pameladean: chalk-fronted corporal dragonfly (Libellula julia)
pameladean ([personal profile] pameladean) wrote2015-02-03 03:25 pm

All the Niggling

The copy-edit of the Liavek collection, which Pat and I decided (with the agreement of the publisher) to call Points of Departure, arrived a couple of weeks ago. Sunday evening I emailed my version of the file to Pat, who had agreed to merge the two and make sure that my unfamiliarity with Microsoft Word and, indeed, with any kind of electronic editing and copy-editing arrangement whatsoever, had not created any horrors that needed fixing.

There were some editorial remarks and changes as well, but very minor ones, the editor having thought that we had done a good job on the stories the first time around and knew how we wanted them to be.

I had forgotten the stages of dealing with a copy-edit, which, in my case, go approximately, NOOOOOOO, Are You Kidding Me, I Cannot Write For Toffee Not If It Was Ever So, Okay I Can Fix That If You Insist, Bored Now, Thank Goodness Somebody Noticed That, The Rest of This is Nonsense and I Will Not Do It, Really Bored Now, Really Why Did I Think I Could Write, Oh All RIGHT, This Is Very Annoying But You Have A Point, and I Am So Done Now.

I believe that copy-editors cannot catch everything that is actually wrong without also pointing out a certain percentage of things that are not wrong at all, and the writer just has to deal with it; but I had almost forgotten this, because it's been so long since I had anything published.

It was interesting to me that all the changes I balked at came down to either voice or viewpoint. The first and last of my Liavek stories are in the first person, and I was really not at all willing to change much of anything. The middle three stories and my sections of the new collaborative story are in third person, but there is in each one a particular viewpoint that dictates word choice and style generally. I was not altogether aware of this when I wrote them, but when I tried to make changes that on the surface seemed perfectly reasonable, it always came down to viewpoint.

On the whole I feel that all of the stories have held up remarkably well, and actually found myself becoming weepy both over the end of my last one, "A Necessary End," and Pat's last one, "The Levar's Night Out."

I am so pleased that this collection will be available as an e-book. I think the release date is in May, but I'll keep you apprised as things get closer.

Pamela
sovay: (Rotwang)

[personal profile] sovay 2015-02-03 10:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I am so pleased that this collection will be available as an e-book. I think the release date is in May, but I'll keep you apprised as things get closer.

Will it be available as a non-e-book as well? I was just re-reading the four Liavek anthologies I own (I'm missing Spells of Binding; I believe I got it out of a library in college) and I have an increasingly antiquated preference for books I can carry around without an electronic interface.
sovay: (Sovay: David Owen)

[personal profile] sovay 2015-02-04 12:32 am (UTC)(link)
Perhaps if it does well as an e-book something might happen.

Fingers very much crossed. In the meantime: mazel tov! Book!

[identity profile] skylarker.livejournal.com 2015-02-04 04:11 pm (UTC)(link)
I'll look forward to its release, now that I've got a day job and can actually buy books again!

[identity profile] thistleingrey.livejournal.com 2015-02-05 04:25 am (UTC)(link)
+1 preference for print, but I'll be glad to read it in whichever form--I'm really looking forward to it.