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The Revision Process

September 23, 2011 by Carey Jane Clark

In my 3 in 30 post last weekend, I mentioned the revision process and the mistakes I’ve been cleaning up. You may wonder what mistakes I’m talking about. Most of them, I’m learning, are quite common–many writers make them. They involve words that I tend to overuse, simply because when I’m writing, they’re the first comfortable tool I reach for.

Words like “look” can indicate I’ve given too many “stage directions” to my characters in the midst of dialogue, or that I’ve just not taken the time to find a better, more fitting word or phrase.

Another no-no I come across is sentences using the word “was,” which is kind of a nothing verb that adds no color or life to the sentence. Sometimes, too, the use of “was” signals that I’ve told instead of shown. I get rid of was whenever I can. Sometimes that means eliminating the sentence altogether–the reader can figure out from what I’ve already written what’s going on, and the sentence with “was” is redundant. Sometimes, I simply rewrite the sentence using a stronger, more forceful verb.

I wrote the entire story originally from one point of view and in the rewrite, added a whole new point of view, so the final product is told from two points of view. My writing improved as I went along. As a result, some of the older scenes, written from my protagonist’s point of view need more refining.

The good news is, I am still learning as I go along, and getting better at revision. The other day, I had to write a new scene to replace one. Now that I’m finished, and can look at the story as a whole, I realized that one of my scenes needed to be replaced with a new scene that would bring more meaning to the climax. I wrote the new scene and had very little revision to do afterward because I was able to write well the first time, instead of having to go back and catch all those little mistakes.

To me, the aspect of learning as you write is one of the most intimidating things about the craft. I know that I may look back five years or even five months from now and want to bury my head if I read what I wrote today. The fact that you keep improving is a blessing and a curse. I have many author friends who have never read their books once in print. I will probably feel the same way. But I hope I can enjoy each step along the journey ahead as much as I’ve enjoyed the road behind me.

- Carey Clark

Writer’s Conference Blessings, Part 3

August 18, 2011 by Carey Jane Clark

Wow! I made a lot of wonderful writer friends last week. A few of them have blogs, so I’m going to mention them here and suggest that you check them out as well.

Karen Vogel and Me

One talented friend (you know who you are) doesn’t yet have a blog but should. I will feature her when she finally gets around to that.

Lanita Boyd and Me

And look for these names on your bookshelves–coming soon:

Lanita Boyd
Keisha Gilchrist-Broomes
Pasquale Russo

- Carey Jane Clark

Writer’s Conference Blessings, Part 2

August 17, 2011 by Carey Jane Clark

There were many unexpected blessings at the writer’s conference last week. One such blessing was the privilege of attending fiction author Joyce Magnin‘s not-yet-published-fiction author’s clinic.

Joyce Magnin

I hadn’t signed up for it, but when I met with Joyce on the first day of the conference and she read over my manuscript and synopsis, she gave me the opportunity to attend.

I had the chance to make some wonderful friends, and participate in discussion that was aimed directly at the kind of fiction I’m writing, so it made for a wonderful week.

Joyce Magnin and Me

And Joyce was such a pleasure to get to know. She calls herself the “queen of quirk” and her writing is something you really should check out for yourself. It’s available at Amazon or for Nook and Kindle.

- Carey Jane Clark

Writer’s Conference Blessings, Part 1

August 16, 2011 by Carey Jane Clark

It is hard to put into words the blessing I received at last week’s conference. It was amazing! I made new friends, had some valuable experience being critiqued, participated in one-on-one interviews with authors, agents and editors, learned a LOT.

One of the biggest blessings was meeting up again with author Cec Murphey, who has impacted my writing in many ways. I met him first at a writer’s conference in 2005 in Ohio. I took copious notes from his workshop, and applied them as much as I could in my writing and life.

Cecil Murphey and Me

Then, in 2007, I had the opportunity to attend one of his mentoring clinics. This event truly made a difference in my writing.

Last week, at the Greater Philadelphia Christian Writer’s Conference, I attended his “Dancing with Dialogue” workshop. During the workshop, I had the opportunity for one page of dialogue from my manuscript to be torn apart by the class. :)

I have learned to love criticism (when it comes to writing, anyway). It’s the only way to grow. Wonderful!

- Carey Jane Clark

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