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| Tips & Advice Share your tips, tricks and advice. |
04-15-2006, 02:31 PM
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#1
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Addict
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Barrington
Gender: Female
Posts: 153
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Revisions!
Having finished my book, sent the first draft off for critique by a friend, and settled back into my chair before the computer...Revisions suddenly set up a Great Wall of China between my story and I. Help! At times I feel ruthless, like butchering the whole thing and gluing it back together, and at other times I'm such a ninny, and I don't want to ruin it, even though I know it needs lots of work.
Any suggestions about how to approach revisions/rewrites? Any tips will be recieved with immense grattitude--
Gwen: the Quillqueen
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04-15-2006, 02:40 PM
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#2
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Scribe
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Los Angeles
Gender: Male
Posts: 65
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Man. Do I know that feeling. I have stories in which I think I've re-written the opening chapter like 40 times
Here's a couple of things:
1) Be very wary of making changes that have 'big-picture' consequences unless absolutely necessary. Dont go changing the continent your hero (or heroine) lives in for example.. unless you plan on rewriting half your chapters!
2) When the 'omg this needs to be made better' bug hits you.. and you start re-writing, when you are done with your edit, pause for a moment, and ask yourself, as objectively as possible 'did this really make it better'.
3) Don't be afraid to use the 'Undo' key. Control-Z IS YOUR FRIEND. Remember, unlike the age-old environment of typewriters (shudder), in our electronic age we can take stuff out as easily as we can put it in! Don't be afraid to try to make it better.. you can always go back in a few seconds!
4) Finally, don't bite off too much at once. Take it one chapter, one paragraph at a time. Dont worry about the Elephant.. worry about the hairs on his left front foot's toe-knuckle! Do it 'one bite at a time' and have patience.
Hope that helps!
Steve
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04-15-2006, 02:44 PM
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#3
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Ink Slinger
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Les Etats-Unis
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,568
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hide it in a deep dark hole for as long as you need, forget about it. Right when you write something you're passionate about it and don't want to hurt it, so give it time to fall away to the old stuff, then hack at it so its beautiful  If you're still attached to a piece, you'll get no where. and after you've done that, read over it. and if you still aren't happy, hide it again, and hack at it again. just keep at it  I hope that helped, and wasn't too vague...
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04-15-2006, 03:36 PM
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#4
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Addict
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 100
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Leaving the MS unread for a while is a good tip.
When you do come to look at it again, don't be frightened away if it appears to need a major overhaul. I've written three novels. The first draft of the first one was pretty dire. The second one was a bit better, and the third (or so I thought) was pretty good. But when I came to looking at the third with a view to doing a bit of re-writing, I realised it needed a total re-write. So I took a deep breath and got on with it. I plan to go back to the second draft of the third novel at some point over the next six months. Hopefully I'll still be as pleased with it as I was when I finished it, but if it needs lots of work, I'm prepared for that as well.
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04-15-2006, 05:31 PM
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#5
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Best Seller
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 625
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Quote:
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at other times I'm such a ninny, and I don't want to ruin it
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Keep in mind too that you don't need to destroy your drafts. While holding on to every single change can make things cluttered, there's no reason you can't keep a copy of the current draft in one file, and the working revision in another.
-Frank
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04-15-2006, 09:17 PM
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#6
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Addict
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Barrington
Gender: Female
Posts: 153
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Wonderful,this makes me feel better. Probably that's one of my big problems: I'm trying to work on it too soon after finishing the draft, and it needs to breathe. Thanks for getting back to me with the --very-- helpful tips, I'm grateful.
Gwen
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04-18-2006, 12:23 PM
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#7
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Addict
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Barrington
Gender: Female
Posts: 153
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On Another Note
Something else: I want to make a lot of serious changes to my plot, which would make for a lot of rewriting. Would it be better to go through the extra work and make the changes, or to just work on the plot at hand and try and make it better?
I promise I am setting the project aside for a while, but I just thought I'd ask for future reference.
Cheers~
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04-18-2006, 04:55 PM
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#8
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Prolific Writer
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Oslo, Norway
Posts: 326
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by Steve Booth
3) Don't be afraid to use the 'Undo' key. Control-Z IS YOUR FRIEND.
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On a related note, I would advise you to get some kind of revision control system (CVS, Subversion or if you're using Word, something like Workshare Professional), learn how to use it and then use it religiously.
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04-19-2006, 12:05 PM
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#9
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Addict
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Barrington
Gender: Female
Posts: 153
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Oh, I've never worked with any revision program things like that. How do they work? Do they cost anything?
Gwen
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04-19-2006, 12:54 PM
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#10
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Prolific Writer
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Oslo, Norway
Posts: 326
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by Quillqueen
Oh, I've never worked with any revision program things like that. How do they work? Do they cost anything?
Gwen
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Well, somewhat simplified they work by having a repository or library of of all your work files as well as a history of all revisions of those files. In another place you have a local copy of your files that you work on, and every now and then (typically once a day) you use a small program to register any changes you've done to the files with the central repository.
This gives you a historic log of all the changes you've done to the files, as well as the ability to retrieve a copy of your files as they were at any point during your work; so if you realise that you need that chapter you deleted four months ago, you can just go to the revision control system, retrieve a copy of your files from four months ago, copy the chapter from the old versions of files and paste them into the current versions.
That's the main thing revision control systems do, and as a fiction writer working on your own that's the main thing you'll be interested in, but there's more to them too.
Some of them are free, and some cost money. For the free ones I'd recommend Subversion, although if you use Microsoft Word you may want to consider purchasing a system that integrates into Word as a module. I've never used any of the latter, so I can't really advice on that.
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04-19-2006, 02:56 PM
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#11
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Addict
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Barrington
Gender: Female
Posts: 153
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All right, splendid. Sounds like a god-send. I'll take a look and see what I can find.
 Scales, scales, scales...
Gwen
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04-19-2006, 09:40 PM
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#12
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Prolific Writer
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Miami, Fl
Posts: 226
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"Murder your darlings"
- some famous writer
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04-21-2006, 12:59 AM
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#13
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Addict
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 187
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It was the hardest thing for me to set my ms down for a few eeeks. I was so itching to start editting it! But I'm glad that I did. I'm almost finished with my first revisions now. I printed the whole thing off so I could see it in front of me and then I editted the paper version with my trusty ballpoint pen. I highlighted sentances or paragraphs that were very good too. Then I went to the computer copy and made the changes. Good luck and congrats on finishing it!
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Anne Lacey
Wife to Joel, Mom to three lovely boys and expecting a little girl in January
"History will be kind to me, for I intend to write it." -Winston Churchill
"Live to the point of tears." -Albert Camus
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