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This will help polish up your prose and allow your work to shine. Editors have extensive tools and training that, when properly wielded, will make your prose sing. A robust developmental edit will help you see how to organize and structure your writing in a way that resonates with your target audience and career goals.
Not so much functionally—there are people who can help you write cleaner prose. I hire a copyeditor to clean up my posts, and while the ideas, connections, turns of phrase, overall structure and layout are mine, it still feels inauthentic. Write with a copyeditor. So here’s my response. Persistence pays.
And I was reading through these, and at the time I was a nonfiction proofreader and copyeditor, sorting out other people's work, and I was reading these stories just going like these are—like I didn't understand the medium of short stories very well, and obviously, if you're going to start anywhere, start with Stephen King.
You ignore those sorts of “rules” at the risk of losing your audience. I’m also convinced that it produces unoriginal prose that’s much stiffer and more cramped. And then there are also language “rules,” the kind I covered in Wordcraft. Some of those are indeed spurious, such as the rule against split infinitives.
That can be good, in one way, because you do have time to really reflect and dig deep, and write better prose, months and months of structural edits, like three or four versions of it. audience as well? Because not only is it my schedule, it's their editor's schedule, and the line editor, the copyeditor, each person, their schedule.
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