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Author in Training, Part 2: Revising – How much is enough? — 4 Comments

  1. I'd like to correct all typos, of course, but smoothing and tightening and polishing could go on forever. I expect that I could read my writing 100 times and still find something I would like to change. So, there does have to be a point where you say, "Enough!"

    When I keep fiddling, a friend of mine always asks, "Are you really improving it or just making it different?" Maybe that's standard.

  2. I'm polishing one old mss that has already been edited (by Scott), doing a massive rewrite of another that was also mostly edited and still need to finish another with plans to upload all three of those to ebooks, buuuuuuut, I'm very tired of rewriting and polishing old mss and rereading old stories. At some point, I think a writer very much needs to move on to something new. I have a couple of "new" mss that I barely started several months ago, and I've been missing being inside a new story. It's hard to let go, but I'm thinking every sentence you're "fixing" on an old story is taking you away from an exciting new story.

  3. Brenda, I know what you mean. I will definitely focus on finishing my new novel. Perhaps once I run out of ideas and have writer's block, I may revisit Love of Stonemason. And, as Linda's friend mentioned, changes may not "improve" the novel but rather make it different.