Bisky's Twitterling's Scribbles! discussion
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I type in and edit as I go, I always reread the last chapter I wrote when I sit down to write more.
Then I put it away for a while, and then do an edit.
Then I do a proof read.
For me, the trick is knowing when to stop :3

I did Fury in 4, but I hope to do my next in three :]
I'm on the fourth draft now getting ready for beta reads, hoping it's going to be my last anyway :p
I'm on the fourth draft now getting ready for beta reads, hoping it's going to be my last anyway :p
@Brian Yep I think that about sums it right. That's how I'm doing it with my sequel.
However, I can't count how many times I re-edited Fate, but it was my first and I've learned a lot while doing it, but always AFTER I've finished an edit. During the course of my last edit, I created a prologue and scratched a lot of stuff while sprinkling other info throughout the book. I find the result much better although with all the edits, the first chapter doesn't flow as well as the rest, but I had to put a stop to the mad editing before I went crazy. (Being already a tad crazy I should say crazier instead. :P )
However, I can't count how many times I re-edited Fate, but it was my first and I've learned a lot while doing it, but always AFTER I've finished an edit. During the course of my last edit, I created a prologue and scratched a lot of stuff while sprinkling other info throughout the book. I find the result much better although with all the edits, the first chapter doesn't flow as well as the rest, but I had to put a stop to the mad editing before I went crazy. (Being already a tad crazy I should say crazier instead. :P )
50? Holy cow! Thats amazing haha As long as it's the best it needs to be ^^
@Brian and GG Def sums it up haha
@Mark Thanks ^^ And 3 seems to be the magic number :)
@Bisky Here's hoping! Good luck with your beta readers :D so exciting ^^
@Harmony I agree, def gotta know when to stop. A writers work is never done, but at the same time you have to know when to let it go so others can enjoy it :)
@Brian and GG Def sums it up haha
@Mark Thanks ^^ And 3 seems to be the magic number :)
@Bisky Here's hoping! Good luck with your beta readers :D so exciting ^^
@Harmony I agree, def gotta know when to stop. A writers work is never done, but at the same time you have to know when to let it go so others can enjoy it :)

@Mark, I used to write my first drafts by hand, but I screwed up my wrist a few years ago. Now I can only write for short periods of time, so I've shifted all my drafts back to the computer. I miss doing things by hand though. It kept me from revising my writing before getting through my first drafts.


My 70 something are in the bowels of my email address. But now I can see why they were rejected and it makes me hopeful for the next time I query ^-^ and brag about my Twitter followers, YOLO.
Jks :p
I heard about one author who used his rejections to plaster his bathroom walls :3
Jks :p
I heard about one author who used his rejections to plaster his bathroom walls :3

I keep thinking of things to change or add as I go and then I have to go through and change everything that effected.
It's hard to know when it's done, when to stop editing. I figure if there's anything I've missed in four edits I'm just not seeing it and hopefully my beta readers will catch it.
I have to be really strict with myself. I'm such a perfectionist I could pick at the bloody thing for years xP

@Claire Keep! I scrapbook all mine along with the queries I had sent out ^^ That way when I do make it I can look back and be like 'look at all these losers that said no. Bet they're sorry now!' :p
@Bisky I would die laughing if I heard you say "yolo" with your accent. lol XD
@Molly It is really hard to stay objective with your own work, I think. That's why having some fresh eyes on it is such a wonderful thing. They can tell you how it translates, and they'll see things you never saw. It's very helpful.
@Bisky I would die laughing if I heard you say "yolo" with your accent. lol XD
@Molly It is really hard to stay objective with your own work, I think. That's why having some fresh eyes on it is such a wonderful thing. They can tell you how it translates, and they'll see things you never saw. It's very helpful.



Your run down of going with a small publisher sounds exactly how I felt, too... EVERYONE has to promote themselves these days, and, you're right, the big publishers take YEARS to get a book out, where a small publisher can do it in months.
Hands on is the way to go. Mine's great for that, too.
As for my own drafts... well, for my debut I only really finished one entire MS... The rest was edited as I went... I would get to a point and just think "I wonder how much this would change if I did this instead?" My opening 6-8 chapters went through various iterations to work out how best to set the whole novel up. I found as I went forward there were fewer and fewer narrative choices to make, so big edits didn't have to happen so much. So, the final chapters just needed a tidy-up, really.
For my second, I've tried to keep the forward pace going more. The opening doesn't have as many options as the first book did, because this one is a follow-on from the last! Still, there are some events that COULD happen in various orders and I have had to play with those to get a feel for which arrangement I prefer. I feel I'm getting close now. I still haven't typed or written "THE END" yet, though I have got close!
At the moment, I am running through a detailed synopsis to try to avoid too much re-writing from here on in...
Then, hopefully, it'll just be a couple of run throughs to smooth things out and then to edit...
... and then beta readers...
@Brian and Bisky -- Exactly right! You HAVE to let them go eventually. Is my first novel the perfect book? Hell no! But I knew I had to let it go. I've got an idea of the standard I'm aiming for with this one, so I think I'll know when to set it free... Luckily I have my publisher ready to take a look at it when the time is right this time around!

Forever Lost: that is from a free write and I'm on my third. Once I get these changes in we'll see if it all works out. Then it will be just making sure I catch all the mistakes. (Honestly though, is that even possible? *sigh*)

I started my first as a college dropout and am finishing it as a grad student. With so many changes going on in my life, I had to keep changing it to keep up with me. Really, I should have written like three books, but the book that I am releasing is definitely the best version of it, so I would say it was worth it.


How many drafts of your book have you done before you thought it was "ready"?
For my second book it'll be only 3 drafts once I'm done editing.