense. Or at least, this one writer. You, that is. YOU can’t write a book that makes sense. (You realize, at this point, that your brain is going to unrealistically dramatic places, BUT YOU CAN’T STOP IT. You feel that stupid.)

At the end of your letter, a bajillion bullet points of things to fix later, there might be another little note from your editor, to soften the sting of what you have just read. Something like, “No, seriously! I really liked it!” And you KNOW that’s the case because your editor doesn’t owe you anything, and if your book blew chunks, your editor would tell you.

But it’s hard to pick yourself up from that overwhelmed little pool of stress and embarrassment. You wish that you could have written a better book from the start.

You, yes, probably eat more cheese. Or you eat ANYTHING, really.

You sleep. Part of you wants to dive right into revisions, but you know that’s a bad idea. That’s not how a winner plays skee-ball. Besides, once all that adrenaline’s left you, you kind of feel like a wrung-out banana peel. So, you sleep. And you probably dream of mangled manuscripts chomping on your nether bits, Editor cheering them on.

Then you wake up. The world has not ended. In fact, the world has kept on going, and the edit letter is still sitting on your computer, and you’ve still written a book good enough to get an editor, and that’s something, isn’t it? You can’t be entirely stupid, then.

So you open the letter back up. Maybe you even give your editor a call.

You take a deep breath. You print out your edit letter. You divide up all the bullet points and comments and questions into groups, and decide to work on only a little bit every day because that is what sane people do.

Then, you start to work.

Revisions are hard at first, and scary. But you take them one bullet point at a time, and pretty soon, just like with anything, you get into a groove. You see your manuscript getting shinier right before your eyes, and it’s kind of like when you start working out, and you’re doing squats and bicep curls and tricepfloodles and your body is like, “STOP IT I WILL DO ANYTHING PLEASE STOP IT STOP IT STO — oh wait, I see, this is actually quite nice and now I look hot.”

Yes, it’s like that. Because your book is getting better, bullet point by bullet point. You answer your editor’s insightful questions and start making smart changes to your manuscript, and it’s almost — almost — as though your editor likes you and your book and wants what’s best for both of you. It’s almost as though your editor doesn’t in fact think you’re stupid, but rather thinks you’ve written something really great, and knows how to make it even greater.

Huh.

Imagine that.

All I Ever Needed To Know About Writing, I Learned From Skee-Ball

19 Oct

When I was wee, maybe as young as four or five years old, I frequently went on adventures with my Aunt Martha, aka, The Coolest Aunt. Aunt Martha reminds me of Jo March from Little Women. She’s brilliant, fearless, and ferociously dedicated to her family. Getting the chance to ride in her shiny red convertible with the windows down while we blasted Billy Ocean and munched on Cheetos made me feel like the coolest, happiest little nerd-girl in the world.

I mean, really:

Besides cruising in the Mazda, going to the park, and playing grocery store in my room with plastic cheese, one of our favorite pastimes was going with Aunt Martha’s friend, Patty, and Patty’s niece, Tiffany, to that pantheon of high-class dining and entertainment, Chuck E. Cheese’s. You know, with the cardboard pizza that, when you were wee, was the pinnacle of culinary achievement, and the tickets and plastic twisty tunnels and ball pits and TERRIFYING ANIMATRONIC CREATURES:

Can you imagine being there at night, once everything’s locked up? Well, YOU SHOULDN’T.

My favorite part about Chuck E. Cheese’s, however, was none of these things.

It was skee-ball.

I cared not for Whack-a-Mole or air hockey or that weird game where you had to slide the coins around (?). All I cared about was skee-ball. Glorious, glorious skee-ball. I can still remember the sound and smell of the balls rolling down the chute. (Don’t go there, you dirty readers, you.) I would spend the entire outing camped out at the skee-ball area. Pizza? Psh. Ball pits? Yawn. Not even the plastic twisty tunnels, with all their potential for pretending like I was crawling around Jefferies tubes to hunt down an alien macrovirus, could snatch me from my skee-ball for long.

My most vivid memory is of one particular Chuck E. Cheese’s trip. There stood Tiffany and I at our respective skee-ball lanes, having a grand old time. But, as my observing Coolest Aunt pointed out, there existed one enormous difference between my skee-ball strategy and Tiffany’s.

Basically, I had none.

I was like the baseball player who swings at every pitch, no matter what. I rolled every ball up the ramp with the force of a Titan. Sometimes they even flew with such velocity that they bounced off the top of the scoring area and fell back below without earning me any points at all. I never paused to look or aim, save for a cursory glance at those little white tubes. “I will OWN you,” I thought. “I WILL BE THE BEST SKEE-BALLER EVER,” I thought. And the balls rolled down the chute, and I kept cranking them up the ramp, one after another after another.

Now, granted, this might mean that if aliens allergic to water had invaded our water-filled planet with its water-filled atmosphere, I’d have been able to save the day with a well-aimed swing of the bat throw of a skee-ball.

But in this situation, it just meant that I hardly ever scored anything and came away from the game frustrated and despairing. Not to mention envious of Tiffany, who took her time with each ball. She gave it a few practice swings. She calmly analyzed the angle of the ramp and the position of each little white tube.

Me? I cranked through a whole game before she’d even gotten through the first three balls. I GLARED at the ramp, at the taunting lights of my abysmal score, and threw ball after ball until I was red in the face and the people around me started backing away, perhaps imagining the headline: “INNOCENT BYSTANDERS DEMOLISHED BY ANGRY GIRL’S RUNAWAY SKEE-BALL.”

But, despite my frustration, I couldn’t abandon the skee-ball. I loved it too much. I had too much fun playing it, despite my awful scores. I’d walk into Chuck E. Cheese’s, and my eyes would immediately gravitate toward the skee-ball ramps. They called to me. They were my Precious.

When I started writing about fifteen years later, I, sadly, approached it in the exact same way.

Claire’s Initial Thought Process Re: Writing:

Claire: I think I’d like to start writing again. You know, that thing I did before I was a musician?

Claire’s Brain: Hey, that sounds pretty neat.

C: But I’m not just going to write. I’m going to WRITE.

CB: Of COURSE you are, sweetie.

C: I’m gonna be A FRICKIN’ BEST-SELLER.

CB: Ain’t no harm in reaching for the stars.

C: MAYBE I’LL WIN PRIZES. LIKE THE NEWBERY. OR THE PULITZER.

CB: …With fantasy fiction? Oh, honey.

C: I’LL WIN THE BOOKER PRIZE, TOO. I’M NOT EVEN IN THE COMMONWEALTH OF NATIONS. BUT I’LL WIN IT.

CB: All right, your English accent is passable and all that, but still…

C: AND IF I DON’T SUCCEED AT ALL THESE THINGS, I WILL BE AN UTTER FAILURE.

CB: Well, that’s a bit–

C: I’M GONNA START RIGHT NOW.

CB: Wow, really? Because–

C: RIGHT NOW. RAH RAH FORGET ALL OTHER RESPONSIBILITIES! EXTREMISM!

CB: …You know, maybe you should do some things first. To prepare.

C: LIKE WHAT? *GLARES AT EMPTY WORD DOCUMENT* *ROLLS UP SLEEVES*

CB: Maybe you should, I don’t know, read. You don’t really read anymore.

C: NO TIME FOR READING. MUST WRITE GREAT AMERICAN NOVEL.

CB: Yeah, but you don’t know anything about writing, really. Or publishing, and what’s selling, and how to get published, and–

C: STOP TALKING. TIME FOR SKEE-BALL WRITING.

And then I proceeded to, well, crank out a bunch of scoreless balls. (DON’T, I said.)

I wrote a book that was too big for me.

I didn’t read. Like, anything.

I researched the publishing industry only long enough to find out about these things called “query letters,” and then before going any further and researching things like appropriate word count and how long a query letter should be, I started querying IMMEDIATELY.

I received requests for revisions, thought about them for maybe twenty minutes, hurried to finish them in a few days, and IMMEDIATELY sent them back without even a pause to sit back and breathe.

BALL AFTER BALL AFTER BALL. With no thought behind it whatsoever.

No thought, but a lot of passion.

And the scoreboard remained blank.

It’s like I was afraid to slow down to plan and think and put in the grunt work of becoming a writer, because if I stopped long enough to do that, I’d see how much work it was actually going to be. How many words I’d have to write before I could even begin to truly grasp story structure. How many books I’d have to read before I understood how to write something that would sell.

I’d see that the shot I really needed to win the game was into that little white tube way up in the corner. Big points, that tube. But hard to reach.

It took me a long time to realize that it takes a long time to write books.

It took me an even longer time to realize that it’s okay that it takes a long time to write books.

I’m still realizing that even once you write a book, even once you sell a book, you’ll always be learning.

And sometimes, you have to stop, take a step back, breathe, and give yourself time to learn what you need to learn to be successful.

I struggle with this. I probably always will. My instinct is to CRANK CRANK CRANK, and if it doesn’t work out on the first crank, and the ball doesn’t score, I have to fight to not feel like a failure, like I’ve wasted my time and am not working hard enough.

But the truth is, my friend Tiffany, who took her time before each shot, who planned carefully and analyzed what she was about to do, even if it meant that it took her longer to complete a game? She scored higher than I ever did.

She wasn’t afraid to take her time.

I’m working on a couple of different projects right now. One of them is particularly awesome but has also been particularly challenging, and it’s taken me longer than I expected to get it where it needs to be.

When I first realized this, that it was going to take longer, that it was going to be more of a challenge than I’d thought, I went straight down The Vortex of Doubt and Self-Loathing: “Why can’t I work faster? Why can’t I write better? Why can’t I figure this out the first time around instead of having to revise and re-work and re-think? I can’t do this. I’m not going fast enough. I’ll never finish.”

If you ever experience these moments — and I’m sure that you have — just stop.

You’re wrong. You’re going just as fast as you need to be, for you, your project, and your career.

When you have these moments, Think Skee-ball. I have to remind myself to Think Skee-ball all the time. Going lickety-split doesn’t always work out (although it might be impressive in a train wreck sort of way). There’s no rule about how fast or slow you play the game. What matters is the score at the end, and if your score keeps improving, and if, maybe someday, you can make the shot into that high corner tube in every single game.

Don’t rush to finish a book just because “it should be finished by now.”

Don’t send out a project before it’s ready with the thought that “if I don’t send it out now, I’ll lose my chance forever.”

Take the time to read, even if it means you write fewer words per day.

Story structure is a challenge for you? World-building? Character development? The technicalities of prose? Don’t be afraid to take the time to learn, even if that means it’ll takes a month (two months, six months, a year) longer to finish your book than it would otherwise.

Take the time to research — the publishing industry, the best agents for you, winning query letters, great synopses. Five well-placed, well-researched, well-ripped-apart-and-put-back-together-from-scratch query letters will get you farther than twenty query letters sent out without a plan.

Don’t crank out ball after ball until you’re red in the face and scare innocent bystanders.

Study.

Plan.

Aim.

What matters isn’t how fast you play. What matters is the score at the end.

Think Skee-ball.

~*~

Okay, I have a huge craving for skee-ball right now. Writers’ party at Chuck E. Cheese’s, amirite?

ROW80 Round One: 2/2/11 Check-In

2 Feb

Yay! This has been a productive week for me, especially in comparison to the previous couple of weeks.

Including Sunday, and not including today, I’ve written 1,329 words on Cracked and at least 1,000 words during my Cavendish revisions/rewrites, so that brings me to 2,329 for the week so far, which averages out to 776 words per day, which far exceeds my adjusted ROW80 goal of 300 words per day, and even exceeds (by a smidge!) my original goal of 750 words per day.

Huzzah!

I mean, this isn’t really that much, but relatively speaking, it’s tremendous!

I reworked the Cracked prologue and am almost finished with it. I’ve halted the fairy tales for now because I needed a break from them.

Re: Cavendish, I’ve basically completed my first round of post-betas rewrites & revisions. I’m very happy with the feedback I got from my brilliant, wonderful, spectacular betas, and there are a few rough spots here and there I still need to smooth out, but overall, revisions are going as swimmingly as this plucky chica:

So, whew! I’m glad to finally be making this kind of progress again. Said progress has been at least partially made possible by The Really Frickin’ Ginormous and Nationwide Snowpocalypse, which left us North Texans with several inches of ice and snow, not to mention below zero wind chills. I mean, seriously. This is TEXAS we’re talking about. We’re not equipped to deal with this craziness — technologically, mentally, emotionally. Therefore, the entire metroplex shut down, and I’m enjoying a couple of cozy days at home with Mom. Her first chemo treatment was actually supposed to be today, but her doctor’s offices closed, so they’re moving that to Thursday. It’s for the best, really. I did NOT want to be hoofing it across the metroplex in this weather, especially with us being already freaked out because of, you know, the CHEMO. Oy.

Anyway, I’m starting to ramble. Here’s the linky for the other intrepid ROW-ers.

Also, if you’re interested, do check out my regular post for today, all about how talkative we writers can be, and if that can be a bad thing, especially during the first draft stage.