popmuze said:
Lots of good stuff to chew over!
This particular service is very cheap (perhaps you get what you pay for) and the first chapter is free!
As far as my background, I am extensively published, but not as an adult novelist. I've had a few readings from editors and agents, with all sorts of positive and some negative feedback (based on readings of anywhere from a chapter to 100 pages). Nobody has read the entire manuscript and while I do know a few writers, I've been thus far reluctant to burden any of them with the task of not only reading my book, but giving me the kind of detail I need to solve whatever problems and bring out the great things lurking in it.
In my experience, even editors and agents don't do this kind of thing anymore like in the good old days of Hemingway and Fitzgerald and their editors. What I'm looking for is someone I can bounce ideas off, like "maybe it isn't his baby!" or "do you think the allusions to the romantic poets work or just sound silly?"
Don't do what kind of thing? An editors job has always been to edit novels. This is what editors are paid to do. I thnk you need to look deeper into exactly what editors did for Hemingway and Fitzgerald. Those guys were great writers, and I used to know an editor who worked with Hemingway.
There seems to be this really strange idea around today that writers used to be bums who couldn't write anything without nine editors to rework everything they did, and that in some fairyland of yesteryear, editors not only had to rewrite everything a writer sent in, but did so out of the goodness of their hearts. It's nonsense.
There were a tiny handful of editors in the old days who did extensive rewriting and editing on the novels of a handful of writers. Today, there are still a tiny handful of editors who do extensive rewriting and editing for a handful of writers.
But darned few writers needed it in the old days, and darned few writers need it today. Those that do get just as much help today as they ever did. And thos ethat do need it today have almost zero chance of getting it from a critique/editing service. Just like yesteryear, writer need to learn how to do these things for themselves. When they get close, agents and editors take over.
I don't know where this weird notion came from the in some mythical yesteryear editors were so much better and did so much more than editors do today, but it's a myth.
It generally isn't difficult to dispell the myth with a little legwork, either. Universities all over the country have collections that contain the first through the final drafts of all the fiction thousands of writers wrote during their lifetimes. When you pour through these collections, the myth is dispelled in a moment. In fact, as often as not, you see draft after draft that was better than the published version a heavy-handed editor worked on.
I strongly suspect this nonsense got started solely because of the way Maxwell Perkins reworked and trned Thomas Wolfe's huge stanck of manuscript pages into novels.
I also strongly suspect most of those who make such clams have never, ever seen a manuscript after one of today's editor got through with it, and they sure as heck haven't seen many those editors of the mythical yesteryear editied. Or have never written anything good enough for a decent agent or editror to offer suggestions on. Anyone who has knows better than to say today's editors don't work as hard as those of yesteryear.
Or they're in the business of making money from new writers by offering critique and editing services.
If you've already published fiction you should know everything you need to know to get a novel right. And vertainlt more than what nine out of ten critique/editing services know. And absolutely enough to put your novel in the hands or real experts, which means selling agents and editors who actually work for publishers.
No agent and no editor has ever said "This novel has real possibilities, but, sigh, it needs a few changes, so I'm not going to bother with it."
The vast majority of hired "editors" and critiquers could screw up a free breakfast, and the main thing they all have in common is that novel they edit and critique are great at drawing rejection slips.
If yu do go this route, do not tell an agent or editor that you've done so. It does not, contrary to what hired "editors" and critiquers tell you, make a favorable impression on anyone.
And if your novel is really any good, be prepared for the first agent or editor who sees it to ask for changes. . .and odds are good the changes they ask for will be the exact reverse of what your hired "editor" or critiquer told you to do. Agents and editors want what they want, and they want it the way they want it, which very seldom seems to be the way hired "editors" and critiquers want it.
Unfortunately, you don't always get what you pay for, as anyone who has fallen for some of the various internet scams will attest. With darned few exceptions, handing off a manuscript to a hirded "editor" or a paid "critiquer" amounts to the same thing.
There will always be those looking for ways to get money, and there will always be those willing to give them money.