kleenexwoman: A caricature of me looking future-y.  (William S. Burroughs sez:)
[personal profile] kleenexwoman
So I'm looking over [livejournal.com profile] fandom_wank, and there's a lot of nittering over what's appropriate in concrit. Here is a debate topic for today: What is the point of leaving concrit on a final draft? Do authors routinely fix errors right on the entry? (I've seen this in a few fic communities with people pointing out minor grammatical or factual errors.) Is concrit on one story applicable to future stories, something to keep in mind when writing your next epic? Not making the same mistakes? How does one apply story-specific concrit to one's body of work in general? DISCUSS.

I'm not that used to receiving concrit, myself; the only time I've ever gotten a thorough critique of a story was in Fiction Collective. Thus, I'm also not used to editing my stories, and I don't really know what to do with concrit that's not extremely specific. I can't tell what suggestions to take, and I don't know how to implement the suggestions that I do take. Is there a class for this? Editing Your Stories 101? Or is it just a skill that comes with time and effort?

For example, I have a short story I've been considering submitting to the Central Review. I just put it up on my writing journal; the story is All the Pieces.
I originally wrote it to explain to an ex-girlfriend why I felt our relationship didn't work out; she didn't seem to understand it when I told her in plain language, and she was given to writing Storygrams in metaphor, so I thought she might understand a metaphor better. She read it and thought that it was my way of writing a "romantic" story, but was highly offended by what she thought the implications were, got some of her friends to flame it on FictionPress, and then stopped talking to me, which was pretty much what I wanted in the first place, so everything turned out OK after all.
I've been opening up the document, staring at it, staring at the notes I took for how to improve it, and then giving up and closing it down every week for the entire summer (and I've been doing the same thing with some poems I wrote and the critiques from Poet's Collective). This has been going on all. Summer. Long. "Time to edit! Uh. What do I do? Shit, let's watch a movie instead." It's probably one of those things that are easy to do once you get started, but, as with many things, it's difficult to pick a place to start. (And I'm not even sure if I want to edit the thing at all. Again, how do you tell good concrit from bad concrit? Rather, how do you pick out things you want to change and leave alone the things you don't?)
This account has disabled anonymous posting.
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

Profile

kleenexwoman: A caricature of me looking future-y.  (Default)
Rachel

April 2015

S M T W T F S
   1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
26272829 30  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags