I have been a writing coach for over twenty years. During that time, I have spent countless hours working with students, editing and revising their work. As I often say to them, "We first take your rough draft and make sure it's structured correctly with its beginning, middle, and end, and then we go through the piece over and over, refining each line until the writing is so taut that the words bounce off the page." I have come to learn that working as an editor for other people's work is not only wonderfully satisfying but has greatly benefited my own writing as well.
I, like most people, didn't start out relishing the idea of revising my work. I wrote my piece, edited it a bit, and, while it might not have been perfect, I was fairly sure it was good enough. The last thing I wanted was to go back into the text and start the painstaking process of making sure every line said what I actually meant it to say. I also wasn't too excited about checking that every word was exactly the right word within the context of the sentence. Ugh. That all sounded like a lot of work. However, over the years, I have developed the skills needed to effectively edit my students' work, and, lo and behold, have also realized that there has been a carry-over to my own writing. I have also gained a growing appreciation for beautifully written prose, which was the product of all that time and attention.
At this point, I recognize the value of strategically revising a piece of writing to bring it up to a highly refined level. I don't dread it anymore; I actually look forward to the process. I now know a secret that I didn't know before. Revising a piece of writing is exactly like an artist making a quick sketch and then going back and filling in the details with color. It isn't that the sketch wasn't good in itself, but rather that the painting is a more complete and complex depiction.
And therein lies the fun. Slowing down, coloring in the details, helping the reader to see, taste, touch, hear, and smell what's happening on the page transforms a charcoal sketch into a color-splashed painting worthy of a prized spot on the living room wall.
And all it takes is the willingness to revise.
Life as an Editor
I have been editing a manuscript today
Switching out a word, a phrase, sometimes a whole sentence
Looking for repetition to eliminate while keeping the rhythm of the words
Searching for themes, motifs, and tropes that will illuminate the writing
Delighting when I stumble upon an apt metaphor
Or a succinctly stated feeling
Or a burst of action verbs that make me want to run, dance, and play
And always I am pleased when I discover a keenly observed detail
Which often serves as a symbol that breaks the writing wide open
Prompting the words to burst forth like a meadowlark
Serenading the reader from the page
Susan Schoch says
Wonderful advice, Len. I once had a conversation with a doctor who also wrote poetry. She felt that revising poetry was almost sacrilegious because she was inspired when writing and changing any of that initial voice would destroy the vision. I tried to explain what I had learned in poetry workshops and in my own experience: the vision and inspiration would grow clearer through revision. Sadly, she dismissed me and my thoughts on the subject. I’ve wondered since then about her reaction – seemed like expecting perfection in a first draft. Thanks for affirming the utility of revision, and how it works: “Prompting the words to burst forth like a meadowlark/Serenading the reader from the page.”
Len Leatherwood says
Thank you, Susan/s, for your response. Yes, I understand the spirit with which your doctor was working, but in my experience, giving oneself the freedom to go back and strategically improve that initial inspiration is the process that provides the opportunity for actual in-tune serenading from the page!