β If you’ve never tried something, how do you know if it’s missing from your life? In Grace Dent’s column this week, she ponders whether she’ll ever be able to go back to ‘eat[ing] toast served in what feels like a working creche by someone wearing a singlet and displaying armpit hair’ π€£when she canContinue reading “Cherry Edits: free 1000-word sample edit. Try before you buy.”
Tag Archives: forauthors
May 12th 2020. Fantasy novel: top proofreading spots.
π Today’s top #proofreading spots from a fantasy novel. β The tower rose in the distance, its height all the more impressiveness from her vantage point β‘οΈ impressive β β The creature’s wings billowed and caught on an updraft β‘οΈ updraught β π¬π§ β Mystical plains β‘οΈ planes β β A minute or slater β‘οΈContinue reading “May 12th 2020. Fantasy novel: top proofreading spots.”
How do I get an en dash or an em dash on Word? Using alt codes.
β Do you know your alt codes? Alt+0150 β This is my favourite and I use this a lot: the en-dash, a dash the size of a letter N. Itβs the one which Word often does automatically β when you hit the hyphen to move on to a different clause and, as if by magic,Continue reading “How do I get an en dash or an em dash on Word? Using alt codes.”
Should I get a second monitor for my PC? Yes!
I treated myself to a second monitor and my efficiency shot up! π₯οΈπ₯οΈ When I edit a manuscript, if my client doesnβt have a style sheet, I create one.π This oneβs shared with the authorβs permission: manuscript screen 1, style sheet screen 2βitβs so much easier. Whether fiction or non-fiction, I start by setting downContinue reading “Should I get a second monitor for my PC? Yes!”
Proper nouns. What are they and why are they important in novels?
I do love a good proper noun. They can really anchor you in a particular time and place. π― I don’t mean a ‘right good’ noun. I mean the kind of noun, identified by an initial capital, denoting a particular person, place or thing. π The novel I’m currently editing makes good use of proper nouns.Continue reading “Proper nouns. What are they and why are they important in novels?”
Stay home or stay at home? Is the preposition on its way out?
It’s really interesting to see how language is changing in the current #Covid19 crisis. The BBC news app tells us that people are being told to ‘stay home’. On the signs people have been making for their windows, you can see the appeal of the symmetry of STAYHOME four letters apiece. Anyone in the UKContinue reading “Stay home or stay at home? Is the preposition on its way out?”
March 23rd 2020. Puzzle book: top proofreading spots.
π Today’s #proofreading spots are from a fascinating project I’ve been working on: a lateral-thinking puzzle disguised as a furniture catalogue. Errors shared with permission. β inhance β‘οΈ enhance β β metalllic β‘οΈ metallic β β ubiqitous β‘οΈ ubiquitous β β fascimile β‘οΈ facsimile β β seperately β‘οΈ separately β Problems like this can occurContinue reading “March 23rd 2020. Puzzle book: top proofreading spots.”
Should mum be capitalised? Should university be capitalised?
π Mum or mum? University or university? In the manuscript I returned this weekend, one issue was the misplacement of capital letters in nouns such as the ones above. My client often opted for the uppercase option but that wasn’t always the correct call. βͺοΈKeeping mum Whether to use uppercase or lowercase depends on whetherContinue reading “Should mum be capitalised? Should university be capitalised?”
How can I proofread without missing errors?
When I’m proofreading… π ππ π π π I read like a small child. π£οΈ I read the words aloud. π’I read them slowly. πI follow along with my finger. I find this particularly helpful when reading sentences with a lot of two/three letter words in them. Our eyes can gloss over these allContinue reading “How can I proofread without missing errors?”
What even is a ‘proof’? An open invitation to ask me questions about editing jargon.
Jargon, field-specific language. Whatever you want to call it. Do you like it? Find it useful? Does it scare you? I find it fascinating how words can mean so many different things in different industries. Take the word βproofβ. In editing, a βproofβ is the page which is checked for errors prior to publishing. InContinue reading “What even is a ‘proof’? An open invitation to ask me questions about editing jargon.”
