The revision process continues to be on my mind this winter- notice I said “on my mind,” meaning I haven’t done much more than think about it. The whole process of novel revision seems terribly daunting. I’ve been collecting other writer’s thoughts on their process of revision, hoping to get inspired, and it worked to some degree. I’ve started revising a short story I wrote last winter, hoping that by “practicing” on something smaller, I’ll be less intimidated by the work involved in revising the novel.
Here’s some food for thought regarding the revision process…as you will see, every author approaches it completely differently!
“I start on the first page. Then, I rewrite that page twenty or forty times until it’s right, and then it’s finished. Then, I go to page two and I do the same thing twenty or forty times.” Stephen Dixon
“I go over what I’ve written, but I’m not making major changes. I’m just fixing it by making minor changes that might have a big effect. I hardly throw anything out.” Jayne Ann Phillips
“I do twenty or thirty drafts. I’m a big reviser. I go back…and polish the beginning, then I force myself to go through page by page from beginning to end, over and over again.” Amy Bloom
“I go through with a very cold eye to cut out everything that can be cut without loss.” Thomas E. Kennedy
“I polish as I go along. My habit is to perfect individual sentences, individual paragraphs, and individual pages, and when I think they’re as good as I can make them, I feel free to go on to the next part. So when I write the last sentence of the last paragraph, I’m done with the book.” Kent Haruf
“I do a great many drafts, no matter what it is. This means letting it sit for a few days before looking at it again, then doing it again, then letting it sit and doing it again. I let my friends read drafts after the first ten or twelve. My early drafts are sketchy in the most important ways – everything vital is left out – and they’re wordy in other ways – there’s all this extraneous material that doesn’t matter. So the revisions are in both directions.” Andrea Barrett
“I do a lot of revisions in fits and starts. When I write, I barrel through from beginning to end, and then back up, and if the beginning isn’t working, start over. Once it works, I write through to the end, and start revising, and, if necessary, trash the whole thing, and start over.” Myla Goldberg
Writer Bug posted some great revision advice which she picked up at her last residency. She talks about picking 15 areas you want to work on in your manuscript, and then going through it 15 times, focusing on one area each time. Some things to work with include: verbs, redundancy, verbosity, vagueness. She also advises reading the story aloud, which is a great idea.
As I’ve begun revising my own work, I’ve been taking one paragraph at a time, revising each sentence, looking for better words, paring down wordiness, then going on to the next paragraph until I’ve finished the page. Then I re-read the page and see how it flows. Once I’ve done each page, I’ll go back and re-read the whole thing to see if I need to make structural changes.
So, how about you? Anyone else out there in the process of revisions? If so, how’s it going?
Karen H.
Jan 28, 2009 @ 14:22:24
Hi Becca,
Good morning!
Coincidentally, I just completed a monster revision of my latest novel this past Saturday. I’d received a ton of edits from my editor back in September. Feels so good to have it completed. I plan to write a blog about the main points she asked me to correct and will have that up next week. In the meantime, a good editor is the best investment. One of her comments to me: You have three characters with meaty hands Revise.
Ha! Meaty hands will be the title of my editing book, should there ever be one.
🙂
gautami tripathy
Jan 28, 2009 @ 16:39:28
I needed this question!
http://firmlyrooted.blogspot.com/2009/01/revision-redux.html
confuzzledbooks
Jan 28, 2009 @ 17:02:11
Hello
here is my answer
http://confuzzledbooks.blogspot.com/2009/01/write-on-wednesday.html
Crafty Green Poet
Jan 28, 2009 @ 18:54:49
I write my poem and make revisions as I go until I have what feels like a complete poem in terms of where I want it to go. Then I put it away for a while and go back to it later to polish it and refine it. Of course if I’m responding to a blog prompt then I just post the earlier draft version, but most readers of my blog are kind enough to say nice things about these early drafts.
Some of my haiku are never polished, they’re supposed to be of the moment and polishing can make them sound a bit false…
shoreacres
Jan 28, 2009 @ 19:00:47
Hi, Becca,
Since I’ve never even attempted a novel, I haven’t a thing to contribute to the subject of revision in that regard.
With my essays and poety, revision is a continual process. It’s amazing to me how often I begin with a first line or paragraph, and a last line or paragraph, and then spend all my effort writing the middle. It happened with my poem “The Grammarian in Winter”, and it’s happened with the essay I’m working on now.
Annie Dillard talks in “The Writing Life” about perfecting a piece of prose as it progresses. She says, “Original writing fashions a form. It unrolls out into nothingness. It grows cell to cell, bole to bough to twig to leaf; any careful word may suggest a route…” She has other things to say about different ways to approach the task, but right now, that’s how I do it.
Practically, that kind of writing means that when I’m done, I’m done. For the most part, there’s no going back to re-write. I’ll change a phrase, or punctuation, or take out or add a word, but I never spend a day revising an entire piece. Obviously, if I were to move into longer work that would have to change – I’ve decided that even longer essays would require a different kind of attention and different structuring. But I’ll get to that when I get to it!
jeanie
Jan 28, 2009 @ 19:26:04
I’m up and posted at http://themarmeladegypsy.blogspot.com/
(I confess, I sneaked a look at WOW when I was in the midst of editing an article that I wasn’t enjoying. So, this prompt was extremely timely!)
By the way, I am participating in the One World, One Heart blog giveaway event. So, scroll down to the post after this one if you would like to enter. I’m giving away a hand-painted scarf, a quilting book and a recipe tag book! You don’t have to participate in the drawing to enter!
hilary
Jan 28, 2009 @ 22:54:37
heyyy,
i check in on your blog every once in a while but have never commented. i just wanted to say that your posts are extremely helpful and i look forward to reading what you have to say. i am a big believer in revision since i took my creative writing course. one thing that really helps me is to have others criticize my work. thank you for your posts!
-hilary
oh
Jan 29, 2009 @ 05:18:41
Revision. Brrrr … that was a chill …. Revisions: I deal with them at work. And they require serious organizational awareness, not only of each sentence but of the work as a whole.
And in my own writing, I get so fed up wtih major revision that I throw the whole darn thing out and start over. Otherwise, I find myself fixing and flexing words and sentences. But sometimes, that just isn’t enough. The read-it-aloud thing is huge, I mean, it works. So does simmering. Let the writing go a day or two, or twelve. I’m with Jeanie; I play with revising my blogs. That’s due, in part, to that fact that blogs are short by nature and therefore manageable but also, focusing on short pieces helps me avoid revising my creative stuff!!!
anno
Jan 29, 2009 @ 11:37:57
What a wonderful collection of the varying approaches revision! I always felt guilty that I could never master the process so frequently advocated of writing a quick draft followed by a more thoughtful revision, so I am relieved to read that there are others who work slowly: those who, when they’re done, they’re done. But then, I only write shorter pieces, 1500 words tops. Like shoreacres, I suspect that if I wrote longer pieces I would have approach the process differently. Thanks again for giving me something to think about!
anno
Jan 29, 2009 @ 11:38:52
Um. Make that first line say, “varying approaches to revision,” ok?
Becca
Jan 29, 2009 @ 14:39:28
I think my biggest problem with revision lies in the size of the piece. I can revise my blog posts without going into panic mode, but short stories, and (Eek!) the novel are daunting because I don’t know where to start.
Letting some time pass is key for me, and reading passages aloud also helps me see – actually hear -things differently. Also seeing it in black and white on paper, and not on the computer screen makes a difference.
I have to do a fair amount of editing at work, but it’s so technical in nature that it doesn’t really compare.
Thanks for all your thoughts on the subject!
seachanges
Jan 30, 2009 @ 15:35:42
Becca – a bit late but my contribution is up also. This was a very stimulating discussion and I had to sit down and write a piece on it! Thanks very much, as usual an inspiring post!
kimhaasdesign
Feb 02, 2009 @ 16:21:54
I am in the midst of deeply revising a story.
http://kimhaasdesign.wordpress.com/2009/02/02/the-gift-of-revision/
qugrainne
Feb 03, 2009 @ 12:31:24
Hi Becca. Thanks again for the prompt. I so look forward to these – they really help me to reflect! I am running around like a chicken this week and forgot to post here!
http://qugrainne.com/2009/02/01/change-the-way-you-look-at-things-and-the-things-you-look-at-change/
teeveebee
Feb 05, 2009 @ 06:13:41
I revise my writing after the fact. I begin with what I call “vomiting”. (Not a very pleasant way to put it, I know.) What I mean is, I just write whatever comes to mind at first. I don’t bother with spelling or correct usage. Just get the thoughts down. Sometimes, if I’m not sure what word I want to use, I just type in nonsensical letters (i.e. fjdlfjdfj) with the idea that I will return later to think about how I want to word it.
When that’s done, I re-read and revise. Re-read and revise. Re-read and revise, until I drive myself absolutely nuts. All that, and I’m never really quite done. I can always find a way to tweak whatever piece I’m working on here and there.
I make it a habit to take a breather after I think I’m finished. I let the piece rest for a day or two and come back to what I’ve written afresh. I’m always amazed that I can still find things that need changed or edited.
I suppose it’s different when writing a novel, of course.
My blog posts are an exception as well. Blog posts don’t get as much revision because they are posted more frequently.
By the way, I’m a new visitor. I enjoyed nosing around your blog!
Joanne
Feb 17, 2009 @ 17:31:21
Hi everyone,
I’m interested in joining Write on Wednesday. I’ve been reading some of the comments and blogs. As an aspiring writer myself I’d like to join up and learn and share from other aspiring writers. Can someone help me get started, please? It’s probably easy but I tend to stumble about a bit and push the wrong keys…
Thanks.
kris
Feb 18, 2009 @ 22:35:55
Hello-
I’ve been very busy with completing (reworking) my outline but the last several days life got in the way of writing and today I was in a little panic myself about getting back to it. So, in the realm of misery liking company I was glad to read your post. I feel like I’ve accomplished something good on the days I write. Not that the writing is always good I just feel that some creative rodent has been let out to run around. I like that part of it.
Zita Dreamer
Apr 03, 2009 @ 02:38:38
Write on Wednesday on January 28, 2009
How do you do revisions? Are you doing a revision now? If so, how’s it going?
I do revisions by braking down in chapters and seeing if each chapter can stand on its own. One a week would work out good, so I have time to rewrite as much as I need for each chapter.
I am not doing revisions right now. I do not have anything that has to have revisions right now.
I have a lot of things started, but nothing finished and I am in the process to change that. I am catching up on things when all I can do is write.