by Jackie King
The dog-days of summer arrived
a little later this year, and along with the heat came lethargy and indolence.
I’m calling this the lazy-day-syndrome, and I fear that I’m infected. Coining a
disease sounds less harsh than calling myself a slug, don’t you think? (I have
a habit of excusing all of my bad habits…my favorite is describing my tendency
toward untidiness as artistic clutter.
The above paragraph is in
explanation of today’s struggle, which is settling down to edit an
almost-finished book. The word-smithing isn’t going at all well. My dialogue
sounds as if it needs heavy starch and a hot iron.
I spent considerable time
scanning through dialogue, knowing that what I was reading wasn’t quite up to
snuff, but not sure how to fix the problem. I wanted to put the work aside,
telling myself that it was too hot to work, but that’s not going to bring in
royalties and pay the bills. So I decided to let off some steam for a while and
lambast my pet peeve, as a reader, not a writer. Complaining always makes a
person feel better, don’t you think?
I abhor the current odious
trend of using both a punctuation mark and
a question mark at the end of a sentence. Why? It’s insulting to me as a
reader. It’s as if the author is saying, “I can’t trust you to get this, so I’m
red-lighting the words to help you out.”
News flash: If the sentence
is written correctly, I’ll get it. Also, when I see double punctuation at the
end of one sentence, my first emotion is to throw the book across the room.
Why? Because it’s insulting to my intelligence. If the sentence is
exciting, trust me, I’ll know that. If it isn’t, an exclamation mark won’t
convince me.
Okay, I’ve had my little
verbal temper-tantrum and now I feel all better. Guess I’ll go back to editing.
Hugs to all,
Jackie
8 comments:
Jackie, I'm sure most readers understand your tantrum: )
Jackie, when I see double punctuation, I think the book wasn't edited well. It bothers me too.
Thanks for your comment, Ainaa.
Thanks, June. I'm worried that double punctuation will finally become accepted as have so many other incorrect grammar usages. And thanks for listening to me vent.
Jean, that's absolutely correct. The shocking thing is, I have seen this in many best selling books.
Hugs,
Jackie
Yep, totally agree. I also like Elmore Leonard's 5th 'rule' of writing: 'Keep your exclamation points under control. You are allowed no more than two or three per 100,000 words of prose'.
Well said, Bill. I'm also a huge fan of Elmore Leonard.
Well said, Bill. I'm also a huge fan of Elmore Leonard.
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