By: Susan
Defreitas
By the time your book reaches the final stage of editing,
you've read each sentence what feels like a million times. And yet, insidious
errors lurk within the pages of this perfect manuscript that you, the author,
simply cannot see.
That's where proofreaders (also known as copyeditors) come
in. A good copyeditor is not just someone who has mastered every comma rule in
the English language (no small feat); a good copyeditor is someone who will
find errors that twenty beta readers manage to miss but anyone who paid actual
money for your book, somehow, will not.
I'm a freelance editor, and my debut novel, Hot
Season, comes out later this year from Harvard Square Editions, so I've
experienced this process, as Joni Mitchell might say, from both sides now. Here
are a few things that few authors realize (and few copyeditors are willing to
admit).
You'd think that because a manuscript has already gone
through a line edit, one round of proofreading would be enough to catch any
lingering errors. But this is seldom the case...
1. Every Book Goes to Print
with Errors
Don't think this is true? Check out those old periodicals
dedicated to book collectors; they always listed the typos in each first
edition. These errors, once they were pointed out by readers, were eradicated
by the next edition.
Those typos were, in fact, used by collectors as a way to
authenticate first editions: e.g., if someone claimed this book was a
first-edition Phillip Roth, but it lacked a typo on a certain page, that person
was lying to you.
Finding errors in your first print run isn't the end of the
world. In fact, it's par for the course, even if your book has benefited from
many rounds of editing.
2. One Round Is Never Enough
You'd think that because a manuscript has already gone
through a line edit, one round of proofreading would be enough to catch any
lingering errors. But this is seldom the case, because proofreading requires
such a different focus—sometimes, you have to completely tune out the content
of a sentence to see the grammatical structure beneath it.
That kind of close focus can be difficult to maintain, which
is why proofreaders often only work on the same project for a few hours at a
time; it's a lot easier to miss two thes in a row when you're
caught up in the story.
Of course, two
rounds of proofreading is better than one, but few can afford such luxuries
these days (even the big publishing houses).
3. You Are Your Book's Last Line of
Defense
. . .
To read the rest of the post, click here:
~*~
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