What is the single best
piece of advice you’ve ever received about the publishing process and/or what
advice would you offer to a first-time author?
The best advice I’ve
received is never to proofread your own work. This advice is something I haven’t
always followed, always to my regret, finding silly typos or other errors only
after the final printing. Even with short stories, which look perfectly fine
even after the umpteenth reading, only show their flaws after submission, when
they dance and scream and hoot and holler off the page; the haunting of the
self-proof reader.
This is advice I give
in turn, not only to first time authors, but to anyone serous about getting the
best possible version of their work published. This advice goes hand in hand
with never copy edit your own work, unless you have qualifications and
experience in this area, as there are a multitude of pitfalls for the
unsuspecting beyond syntax and grammar. Issues around copyright, plagiarism, libel
and defamation etc. are all lurking between the pages of the unsuspecting. It
may be something as simple as referencing the title of a well-known song
without permission of the copyright holder, or using a quote without permission
or attribution of the source.
When I suggest having
work proofread, this doesn’t always mean shelling out big dollars. If you
belong to a good writing group whose members have current knowledge of spelling
and punctuation, and who have a good understanding of the difference between
proofreading and copy editing, then recruiting these as final proof readers (as
a reciprocal arrangement) can be a good start. Also use anyone you know who is
a prolific reader as their reader eye will pick up an error in no time. It literally
jumps off the page at them, halting the reading.
Money saved on
proofreading can be spent on a good copy or structural editor who will work
with you to ensure the book is true to your intent and gives you the best
chance of having an agent or publisher read the submission, or if an Indie
publisher, to ensure a quality product.
Roger that, Red Leader. Message understood. Over and out.
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