Welcome back to another Open Book Blog Hop!
Today’s topic is: How do you know when you’ve done all the editing you can on your story? Or that you’ve gone too far?
And remember to pay a visit to my fellow writers to see what they have come up with. You can find their works here!

This one is a great topic, especially for my 100th post here on the site! Editing is a tough job. I am my own worst critic, as I am sure is the case for most if not all authors. That said, I’ve had the great fortune to work as a freelance proofreader in the last year or so, and I feel this has certainly taught me a few things and helped me when it comes to critically assessing my own work.
When editing book one I went into editing not entirely knowing what the process entailed. I printed a copy of my first draft and sat down with highlighters at hand. The white pages became awash with a rainbow of neon colours as I targeted perceived errors. I read through my work twice to try to capture any errors. I then uploaded it to Kindle and used text to voice to have it read to me. Yes, the voice was somewhat robotic, but it had enough of a human quality to it to give me the feel of it being read to me. This aided in picking up other errors merely reading would have overlooked. I then made the adjustments and repeated the process.
From this point I sent the book to my test readers, asking for feedback. What works? What doesn’t work? Are there any glaring plot holes? And obviously, to highlight any errors I have missed. This was quite a nerve-wracking part of the process as it was the first time my book was read by somebody other than myself. From this, I gathered their feedback, looking beyond any “personal preference” change recommendations and making any major changes. A final readthrough and text-to-voice process and I then passed it over to my editor.
And that in and of itself was a whole other world I hadn’t known much about. The ultimate answer to this week’s question is simply “once I can no longer see the wood for the trees.” Once I’ve edited, tweaked and tightened it to the point I am most happy, and more importantly, am blind to further issues, that is when it heads to my editor. There, I have full faith that anything I’ve missed will be found and can be resolved, forming the final edit ready for publication.
It doesn’t seem to matter how many times you read through, a typo will always evade you until the book is published. Then you will spot it, usually on page one!!
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Then you’ll read it through again and spot the typo your editor missed, lol!
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I, also, like the editing by “listening to the computer’s monotone voice”. I find silly little things that way.
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I’ve caught typos in books published by major companies. The knowledge provides some small comfort when I catch one of my own after my book has been released.
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