The editor walks the craggy wasteland.
Maybe she’s a freelance pen-for-hire. Maybe her red ink dances for one of the corporations.
Doesn’t much matter. She is what she is.
Then —
In the distance, across a valley of charred manuscripts and killed-off characters she hears the plaintive cry of a writer lost in the woods, a writer with a soggy, boggy book falling apart in his hands.
And the editor rides.
Hoofbeats on broken earth. Her heart driven by the thunderous stampede — a heart hungry for the story, voracious for the words, desperate to find all the fiddly bits, all the commas and semi-colons and character arcs and thematic throughlines and save them from the hands of an author strangled by his own creation.
An author mad by his own whims.
And that is what she finds over the next ridge.
The author, kneeling over his manuscript. Punching it with raw-knuckled hands. Grabbing fistfuls of paper and shoving it into his mouth and moaning around the wads of crumpled story.
“I’ll make the protagonist a camel!” the author cries around dry, labored gulps. “I’ll write three prologues. Each weirder than the last. I’ll remove all the punctuation and make it one big run-on sentence and all the characters will fall prey to my plot and my plot will fall prey to my themes and my themes will fall prey to a half-dozen strongly-concocted gin-and-tonics and–” Here he eats another wad of his own manuscript. “GRASHAGRABLECHRAGGTERFUGGMBTZZ.” He falls to the earth, forehead against it, blubbering.
The editor kicks him off the manuscript. The author tumbles into the dust. Tears streaking dirty cheeks.
“You,” the author says.
The editor nods. Pops a white Chiclet. Crunch.
“But…” the author begins.
The editor just shakes her head.
Finger to lips. Shhhh.
She pats his head. Whispers something in his ear. It’ll be all right. That’s what she tells him.
Then she gathers up the crumpled story-boulders and pages caught on cactus spines and she again mounts her steed and rides to the next ridge. There she sits, alone. For hours. Maybe days. Pulling pages apart. Seeing what she has. Shining a light into dark corners. Finding sense. Fixing errors. Bringing sanity back to madness, chaos back to order, context back to content. Her red pen dances bloodily upon the page.
And when the time is right, she rides again.
Finds the author now sitting alone, perfectly still as if he had taken Herculean amounts of LSD and was afraid that he’d become a little teapot and any movement could cause his tea to spill.
She goes to him.
She shows him what she’s done.
He hates her — at first.
He froths and kicks and spits, a beast poorly corralled, distraught at what he sees — the ruination of my art, the muddying of my vision, poopy handprints on what was once a clean white wall.
But soon he sees.
He sees how things make sense.
How the periods and commas all line up proper-like. All reporting for duty.
His crutch words are gone. His plot has been untangled. The characters are no longer just cardboard cut-outs slotted into gaps but rather living, breathing entities, emotionally resonant and utterly believable.
His pile of word-slurry has been concretized. Into a marble bust. An aegis of the gods.
And when he looks up, the editor is gone. His satchel, too.
She’s riding off. A wasteland MacGuyver. An apocalyptic A-Team.
What she brings to the story is hidden behind every page. Lost in the space between sentences. Her repairs are invisible — the mechanisms of her craft hidden behind authorial drywall. Ever unknown to readers.
“But I don’t even know your name,” the author whispers — a whisper lost on the wind.
She’s gone. Onto the next writer sitting in his own waste. To clean up him. To fix his story.
To do what must be done.
* * *
All this is a roundabout way of saying Yay, Editors!
Not all editors are good, or great, and some are quite bad.
And no editor can take a bad story and make it good — dross does not polish into gold.
Oh ho! But an editor can however take a good story and make it great, harnessing the potential that lives in a pile of unforged story. Dross will not become gold, but iron can become steel.
What I’m trying to say is, I have recently been getting this question:
“Do you know any good editors?”
Folks email me and want to know if I’ll look at their work (I won’t), or if I know any good editors (I do, but not in a helpful way). And so I come to you, my bubbly lovely jubblies. Let us speak of editors.
If you’re an author who has a favorite freelance editor or who merely cares to sing the praises of an editor you’ve worked with at a publisher or elsewhere, please do! Sing, sing those praises!
If you’re an editor who is available…
Well. Please, let us know that. You may find clients here.
And let us all sing the ballad of the editor and tell their mighty stories. For it is the editor that lifts the story up so that it may catch the sun. And yet it is the author who swallows the syrup of glory.
All hail the editor.
Tim Franklin says:
I will sin and recommend an author as an editor here: the talented Claire Massey of http://www.paraxis.org. Like any good editor she is overtaxed and overcommitted. Aside from whipping Paraxis and New Fairy Tales into line, you’ll see her efforts on the forthcoming Malkin Child by Livi Michael. Or rather, you won’t see them. An editor, after all.
June 18, 2012 — 7:32 AM
Natalie says:
Thank you for those lovely words, Chuck. And the free ad space.
I am a freelance editor. How good, I cannot say. But I love my job.
You can have a look at the website for Highlight Editing at http://grapevine.com.au/~nataliem. I am generally booked out at least 3 months in advance.
June 18, 2012 — 7:45 AM
bethini says:
Awesome post, Chuck. I love it. Especially as it is relevant to my interests: I’m a freelance editor. Writers, find me at http://spoonfully.com
(@Natalie: Far out, another Canberran! Hi there!)
June 18, 2012 — 8:04 AM
Thomas Pluck says:
Oh, how we chafe at the reins. The editor knows the trail. We can bushwhack without them, and waste precious time, and have brambles scratch our nethers, or let them guide us…
I haven’t used a pro editor, but I know one who writes a damn good story herself, and has edited Bill Cameron, Craig MacDonald, and Marcus Sakey to great success:
http://www.alisonedits.com/
June 18, 2012 — 8:55 AM
Jeff Norton says:
Editors are the unsung heroes of literary culture. Here is a fully articulated expression, supporting and celebrating the role of editor: http://www.theliteraryplatform.com/2012/02/follow-the-editor-a-recommendation-engine-for-readers/
June 18, 2012 — 9:36 AM
John Twitter:awesome_john says:
Chuck, you’re awesome. I’m a freelance editor. I blog here – http://writernextdoor.blogspot.com and
I love my job – few things excite me the way working with manuscripts do. And I have openings in my calendar…you know, if you have work that needs help.
I’ll also be at ALA later this week.
June 18, 2012 — 9:39 AM
DelilahSDawson says:
My agent has made me cry four times. Two times, I thanked her for it. It was like she cracked open the rib cage of writing and performed open heart surgery on a bum organ with promise. The other two times taught me even more about myself. Things hurt for a reason, writing included. Cheers to editors!
June 18, 2012 — 9:40 AM
Lou Morgan says:
Two editors who have had the dubious pleasure of keeping me in line are Jonathan Oliver at Solaris and Anne Perry (newly installed at Hodder, but the brave soul who whips stories into shape for the Pandemonium series of anthologies: http://www.pandemonium-fiction.com/index.html).
Both have very different styles & approaches – Jon’s is polite and questioning and thoughtful; making you consider whether that’s what you reallyreallyreally want to say, and Anne is never afraid to say, “Hey. This might sound crazy, but I think *this* would be amazing.”
And both of them are usually right. Because they are editors, and they are All The Awesome, and I wish we got the chance to thank them more often.
June 18, 2012 — 9:43 AM
David Y.B. Kaufmann says:
Behind every great writer is an editor. Even Shakespeare had editors! Mark Twain had a great one. Hurray for editors! In the changing market, I suspect that editors will (again? finally?) become the really important curators for authors – reviewers and readers will ask not only who wrote the book, but who edited it. (And yes, I’ve done quite a bit of editing as well as writing.)
June 18, 2012 — 9:53 AM
Sophie says:
It’s like you read my mind. I was going to ask for you to write a similar post (without sounding too bossy), with a few more tips on how to choose an editor that is more likely to help than do more damage, OR take advantage of your work.
What defines compatibility, even what inspires confidence in a good editor?
I may be overcautious, but then again I’m also very picky.
June 18, 2012 — 10:00 AM
David E. says:
My last editor, Alex Davis, was driven screaming up a mountain, and now that he’s come down he runs some nice Edge-Lit workshops on the other side of the Atlantic. http://edgelitderby.blogspot.co.uk/
And while I’m here… Transmetropolitan issue 51, by Warren Ellis, is pretty much a love letter to long-suffering editors everywhere. If you can find it, check it out.
June 18, 2012 — 10:13 AM
AmandaKay says:
I use http://editorialdepartment.com/ and highly recommend them. My stuff improves exponentially after working with them. Be warned–no matter how wonderful your stuff is, there’s always room for improvement! (Translation: sometimes I’d rather NOT read my manuscript evaluation and live in a dream world where my manuscript is perfection)
They also wrote the book “Self-Editing for Fiction Writers” which I recommend everyone read as well.
June 18, 2012 — 10:33 AM
Clark Valentine says:
Allow me to point to my wife, Amanda Valentine, as one of the best I’ve ever worked with. (No, no bias at all, why? Quiet, you.) Fire and force hurts, but it turns my rolling stock into something beautiful.
June 18, 2012 — 10:57 AM
Clark Valentine says:
Amanda’s website is ayvalentine.com, which I neglected to mention in my previous post. See? She would have caught that.
June 18, 2012 — 10:58 AM
Richard Sheehan says:
Hi
I’m a freelance copy-editor and proofreader in the UK currently working on fiction and non-fiction. It’s a great job and very satisfying. I’m currently busy with work for the next 2-3 weeks, but I’m always interested in considering new work so feel free to get in touch.
http://www.richardmsheehan.co.uk
June 18, 2012 — 11:03 AM
Ellie Ann says:
My editor is my kind savior who also nails me to the cross with every one of her edits. I worship her and despise her. But mainly worship her. What would my book be without her? It’d be worse.
Thanks to good editors everywhere for making bad fiction better and okay fiction good and good fiction great. And occasionally making great fiction genius. *lights candles and sings Hymn De Editeurs*
June 18, 2012 — 11:13 AM
David Bridger says:
My editor for the first book in my Carina series was Kym Hinton. She’s brilliant and a joy to work with, so when she moved on to pastures new and left me orphaned in mid-series it knocked me sideways. But I needn’t have worried, because Rhonda Helms (nee Stapleton) took the reins for the second book and she’s also brilliant and a joy to work with. I’ve been so lucky. It could’ve been grim, but I was fortunate to be assigned two editors who do great work and are fully invested in the vision for the series.
Rhonda does freelance editing too, here: http://www.rhondaedits.com/ . She’s excellent.
June 18, 2012 — 11:20 AM
Brian Engard says:
I’ll sing the praises of three editors I’ve worked with: John Adamus, Amanda Valentine, and Tom Cadorette. They’re all awesome. Seriously, if you’ve got writing that needs editing, Google them. They’re worth your time and money.
June 18, 2012 — 11:22 AM
Casz Brewster says:
Thanks, Herr Wendig.
In my last freelance editing assignment, as the writer and I worked on his manuscript, I really felt like I was Mr. Miyagi and the writer the Karate Kid. “It’s all about finding what it takes to make it to the top…”
If it’s not clear, I’m an editor for hire.
casz@creativewordlab.com
June 18, 2012 — 11:22 AM
Eden Bradley says:
My Bantam editor Shauna Summers made me cry with nearly every book. She wields a sharp-edged sword, and believe me, I bled! But she made me a better writer on so many levels. I haven’t worked with her in several years, but I’ll never forget her. My more recent work suffers without her.
I agree with everyone who advised never to work without an editor-I cannot emphasize this point enough. No matter how many books we’ve written, we are far too close to our own work to have the necessary objectivity.
I’ve put out one self-published short and loved my editor, Casey Lynn, but I don’t believe she’s currently taking on any new work. And I will echo David Bridger in recommending Rhonda Helms-I have not been edited by her, but know her personally and every writer I know who has worked with her sings her praises.
June 18, 2012 — 11:46 AM
Tom Bentley says:
Chuck, “GRASHAGRABLECHRAGGTERFUGGMBTZZ” is a good title for the next Gilgamesh sequel. Thanks for the paean to the editor, and the chance to use “paean” in a sentence.
My “Easy Editing and Spiffy Style Guide” is available as a free download on my site, and in it I confess a sordid love for the semicolon. I edit for money, but I am kind to children.
Editors: can’t live with them, can’t stab them with a red pen, because they’re the ones holding it.
June 18, 2012 — 12:02 PM
Toni Rakestraw says:
Oh Chuck, once again you have created magic. I wish I could print this out and frame it on my wall. Thank you for your ode to editors, written as only you can. 🙂
And thank you for giving editors and their clients a place to list their services.
I am a freelance editor. One can find me at http://rakestrawbookdesign.com. I love my work, and find myself riding the vast wastelands of crumpled stories from the early hours of the day until late at night. Bless you, writers, for without you, we’d be wandering aimlessly with our red pens, looking for something to do.
June 18, 2012 — 12:19 PM
Lenore Hietkamp says:
I’m an editor. One of my authors (stephenlegault.com) just sent me the link to this posting. He tells me he wishes he had written it. Thank you!
June 18, 2012 — 12:55 PM
Laura Anderson says:
Well, since you’ve asked…
Yep. I’m an editor for hire. I can provide references and samples of the work I’ve edited (check out the English dictionary entries at http://Bibliobird.com and also Chris Hussey’s serial fiction at http://www.skiesofglass.com ). I’ve also done textbook editing for a legal publisher, so I’m familiar with the somewhat traditional side of things, too.
And I’ll provide good rates to anybody who informs me that they found me through Chuck.
That said: thanks, Chuck. It’s nice to be appreciated. I’m an editor as well as author, and I know the fight from both sides. But we still need each other, otherwise we’re both at a loss.
June 18, 2012 — 1:09 PM
Nevena Georgieva says:
I have a great freelance editor to recommend: Danielle Poiesz! I haven’t worked with her on fiction projects personally, but she’s awesome and has taught me a LOT about peer reviewing and genre fiction. She also works for a major publishing house…
You can check out her blog (http://readingbtwthelines.blogspot.com/) and her professional website (http://daniellepoiesz.com/).
Good luck, folks!
June 18, 2012 — 2:12 PM
Barry Napier says:
Writer first, but also an editor. I’ve been picking up stray gigs on a freelance basis over the past few months. I recently wrapped up edits on my first novel for an indie author to great reviews. Because I’m still new and trying to build up a portfolio of sorts in the editing field, I’m pretty affordable. My day job is also editing, only it’s for government proposals…
Any interest, feel free to mail me: bnapier@yahooDOTcom
June 18, 2012 — 2:14 PM
Jenn says:
One more editor throwing their hat into the ring! Sample edits and references available upon request.
http://www.editorjenn.com/
June 18, 2012 — 2:17 PM
Jon McGoran says:
Smitten with my current editor, Kristin Sevick, at Tor/Forge, and also Anne Dubuisson Anderson (anneconsults.com), a hired gun who has helped me a lot, and who I can highly recommend.
June 18, 2012 — 2:31 PM
Rose Fox says:
Oh, this was heartwarming and delightful. Thank you, Chuck! It’s always wonderful to be appreciated.
I do freelance editing for unpublished authors who want to find an agent or self-publish. http://www.copymancer.com/ will give you the deets. My motto is “no surprises”: I view editing as a collaboration with the author, and back that up with detailed contracts and frequent communication. We work together in service of the story. I’m booked through the summer but glad to consider projects for September and beyond.
June 18, 2012 — 2:33 PM
Lisa Gluskin Stonestreet says:
You have learned our tribe’s secrets. Now you must die.
But seriously: Thank you.
I edit fiction, poetry, memoir — info and clients’ comments here.
http://www.lisagluskinstonestreet.com
I edit writing about business, tech, design, education – info and samples and such here.
http://www.ampedit.com
June 18, 2012 — 2:58 PM
tambo says:
My three novels (the Dubric Byerly forensic-fantasy mysteries, Bantam Spectra) were all edited by the brilliant and fabulous Juliet Ulman. She saw what I *meant* to write, to show, but was too clumsy to completely unearth on my own. Juliet plucked my hesitations out of their narrative muck, and made them scream. Sometimes the novels required major rewrites, sometimes teensy tweaks, but her guidance made them far better than they were when I first handed them in.
She’s currently freelancing and is still just as incredible and insightful as always. Her website is at http://www.papertyger.net .
June 18, 2012 — 3:55 PM
Sarah Holroyd says:
As one of those nameless, faceless ones who ride in and pull the stumbling author to the safety of a polished story, I salute you as well, Chuck! I live to serve independent authors and to help them see their words in print.
Sarah Holroyd
Sleeping Cat Books
http://sleepingcatbooks.com
June 18, 2012 — 4:11 PM
Peggy Ireland says:
Lol – I’m emailing this link to all my writers. They need to know that they are not alone as they curse the sea of red ink that flows across their computer screens.
Peggy Ireland at Wordsmith Editing http://peggyireland.blogspot.ca/
June 18, 2012 — 4:25 PM
Jeff Kirvin says:
My editor, Kathleen Dale, was so indispensable on my novel Revelation http://amzn.to/bhhrevelation that I made sure she got equal credit on Amazon. She really is amazing and my books wouldn’t be nearly what they are without her.
http://www.kathleendale.com/?page_id=152
June 18, 2012 — 4:28 PM
Gregory Lynn says:
I, too am a freelance editor.
You can find me here: http://tftmm.wordpress.com/editing-services/
I think I can make your story better.
June 18, 2012 — 4:44 PM
Susan Spann says:
I love my editor, Toni Plummer at St. Martin’s/Thomas Dunne. She is amazing, and … she groks my meanings. As in, full-out gets the vibe. Not only did she give me fantastic edits, but her vision for the cover art is identical to my own…a rare and fantastic find indeed. Toni is top-notch, and I’m delighted and honored to be working with her.
June 18, 2012 — 5:22 PM
Sue Ducharme says:
Chuck, thanks for my favorite author shoutout of all time to the joys and aches of being edited. Rave on, knowing we know that you know that we know, and it’s all right.
Editing is my calling, my passion, my living since 1998. And I ride an actual horse, so the hoof beats as I come to the rescue (or amble alongside you and your horse) won’t be metaphorical!
Here’s what the latest author in my posse has to say:
“This has been such an amazing process for me. I’m so grateful for your insight and assistance in making my dream come true. I would welcome the opportunity to work with you again.” See my web page for other enthusiastic comments about how the editor/author relationship ought to be.
June 18, 2012 — 5:23 PM
Adrienne (scieditor) Montgomerie says:
My name is Adrienne, and I am an editor.
It has been only a few days since I last rode off into the sunset with a satchel of money. I develop educational materials (with authors and their publishers), mostly science stuff, and often chemistry. You’ll find me online as scieditor, but my business name is Catch the Sun, and you’ve stated why in the conclusion of your excellent, funny, insightful, and re-readable story.
June 18, 2012 — 5:36 PM
Kirsten Thompson says:
As a freelance editor I found this to be a wonderfully evocative and frankly hilarious ode to the craft of editing.
I am an editor-for-hire and work with both published and unpublished authors in numerous genres, including fiction, comic books, poetry. In addition, I’m a writer and book reviewer.
I can be found here: http://very-ish.tumblr.com/editing
I’m now taking on new clients.
June 18, 2012 — 6:24 PM
Jonathan Dalar says:
My editor, Karin Cox, is awesome to work with. She is a cleverly disguised King Midas.
She can be found here: http://www.editorandauthor.com/
June 18, 2012 — 6:31 PM
Guilie says:
Sing indeed, all ye of little faith (and littler semi-colon comprehension). Editors ROCK. Two freelancers I recommend to the infinite and beyond are Tanya Egan Gibson (http://www.tanyaegangibson.com) and Wendy Tokunaga (http://www.wendytokunaga.com). Both have a knack of making the harshest feedback sound not just kind and almost like praise, but like your own idea.
An observation in terms of choosing an editor: I’ve found one needs to connect with editors, especially freelancers. In order to have an editorial experience that borders (sometimes sinks into) the hedonistic, it’s key that the manuscript and editor connect, even more than editor and author. You get that, you’ve got it made.
June 18, 2012 — 6:32 PM
Lily Cohen-Moore says:
I’m a journalist that cheats on AP style by editing fiction and games (freelance.) There are a ton of fantastic editors I’ve met/know that you can find out in the wild: Amanda Valentine, Ryan Macklin, John Adamus, Jennifer Brozek, Nate Crowder, Caroline Dombrowski, Logan Bonner. Most of them also write (articles, rpgs and/or fiction.)
June 18, 2012 — 7:58 PM
Susan Uttendorfsky says:
One of my current authors claims I wield a big billy club and leave him a bloody lump on the floor, so I guess he’s experiencing what you’ve so aptly described above! If you’re an author looking for a copyeditor/proofreader, please consider me as well.
Susan Uttendorfsky
Owner, Adirondack Editing
LinkedIn
http://www.adirondackediting.com
adirondackediting@aol.com
June 19, 2012 — 11:13 AM
Deborah Heimann says:
Awesome blog.
I’m an editor. I love sitting alone on that ridge. I love shining a flashlight into the corners. And I love the ride. I’ve got my boots on.
Deborah Heimann
Professional Freelance Editor
http;//www.deborahheimann.com
June 19, 2012 — 4:06 PM
Shane Arthur says:
Outstanding! And funny as hell. Made my day.
June 19, 2012 — 4:49 PM
kurt bali says:
In the newspaper world, most editors are also writers and the main problem with that is, they try to force their ideas, opinion, and style within your work. I’ve worked with some great writers who were terrible editors, but I’ve also worked for some absolutely brilliant editors who may not have the ability to write well, but know what is good and what isn’t and leaves the general idea alone while improving it. A good editor is a writer’s best friend.
June 19, 2012 — 5:44 PM
Jason Krell says:
Man, so many editors out there. How do you even get into that business to begin with? I mean, I’m the Copy Chief at my college’s newspaper, but I’d much rather do fiction if I could. Anyone have any tips for doing freelance editing? I can guess how to get into the business through someone else, but doing it myself isn’t something I have a grasp on.
June 19, 2012 — 8:04 PM
Mike Herman says:
nice ode.
Any other odes you’ve done in past blogs? I’d enjoy reading them.
June 19, 2012 — 9:54 PM