Editors and Writers discussion
Novels need style sheets
date
newest »


1. ALL proper nouns
2. Specifics for how certain unusual text should be treated (text messages, flashbacks, "voices" a character is hearing, foreign language terms)
3. Serial comma or no serial comma (author preference)
4. Unusual spellings/features of text
5. UK or US English preference for spelling AND punctuation
Stylesheets are a godsend to proofreaders. I'm always shocked by authors who expect me to proofread when they haven't supplied me with a stylesheet. How am I supposed to know what's correct if I don't have a list in front of me to follow? I have seen authors mistakenly change characters' entire names, name spellings, and even genders! Style sheets are great for keeping track of those pesky little details, and they're also great to ensure 100% accuracy when your proofreaders scour your manuscript.
So yes, have a stylesheet!


As an editor, however, I agree these can be useful though I'm seldom given one with the novel by either a writer or their publisher. I therefore make one as I go along, making notes on characters etc and querying anything that doesn't seem right. Yes it might mean a bit of extra work, but it's my job to spot these things. It's what I get paid for.



I use a notebook and pen at first, mostly because I don't like having more docs open than I have to. Also, scratching things out and making changes leaves a trail that might help untangle things later. Eventually, though, I transfer my notes to a Word doc. If it's long, I will alpha it. If an inconsistency is posing problems, I'll ask the author for a clarification rather than query "Mathers or Matthews" again and again.
When I return the project to the author, I include the style sheet for their own reference. This can be especially helpful for an author who is writing a series. I once read (not my edit!) a series where the size of a family kept changing from six to five to seven. One book at a time, these were not important details, but for series fans catching the "quirks" became a kind of online party game.
Does anyone use a spreadsheet? Or use Word's features to make a style sheet more useful?

If you'd like a copy of the template I use, shoot me an email: hjseditingservices@gmail.com.

I also use a pen and pad (even if it is a bit antiquated!)and make notes as I go of everything from names, eye colour, personality etc, everything down to what handbag a woman carries. I will also check dialogue and the person speaking, places, weather, time of year etc, as I've seen some strange issues in documents over the years! I also, like Heather have several tabs and docs open at any one time to check things if needed!

Dual screen is definitely useful :) document on one, notes on the other. Or, in idle moments, game/lovefilm.

I think most editors have a touch of OCD, and that's a GOOD thing. Authors deserve editors who are obssessive about their work. Perfectionism is a positive trait in the editing world, for sure. :)
But hard for normal life? It's hard to read a book for pleasure these days, I'm too busy searching for errors. Back to style sheets though - my recurring nightmare is being asked to edit something like game of thrones. Imagine checking timeline/names for that!

Even the books I read for pleasure (generally traditionally-published books) have errors. But hey, I try to see my brain as a gift even when it feels like a curse. If only there were a switch we could turn on/off for editing...





Personally, I really enjoy this part of editing a novel--the puzzliness (new word I just made up) of it is fun. But it does add to the time I spend on an edit, and that is an expense a writer might prefer to avoid. Additionally, as a writer works out the puzzles the story always gets better, the characters more interesting.

Henry Mathers (age 29, blue eyes, black hair, drives a Tacoma)
Karrie Mathers (Henry's mother, age 42, blue eyes, blue hair, has six kids)
Carl Mathers (Henry's father, age 48, prefers his oldest son, Sid)
June "Trixie" Morris (age 27, green eyes, red hair, lives at 456 Maple Street, 4 months pregnant)
Sid Matthews (age 34, lives in Maine)
So, if you look carefully, you will see that certain details raise questions. Sid's last name doesn't match the rest of his family. Probably the writer changed the family name but missed Sid. Karrie was only 8 when she gave birth to Sid and 13 when she had Henry. This is because in the first draft Karrie was 48, like her husband, but in the second draft the author decided that she needed to be younger, which meant also making Henry younger but the edit slipped between the cracks. The problem is compounded because Sid was moved from younger son to older son to explain the father-son issues between Henry and Carl. Changes like this are part of the development of a story and resulting errors are among the many things a good editor will sniff out.
Maintaining a style sheet will help the writer keep track of all the changes he or she makes. And your editor will love you if you provide them with a style sheet.