A few months ago I showed my "Editing Folder" to a couple members of my critique group. I'm not sure if they thought I was crazy or liked the idea - lol. Anyways, it's literally a manila folder I carry around when I edit/revise. If I have a
chapter or pages that I must print out to look at I will toss them in.
That, however, is not its main purpose.
I write all kinds of notes to myself on it. What to look for, delete,
and so on. I thought I would share those notes with you today and link to where I
found most of them. Unfortunately, I didn't write down where I got some
of the information from, so I don't have all the links.
I do a search when I have finished editing each chapter. Sometimes I
am able to delete a word and fix the issue in one simple step. Other
times I must reword the entire sentence. Occasionally I find deleting a
sentence here or there makes the piece better.
Plot: (All from
Writing the Breakout Novel by Donald Maass)
- How could things get worse?
- When would be the worst moment for them to get worse?
- Public Stakes!
- Personal Stakes!
- Emotional danger
- Choices (a) suffering & (b) sacrifice
Character: (From
chriseboch.blogspot.com)
- "Could I develop this character more, to make him or her more complicated?"
- "How could this secondary character to be causing problems for my main character?"
- "If the character is already causing problems, could they be even worse?"
Delete These Words: (These are my overused, implied, or filler words I use often)
that, just, seem, like, really, feel, start, already, felt, very, still, up, down, over, but
Dialogue:
- Who is speaking?
- Do they sound convincing?
- Are they in character?
Tension: (In each chapter)
- Story tension?
- Romantic tension?
- Inner tension?
Words that can be axed!!! (
Rachelle Gardner)
about, actually, almost, like, appears, approximately, basically, close
to, even, eventually, exactly, finally, just, just then, kind of,
nearly, practically, really, seems, simply, somehow, somewhat, sort of,
suddenly, truly, utterly, were
Passive Voice: (The Other Side of the Story - Janice Hardy - If you don't follow her, I highly recommend doing so.)
was, saw, heard, felt, knew, watched, decided, noticed, realized,
wondered, thought, looked, is, am, are, were, has, have, had, being,
been
Telling words: (The Other Side of the Story - Janice Hardy)
time (unless important), to see, to hear, could tell, to watch, to decide, to notice, to realize, to wonder, to think, to look,
Your Turn -> Do you have an editing list?
Originally posted on 11/8/2012 on Adventures in Writer Land.