All this week we're going to be giving you editing tips and tricks on the League.
I'm the kind of writer who prefers revision to drafting, and I enjoy the work of adding depth and layers to character, story and theme.
Recently I attended a revision workshop held by Author Sara Grant. Obviously I am not going to give away all her tips (you should totally attend her workshop if you have the chance), but I did want to share one tip that really worked for me on my latest revision of Chasing Before (my sequel to The Memory of After a.k.a. Level 2).
Go through and give each major and major supporting character's dialogue a different color. Felicia is my main character and it is her POV, so she can stay in black, but I made Neil light blue, Libby is green, Nate is orange, etc.
Then read the entire MS through for each character and only that character.
This helps in two main ways:
1) you can isolate a single character's arc. Do they seem to have their own goals and motivations or do they exist solely to further the plot?
2) you can check that each character's voice is consistent and that their patterns of speech differentiate them from other characters.
Hope this works for you too!
I'm the kind of writer who prefers revision to drafting, and I enjoy the work of adding depth and layers to character, story and theme.
Recently I attended a revision workshop held by Author Sara Grant. Obviously I am not going to give away all her tips (you should totally attend her workshop if you have the chance), but I did want to share one tip that really worked for me on my latest revision of Chasing Before (my sequel to The Memory of After a.k.a. Level 2).
Go through and give each major and major supporting character's dialogue a different color. Felicia is my main character and it is her POV, so she can stay in black, but I made Neil light blue, Libby is green, Nate is orange, etc.
Then read the entire MS through for each character and only that character.
This helps in two main ways:
1) you can isolate a single character's arc. Do they seem to have their own goals and motivations or do they exist solely to further the plot?
2) you can check that each character's voice is consistent and that their patterns of speech differentiate them from other characters.
Hope this works for you too!
Great suggestion! I'm finishing up a revision now and am totally going to do this
ReplyDeleteYou should! It's amazingly helpful.
ReplyDeleteThis is really a great idea. I'm going to have to use this next time I go through a round of revising :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing this information, it is very useful.
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