Does your written work need developmental editing? Ask yourself these questions about your writing;
- Does it have loose ends?
- Does it trail off into dead ends?
- Is the Point of View consistent?
- Did your plot and subplots all go full circle?
- Did you add a character that went nowhere?
- Do the closed arcs satisfy or leave the reader with some other reaction?
- Is it boring?
Imagine reading a book and getting about three or four chapters in and realizing you just don’t care about the characters. The same can happen with TV shows but it will be for the same reason, and that reason is the writing. developmental editing is meant to save writers from such tragedies.
A lot of elements lend to creating interest, such as relatable problems for the protagonist to solve, a protagonist with flaws that makes readers yearn for that character’s salvation, or compelling cycles of try-fail, try-fail. Does your work hold up to scrutiny of those elements? You’ll want to know before you publish, certainly not after. That’s the goal of a developmental editor.
A developmental editor will advise you if a character’s arc starts and doesn’t finish, if a character seems to have no arc, or if a character’s growth falls flat or just doesn’t happen. The editor will find those moments when character point of view shifts awkwardly, is unclear, or varies from the format you have established earlier in the work.
Most of us have heard of ‘killing your darlings.’ That phrase can sometimes refer to jettisoning elements from your work that are dear to you, but which aren’t doing your story any favors. It can be an unnecessary character or a side plot that has no value. Those things are more evident to a developmental editor than to a writer. Suggested changes can be painful to face, and, in the end, the author doesn’t have to make them. However, a developmental editor will point them out so that the writer is aware of them. That type of advice can be difficult to absorb –at least early on in the journey of a writer. The more you write, however, the more you will value such advice.
Some crazy things can happen in long written works. Characters can inexplicably disappear and reappear –or be in two places at once. Location names can change. A character can change hair color, height, race, sex, or even personality. Author edits can cause such errors. You wanted the character to be a brunette male at first, but then changed your mind to a blond female. You made your changes, but in chapter three, up pops a paragraph with a brown-haired man using your character’s name.
A developmental editor fixes the basic building blocks like theme, point of view, arcs, plot, and so forth to assure continuity and understandability. They do not (or should not) fix your grammar, misspelling, or other such details. That is for later on, in another set of editing. developmental editing comes first, before line editing, copyediting, or proofreading.
The first novel written is always the hardest. Learning about developmental editing and the stages that follow can be a gut punch to the uninitiated. With more experience, however, writers take the stages of editing in stride. Those many steps are necessary and they create a work of art the author can be proud of. If you mention the above processes to an author who published without going through them, you will probably witness a photo-worthy cringe. Developmental editing is well worth any of the trouble or pain it induces. That heartache translates into a far superior product for the author.
You can seek developmental editing after the first draft, but it has more value after you have done a round or two of editing yourself. It has the most value when you believe your work is done. That’s painful to hear, I know. Written into that advice is the suggestion that your work is not done. Such is the journey of a writer.
If you are interested in having your work edited, Creative Assets Inc can help. Click here to see rates for developmental editing and more.