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What process and techniques do you use when editing and revising?
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The first edit, which I do from start to finish, is effectively a structural edit. I look for plot holes, inconsistencies, and all the really major stuff.
Then I put it away again for another month.
The second edit is the tightening of stuff, making sure my characters are real people, and that the language works. Sometimes I offer it to friends/family/people of the target audience, to read and comment at this point. (I'm lucky enough to have family and friends who are very honest.)
The final edit (usually the third one) focuses on the minutiae - commas, sentences that are too long, typos, inconsistency of style, missing capitals etc.
Then it goes away again and I proofread it properly.


My next step is to go through and check that I am happy my scenes show what I intended, and they are relevant. This is difficult too, because the issue is, how relevant do they have to be, especially in this one where I am trying to conceal something. (It is about espionage and mystery) It is only after that that I start looking at the writing. Taking Alex' points:
1) Humanized your characters. Obviously, we try, but it is not always that easy with some of them because they have to do certain things. I think it is equally or more so important to make them fit for purpose. If you have a character with so many flaws, then how is said character going to realistically do something important? They have to be credible.
2) Your villains are morally villainous rather than merely badly behaved. Why? I suppose in this case a spy is a villain, but also noble- just waking for a different cause. But equally, do questionable people really see themselves as villains? This coming story has a vulture capitalist as well who thinks in the free market, caveat emptor. Is that villainous?
3) Created a credible conflict between your protagonist and antagonist. Yes and no. In my case, spying only becomes conflict when the other side becomes aware that it is going on. I think, create credible tension is more important.
4) All your scenes are important and memorable. Of course, but the problem is, the author always thinks their writing is memorable.
5) All actions are clearly motivated. In my case, they are in retrospect, but early on, nobody knows the motivation, including the reader.
6) Your first page is compelling enough for the reader to turn to page two. We all hope so.

I agree the first serious read-through is to check that the storyline is in order. After that I use spellcheck and a list of words I have which I tend to use too often. Then it's detail work - spelling, typos and punctuation. This I do numerous times but somehow I still seem to miss some. With my last book I asked my Book Club to look at it and as I corrected the things they found I saw many more errors. Then comes the dreaded formatting because the paperback version always seems to lose lines on a few pages when I preview it. Unfortunately I always seem to miss some things and have to reload the book at least once. I'd love to pay an editor but they don't come cheap. Writing the story is definitely the easiest part!

When I edit, I start from the beginning and go from there. I also let myself change anything as I move through it, allowing the characters to choose vastly different decisions, say different things, and change the plot in general if they wish. It makes the editing journey a lot more interesting, but it's probably why I've been in the editing phase for years. :-)
But eventually, you do have to just decide "I like this direction and value it" and then determine to keep it.
And Rita, I don't know if you have ever heard of the Writer's Club. (Or if this is spam, Alex: I'm not the editor involved, though I am a book coach and offer the free blurb services in their package, so I know this group is solid even though I gain nothing from writing this comment) But it offers free editing, so I thought I should mention it, as you said you'd love to be able to pay for an editor.
https://www.patreon.com/AWritersPath
All the best to everyone doing editing. It's tough, and sometimes, even help can't make it any better. :-)

The fresh eyes are most definitely worth the wait, Rita! It really helps me to distance myself, otherwise I tend to read what I thought I wrote, rather than what I actually wrote.



Books mentioned in this topic
Self-Editing for Fiction Writers: How to Edit Yourself Into Print (other topics)Stein on Writing (other topics)
For the nitty-gritty details, I've also been using Self-Editing for Fiction Writers: How to Edit Yourself Into Print.
How about you? What process and techniques do you use?
Triage revising
Instead of going through a page-by-page edit, you should fix the major problems first, much like a developmental editor would. I'll be using this revision process going forward. The process is to make sure that you've achieved the following:
1) Humanized your characters.
2) Your villains are morally villainous rather than merely badly behaved.
3) Created a credible conflict between your protagonist and antagonist.
4) All your scenes are important and memorable.
5) All actions are clearly motivated.
6) Your first page is compelling enough for the reader to turn to page two.