The End by Debbie Bennett
So I’ve finally finished the current work-in-progress,
done a first round of edits and Ratline
is now off to my editor for some serious fluff-trimming.
What – you only do
one edit? I hear you ask. Not really. I’m not a draft writer. There are
those who press GO and keep writing
until they get to the end, when they press STOP.
Any interruptions and they lose the creative flow. But I’m constantly
re-writing as I go along. Sometimes I end up with less words than I started
with, which is always kind of depressing, until I reassure myself that at least
they are better words. On this book,
I found that I couldn’t get past the first couple of chapters for quite some
time – eventually I realised that was because they weren’t the right first couple of chapters. So I
listened to my subconscious and rewrote until it worked – and then it was like
unblocking the sink and everything started flowing freely again.
So I’m editing and rewriting constantly, always trying
to make what’s gone before as perfect as possible before moving on. Yes,
sometimes things will change later, but generally once I’m happy with it, it
more-or-less stays in that form. I research as I go along too: How far between service stations on a
certain motorway? Where is the nearest supermarket to an address, and what is
the layout of the car park? What time was dawn on a specific day of the year?
I’ll track journeys on Google Maps and find landmarks to add a level of
authenticity. It’s a slow process, but gradually it knits together and starts resembling
a novel.
So having got to THE
END, it’s a slow read-through from the start. Now, I’m looking for the typos that Word can't find,
repeated words, clunky sentences and over-use of catch phrases. How many times can everybody smirk in one scene?!
Adverb-chopping, too – although lose too many and your writing becomes bland
and boring. Adjectives and adverbs are like herbs: use just enough to flavour
the story, but not enough to be aware of their presence.
This is also where I’ll notice that I’ve somehow got
more firearms in a scene than I started with. Where a character would have to
be a superhero to get from A to B in time to do something, and where somebody couldn’t
possible say what they did, because they weren’t there and didn’t know. Mobile
phones and the internet are useful tools, too – I’m constantly amazed how many modern
books I read where the characters never text each other or talk on their
mobiles. My teenager couldn’t function without her phone.
And then it’s time to wrap it up and send it off to my beta
reader and my editor. Both are wonderful. They tell me the good, the bad (and
even the ugly), but both are incredibly motivating. And I know if can satisfy
both of them, I can set this baby loose in the world.
Comments
Secondly - I'm a bash it out, don't stop until you get to the end writer. I've tried editing and tweaking as I go along but I lose the thread and either myself or characters get side tracked. I does mean I have a lot of work on my first draft but I love the challenge of taking that first draft and making it better (hopefully).