The Importance of Professional Editing, Part 2
In Part One of The Importance of Professional Editing, we set the table. Now, in the second of this two-part piece, we finish mapping out three different stages of editing, plotting a route that will guide you safely to your dream destination: a published author whose book is ready to take on the literary marketplace!
Picking up where we left off, a substantive editor helps to:
Ensure your message is clear and strong
Clarify meaning sentence by sentence
Assess the clarity of your book as a whole
Eliminate jargon or unnecessary words and phrases
Polish language to as professional and/or clear a level as possible
Make sure the structure of the book (chapters, sub sections, citations, bibliographies) is correct and formatted properly
Pose questions or leave comments regarding missing information, confusing elements
Provide suggestions for improvements (eg. more sensory description in a scene) that only an author can create
Fact check
Format citations
Copy edit
For nonfiction:
Check consistency of information
Assess efficacy of structure and organization of the argument to ensure its success
Assist in perfecting the structure and organization of the argument to ensure its success
Assess the successfulness of visual aids such as source material, diagrams, illustrations, etc.
For fiction:
Ensure characterization is believable and effective
Check plot development for structure, organization, and entertainment value
Improve ‘flow’ of events in the story
Address places which “slow down” the pace of the story
Assess the successfulness of visual aids such as source material, diagrams, illustrations, etc.
Mechanics: Copy Editing & Proofreading
A content (or substantive) edit is, as its technical name suggests, substantial. The number of big picture changes, by the editor and by the author (post-edit) means that while mechanical corrections have been made throughout, the manuscript will likely require at least one final round of mechanical editing to ensure it’s in top condition for printing.
A mechanical edit is one that deals only with the correction of technical aspects of writing (spelling, punctuation, grammar, etc.) There are two types of mechanical edit: copyediting and proofreading.
Either edit (often both) are performed on a manuscript after a substantive edit. They do the exact same thing, but the frequency of correction is vastly different.
Both a copy edit and a proofread correct:
Grammar
Spelling
Punctuation
Typos and missing words
Erroneous word usage
Mechanics of style
Consistency of information
Fact checking
Insertion of image tags
Unusual design or formatting requirements for the design team
Consistency of spelling convention (eg. American, British or Canadian English)
Required permissions
DON’T PANIC.
Some writers worry that allowing another person to ‘interfere’ with their work will in some way negatively affect the end result. Fear Not.
All professional editing is performed using Microsoft Word’s track changes tool or something like it. This feature means that every change the editor makes is visibly recorded for the author to see later. Not only can the author see the changes made to their manuscript, but they can also reject them with just the click of a mouse should they find any stylistic or other changes that they disagree with.
A universal requirement of a professional editor is that they do not impose their own personal style or preferences on your manuscript. This means that your authorial voice—the thing most unique to you as a writer—will be respected, maintained and tended to by your editor. Your voice will never compromised.