I have restructured my MS, printed out the first chapter, gone through it word by word and identified the holes.
It has been an interesting process. First I read the whole in one go to get a feel of how it held together, marking any obvious weakness with a cross. Next I read it page by page with the eye of a critic. I have edited others' work before and found it easier than I thought. I just pretended someone else had written it. I patched and repaired as I went along in longhand.
Today I will be transferring my notes to screen. And that will be Chapter One.

How do others manage to produce hard copies of their work? I am hoping I can do a deal at the place where I work. Tuppence a page if I supply the paper sounds fair. Doesn't it?
3 comments:
Sounds like you need a better printer. They don't cost much. Get one that doesn't just do Posh Copy - much faster to print in draft mode and perfectly readable.
I end up with one final printed MS, but email book to editor and they run off their own at the office.
Prior to that, when I used to send in hard copy, I'd get a spare photocopied at Kall Kwik - it's cheaper in terms of paper/ink/time.
You must have an antique printer! Does it have settings? Draft mode?
I do print at home but when it comes to a complete novel I also make use of work facilities. 180 double sided pages, spiral bound = £5.40. That feels like a very good deal. Office World wanted to charge nearly £30.
Judy, the printer is brand new! A Kodak 5100, bought 'cos they claim the ink cartridges are half the cost of others.
Cathie, £5.40 sounds a bargain - 1/3p per page!
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