I think I have come up with a great editing strategy this
time. Last time I tried to do everything at once and ended up making more mistakes than fixing them. How do I know this? Well, the last time I had two different critique partners who still found a lot of mistakes after the editing process, not to mention that my agent fixed a few too, before my book was submission ready.
Step one: The read through, which will be the changing of
obvious mistakes and cutting of unwanted or should I say unneeded wording.
Step two: The finding of not so obvious mistakes. Reading
through the document making sure I did not miss anything the first time.
Step three: The polishing. Reading through the document
again, making sure the flow is right and that it is hopefully error free.
Step four: The printout. Printing the manuscript and then
reading through it again. It is amazing how easily one can miss mistakes when reading
the manuscript on the computer. Also, rectifying all the mistakes, if any is
found.
I have no idea how long this new strategy will take, but it
should work a lot better than the “Do everything all at once” strategy I chose
the last time.
What approach do you take when editing?