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My Adventure with a Professional Editor
* Every writer eventually reaches that point—you stare at your sales dashboard, squint suspiciously, and whisper: “Maybe the problem isn’t the readers. Maybe… it’s me.” And so, fueled by equal parts courage, diluted wine, and self-doubt, I recently bit the bullet (or “bought the bullet,” as my brain apparently insists on phrasing it) and hired a professional editor for Book One of my Celestial Guardians series. The novel formerly known as The Fallen, currently known as Prince of Darkness, and soon to be … who knows. I wasn’t unhappy with the story. I actually like the story. But writers have a special talent for wondering: “What if the writing I love is actually terrible?” “What if my characters are cardboard?” “What if my plot has more holes than Swiss cheese?” I assumed my lack of sales must mean the writing was flawed. How’s that for self-esteem? So, like a responsible adult (ha), I sent my precious book-baby off to an editor—fully expecting to be emotionally eviscerated for the low price of a Fiverr invoice. The Deadline Arrives… and So Does RealityToday was the big day: the promised delivery date. I eagerly downloaded the edited manuscript, opened the file, and-- Cue the sound of a balloon deflating slowly and sadly in the corner. Where I expected paragraphs of insightful criticism… Where I hoped for notes on character development, structure, pacing, plot clarity… Where I braced myself for maybe even a little crying (I had tissues ready!)… I instead received a glowing book report. Yes, a book report. The editor summarized the novel—accurately, I’ll give them that—describing Miriam, Lucifer, the rebellion, the tension, the romance, the celestial drama… It was like reading my back-cover description rewritten by someone who was very enthusiastic and had drunk two cups of very strong coffee. Or maybe a few glasses of wine! And then came the comments. The Review That Was Not the Review I ExpectedHere is the best part—the editor’s actual words, which I have now read three times to make sure I didn’t hallucinate them: “You’re an amazing writer… Your flow was very good… Your tone was perfect… I commend your writing prowess… Great job… Excellent work…” And somewhere in there: “I corrected some punctuation and redundancies.” That’s it. No critique. No constructive feedback. No plot issues. No “maybe tone down Lucifer’s seductive monologues” or “your battle scenes need tightening” or “Miriam seems confused because you wrote this scene at 2 a.m. while eating chocolate and drinking red wine.” Nothing. Just praise and a few commas moved around. I sat there blinking at my screen like a malfunctioning angelic automaton. Where Was My Painful, Character-Building Critique? I wanted:
(If this is Heaven’s way of testing my humility, I would like a refund.) The Emotional Roller Coaster That EnsuedI cycled through all five stages of editorial grief:
!. Know your editing types. Seriously.There are three main kinds:
2. Low sales don’t always equal bad writing.This one… I’m still processing. But if an editor said my writing is good, and I’ve been writing since 2009, maybe the problem is:
I’m Still Glad I Did It. Even though the edit wasn’t what I expected, it did give me:
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