Do you love or hate revision? When I first started writing I hated what seemed to me a tedious and mostly unnecessary exercise. What could need correcting except perhaps, punctuation and spelling? I had stories to tell and a passion to write these tales from the depth of my heart. I did a fair job of it, too, I thought. I even managed to sell a couple of short stories. (This was some time ago and the short story market was good.)
My mother, an English teacher, also wrote and hung around
with folks having the same inclination. One of her more successful writer
friends, a local journalist named Vera Holding, dropped by with a draft she’d
just banged out on her typewriter. (Those were the clickety-clackety,
non-electrical machines that writers, businesses and students used for letters,
manuscripts and such back in the dark ages.)
“Would you listen to my story and give me some feedback?”
Vera asked, and we agreed, so she began to read aloud. I had seen this woman’s
published work and expected smooth and polished prose, but that didn’t happen.
Her story was so bad I couldn’t think of anything to suggest that might help.
Her work was unsalable in my opinion. So I decided to be kind and lie. “That’s
just fine,” I said, and smiled.
Mother, who knew the woman and her work much better than I
did, made some suggestions to strengthen the plot, but nothing could save that
story. Or so I thought. Her work had no plot; her characters were shallow and
her writing seemed lifeless. But bless her heart, I thought, she’d not learn
that from me.
The next day Vera came back and asked to read her revised
story aloud. I could hardly keep from rolling my eyes, disappointed that I had
to listen to that drivel a second time. But I was raised to be polite, so I
folded my hands in my lap, crossed my ankles, and pasted a smile on my lips.
When Vera began to read something magical happened. The day
before I’d been bored and even a little embarrassed by her writing. Now I was
transfixed. Somehow this author had breathed life into her characters, their
dialogue and the narration. The plot was still weak, but the protagonist was so
compelling that I knew the story would sell. And it did.
That day I became a devotee to the power of revision. I also
learned the difference between a wanna-be writer and a professional writer.
Learning and applying good writing technique takes time and many, many hours of
writing. But anyone who is willing to make the effort and to revise their work
until its right, can master this skill.
Years have passed and wordsmithing is my favorite part of
writing.
What a great story. Okay, now I might like revising better: )
ReplyDeleteWell stated. I always have a combination of expectation and dread when I do my first read-through after completing my rough draft. Will it be junk or will I like what I've written? I find it's some of both. Then I jump in to turn it into a real novel.
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