A potter finishes his/her pot,
paints it, and puts it in a kiln. Once fired, it’s done. Once an artist applies
the last stroke to a painting, it’s finished. When I create counted cross
stitch or Swedish weaving projects, after working the pattern, it’s complete.
Not so with writing. Writing is never finished. There simply comes a time the
author sends it out. There are always improvements to be made. That brings me
to my current novel.
I’m
at a crossroads with my Latter-day Saint romance, Hidden Heritage. Do I send it out next month, or wait until I go to http://anwa-lds.org/conf/conference in September and make even more changes? Nobody
from my intended publisher will be holding pitch sessions. Either way I will work
on Escape from Fire or Car Crash this summer.
That presents
another dilemma. Do I edit the completed Escape
from Fire, or fill in the partial Car
Crash? Maybe I could even dig out Divine
Love and its sequel Diane’s Story.
But
I digress, back to the topic. With writing, there’s always room for
improvement: This sentence might be better if I use a fancier word. Perhaps
that sentence sounds too pompous. A paragraph may need more description.
Another one slows down the narrative with too much description. Would this
scene work better later in the story? Does that dialogue sound realistic? The
list goes on without end.
Beta
readers are valuable with their opinions, but they’re just that—opinions. Don’t
get me wrong, I love the improvements made when I have beta readers.
Whether novel,
or note I find better ways to say things nearly every time I go over stuff,
even my Face Book posts. One of my college professors said, “Writing is never
finished. Just send it out there.” He told us about a famous poet that had 2 or
3 versions of the same poem in print. How do I know if it’s time for Hidden Heritage?
I
don’t expect the reader of this post to tell me. You haven’t read it. I’ll
decide when I finish this time going through it. I already have the dreaded
Synopsis, query letter, and such because I’ve sent it out before. Naturally I
made changes in those as well.
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