Revisions and rewrites—they kind of sound the
same, but they’re not. Not by a long
shot. In my experience, revisions are
just a step or two above tweaking. Simple
problem, easy fix. A rewrite is just
what it sounds like, taking the editing chainsaw to a manuscript to fix some
serious issues (aka screw ups). At least
once, most writers experience that special moment when they realize that their
precious project is a skanky, stinky pile of tripe. Yep, I’ve been there and had to fix
that. It was a lot of work and it wasn’t
pretty, but the results were intensely satisfying once the dust settled.
To avoid the embarrassment of having your critique
group/beta reader/agent/editor witness your writer “duh moment,” it’s
preferable to discover for yourself where your plot train derailed. The red
flags for me should have been characters behaving uncharacteristically and more
than a few chapters that didn’t propel my story forward. They would have been red flags if I hadn’t
been too close to the book to see them.
Fortunately my agent was there to tell me where my plot train had
derailed—and crashed and burned. In the
instant when she pointed out the problem, I immediately saw how that problem
had spawned a snafu, which had caused my first sub-plot to . . .well, you get
the picture. I metaphorically smacked
myself in the forehead for being too dense not to have seen it all myself. I knew I had a rewrite on my hands, not a
revision. At that point, there was
nothing left to do but put on my hazmat suit and wade in.
I had a book contract and was on a deadline, so not
fixing the book was not an option. But
if you’re what I like to call “pre-published,” you might be tempted to throw in
the towel when faced with what you see as a book with insurmountable
problems. I’m here to tell you that it’s
never as bad as you think. If your core
story is solid, everything else can be fixed.
The key is to fix one problem at a time.
And if your solution causes more problems further on in the book than it
solves, you simply discard it and find another solution. For me, the key was to keep my emotions out
it, to look at my book from a dispassionate point of view, and to dissect it to
find the best way to fix it—not the easiest way, but the best way—the way I
knew would give me the best book possible.
And when the rewrite was done, the dust had settled,
and the finished book was on my editor’s desk, I was proud of more than that
book. I was proud of myself for digging
in, doing the work, and not giving up.
So who was my literary problem child? My second book Armed & Magical, which
went on to become my first national bestseller.
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