Monday, May 15, 2006

The Art of Rewriting

"The beautiful part of writing is that you don't have to get it right the first time, unlike, say, a brain surgeon. You can always do it better, find the exact word, the apt phrase, the leaping simile." (Robert Cormier)

So you've finished your book. That's what it feels like, isn't it? You've gotten it all down, finally, your opus, and it's finished. What you probably don't want to hear at this point is that it's not; but that's the truth. The first draft is finished; and that's well worth celebrating. But a lot of the real work has just begun.

Many authors dread rewrites, but I'd like to suggest that it's not something to be avoided or done under duress, like a visit to the dentist. No: a rewrite is your opportunity to take your story or article and make it shine.

While every rewrite is going to be different, there are a few nuts and bolts that you can look for in any manuscript:

You should do at least one rewrite before your manuscript leaves your desk. Knowing that you'll do a rewrite leaves you free to relax and just write the first time around, knowing that you'll have plenty of time to clean it up later.

It's also important to let as much time as possible elapse between your first and second drafts. When you wrote your first draft, you were caught up in the experience and in the content; you need time and distance to be able to assess your work with an impartial eye.

Once you're comfortable with your rewrite(s), it's time to send it out. To a potential agent or publisher? No, no, a thousand times no! Now is the time for a workshop (see links for two online possibilities) or a local writer's group. Have other people look at your work, critique it, tear it apart if necessary; then you can regroup and do (gulp!) yet another rewrite. But don't skip the first one: you are wasting the resources of the group if you have them fixing the nuts and bolts mentioned here – fixing things that you easily could have fixed yourself.

Some people prefer not to go the workshop route but rather directly to a freelance editor. Again, I urge you to send your second or third draft, not your first one, to the editor you choose. I cannot tell you how many manuscripts sent to Customline Wordware for editing that would have been far less expensive had the author first done a second draft and fixed the obvious errors! I don't mind, particularly; but I expect that saving money is something we'd all like to do.

Remember to approach rewrites as you might a friend who is about to give you advice that may be annoying, but that you know to be true. The advice is what matters... and it will bring you beyond the elements of style!





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