wordstitch (
wordstitch) wrote in
onedeadplotbunny2015-02-01 08:07 pm
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Finding motivation through editing
One of the things that I find really helps me to get back into a fic I've left for a long time is to do a nice, thorough edit of it. I read through the things I've already written with a red pen and pare down the words, try to make the sentences as tight as possible. Then I make the changes and read the bits aloud.
I found that in making the fic better, I regain a bit of enthusiasm for working on it, and end up wanting to write more scenes, or expand on existing ones.
Here are some of the things I check during edits:
I found that in making the fic better, I regain a bit of enthusiasm for working on it, and end up wanting to write more scenes, or expand on existing ones.
Here are some of the things I check during edits:
- Deletion of unnecessary adjectives and adverbs. "Really", "very," "slightly", "slowly", "quickly" are ones I watch out for most!
- Deletion of repetitive words/names. Find yourself using the same descriptor a whole lot? I do! I usually run my fic through something like this word counter that analyses which words show up most frequently in the text. Specifics like "growls" or "replies" that show up too often usually get changed to something else, or something less specific like "says." I also notice during editing that one of my characters says the other characters' names too much in a conversation, and I take those out too. There's also a phrase frequency counter which helps too!
- Abrupt scene endings. This may not be a problem for most people, but I write in short scenes and sometimes those scenes end too abruptly.
- Passive language. Self-explanatory.
- Unnecessary metaphors/similes, or silly ones. This happens less and less often as I become more aware of it. But everyone's had a period in their lives when they turned slightly purple in their prose, and it's good to remind oneself those bits don't always work.
- Tense shifts. Writing different tenses in the same fic happens, especially when you're moving from one tense to another between different works. (contributed by
rikym)
- POV/perspective shifts. If you're in third person limited for most of the story and then suddenly shift to third person omniscient that might be weird for the reader. (contributed by
rikym)
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I've been told that I use characters' names too much, and even now I still see it. I do my best to write something in such a way to avoid using a character's name, but argh! I read a fanfiction where this was really bad. The writer may have done it to avoid confusion when discussing more than one character in a scene, especially if they are the same gender.
I feel I'm pretty good now with sticking with a POV. I thought I read somewhere that omniscient third-person POV is hard to pull off? Some of my earlier stories had "head hopping." Is that the same thing?
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My junior high English teacher made us diagram sentences endlessly. If I'm staring at a sentence that sounds off, I mentally start diagramming it and can usually figure out what I screwed up (dangling modifiers, mostly).
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I also tell my students to read their work aloud. It's one of the best things that you can do as a writer, especially when you've got a lot of dialogue, or you're trying to capture a particular character's speech patterns. As you read, you will hear the errors, like sentences that are too long (anything where you have to stop to take a breath halfway through is probably too long!) or poorly phrased passages. Super bonus points if you have a friend/con crit partner who listens as you read aloud!
Also, hi, everyone! I guess this is my introduction! Welp! :)
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