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Robert
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Oct 31, 2017 08:04AM

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My basic take is that if you've written a good enough draft of a story to publish then you are basically done with the heavy lifting, though I seem inclined to rewrite whole manuscripts to lesser effect, and have wasted a lot of time doing this. I think part of this has to do with a desire to be endlessly perfect, or to say more than I said, but you are a writer and know that a good story doesn't mean that you include every last detail your mind remembers, even if they are good, but that you tell enough to tell the story. In some ways, the form or structure of a tale is like a glass and it only holds so much water.
To be fair to myself, I do think that artists need to challenge their work and if you are seriously considering publication then it is probably a good idea to make sure you've done something as well as you could, and a bad rewrite will definitely make this clear. I'm sure if I had a literary agent, a publisher, etc., that they would put the reins on me and tell me that a manuscript was a good and that it only needed some polishing, or an editor would go over it with me and tell me how to improve it, without destroying the poetry that excited anyone in the first place, even if that anyone is me. But I'm writing in a vacuum and left to my own devices.