There are
bad editors, of course. I had one once. She was assigned to me by a major New
York publisher and saw her job as bending my book in another direction.
Bad editors can exasperate a writer and even destroy the commercial success of
a book. Luckily, I now have a good editor, and she has worked with me on all
six of the Steve Dancy Tales. It’s
been a good partnership. She knows the characters, the storyline, and my foibles.
Honest westerns filled with dishonest characters. |
Another way
to jerk the reader out of the story is to use a modern word or phrase in a
historical novel. In my last manuscript, my editor caught the following words that would be inappropriate
for 1880.
nonstop,
1902
freewheeling,
1931
racketeers,
1924
dim-witted,
1934
sidestepped,
1900
lowlifes,
1911
dock-workers,
1913
shoot-out,
1948
best seller,
1889
S.O.B., 1918
run-of-the-mill,
1930
blabbermouth,
1936
top-notch,1900
gangland,
1912
scam, 1963
headlock,
1905
paddy wagon,
1930
Most readers wouldn't catch these, but I’m glad they've been scrubbed from the manuscript.
When I
finish with this round, it will be off to the publisher for interior design and
proofreading. I wish that would be the end, but in this modern world, I’ll also
need the book professionally formatted for different brands of eReaders.