FAQs
- What advice would you give a customer looking to hire a provider in your area of work?
Youve finished your novel or short story but are beginning to think that maybe someone else should look it over before you send it off. You do an Internet search and find Web sites for manuscript editors also known as book doctors - who will proofread and critique your manuscript for a fee. So is a manuscript editor necessary? First, some full disclosure: I offer my own manuscript editing service. Having said that, for many writers having someone else look at your novel or short story is a necessary step to getting it in shape before sending it to a literary agent or editor. For beginning writers, an outside editor is a useful step in helping develop your craftsmanship. After all, no apprentice becomes a master without a mentor. Unfortunately, many editors and publishers just dont have the time to serve in that role. A manuscript editor can help fill that need. Often the reason a writer seeks out a manuscript editor is because a literary agent or publisher recommends it. The agent cant sell the book in its current condition or a publisher who wants to print a book cant in its current form (many publishing houses no longer retain editors, or if they do, the editors are overloaded with work). If agents and publishers do make such a recommendation, by all means follow up on it it means youre very close to getting in print. What keeps most writers from using a manuscript editor is the cost. Most charge by word or page. For a 75,000-word novel, be prepared to pay a few hundred dollars for the close edit and critique. Thats beyond the reach of most single moms, college students and many others who hope to turn writing from a hobby to a profession. So you have a decision to make: Do you tighten your belt now with hope of book sales later, or do you wait it out and see if someone else will pick up the book (or your next one)? When selecting a manuscript editor, keep this in mind: -Be careful of those book doctors who also are literary agents or publishers (or both): That represents a significant conflict of interest. Its also a great money-making racket for a some. -Dont pay fees to a literary agent or a publisher for a referral or vice-versa, when the manuscript editor receives money for referring you to an agent or publisher: Thats called a kickback, and its not giving you an honest appraisal of where to send your manuscript so it can be published. -No manuscript editor ever should guarantee publication: Thats a decision only a publisher can make.