Common Writing Mistakes

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larocca

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[FONT=Georgia,Verdana,Arial][SIZE=+1]Most books aren't rejected because the stories are "bad." They're rejected because they're not "ready to read." In short, minor stuff like typos, grammar, spelling, etc.

I don't mean places where we, as authors, deliberately break the rules. Those are fine. They're our job. Language always changes with use, and we can help it on its way. No, I'm referring to places where someone just plain didn't learn the rule or got confused or overlooked it during the self-edits.

I've been editing novels since early 2000. Looking back at my experiences, I feel like sharing the most common mistakes I've seen. If you'll go through your manuscript and fix these before you submit it to a publisher, your odds of publication will increase dramatically.

Once you've found a publisher who publishes what you write, you want to present yourself in the best way possible. Submitting an unedited manuscript is a bit like going to a job interview wearing a purple Mohawk, no shoes, torn jeans, and a T-shirt. Your resume may be perfect, and your qualifications impeccable, but something tells me you won't get the job.

The publisher invests a lot of time and money in every book it accepts. Why ask them to invest hours and days of editing time as well? If the publisher gets two or three or ten nearly identical submissions, you want yours to be the one requiring the least editing.

The first thing you need to do, and I hope you've already done it, is use the spelling and grammar checkers in your word processor. They're not perfect, but they'll catch many of the "common mistakes" on my list. I've been asked to edit many books where the author obviously didn't do this, and I confess that I may have been lazy and let a couple of mine get to my editors unchecked. Bad Michael!

Here's a list of the mistakes I see most often. [/SIZE][/FONT]
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  • Dialogue where everyone speaks in perfect English and never violates any of the points below. Okay, that's not really a common problem at all. But I have seen it, and it's a terrible thing.
  • It's is a contraction for "it is" and its is possessive.
  • Who's is a contraction for "who is" and whose is possessive.
  • You're is a contraction for "you are" and your is possessive.
  • They're is a contraction for "they are," there is a place, their is possessive.
  • There's is a contraction for "there is" and theirs is possessive.
  • If you've been paying attention to the above examples, you've noticed that possessive pronouns never use apostrophes. Its, whose, your, yours, their, theirs...
  • Let's is a contraction for "let us."
  • When making a word plural by adding an s, don't use an apostrophe. (The cats are asleep.)
  • When making a word possessive by adding an s, use an apostrophe. (The cat's bowl is empty.)
  • A bath is a noun, what you take. Bathe is a verb, the action you do when taking or giving a bath.
  • A breath is a noun, what you take. Breathe is a verb, the action you do when taking a breath.
  • You wear clothes. When you put them on, you clothe yourself. They are made of cloth.
  • Whenever you read a sentence with the word "that," ask yourself if you can delete that word and still achieve clarity. If so, kill it. The same can be said of all sentences. If you can delete a word without changing the meaning or sacrificing clarity, do it. "And then" is a phrase worth using your word processor's search feature to look for.
  • Keep an eye on verb tenses. "He pulled the pin and throws the grenade" is not a good sentence.
  • Keep an eye on making everything agree regarding singular and plural. "My cat and my wife is sleeping," "My cat sleep on the sofa," and "My wife is a beautiful women" are not good sentences. (I exaggerate in these examples, but you know what I mean.)
  • I and me, he and him, etc. I hope no editor is rejecting any novels for this one, because I suspect that most people get confused at times. In dialogue, do whatever the heck you want because it sounds more "natural." But for the sake of your narrative, I'll try to explain the rule and the cheat. The rule involves knowing whether your pronoun is the subject or object. When Jim Morrison of The Doors sings, "til the stars fall from the sky for you and I," he's making a good rhyme but he's using bad grammar. According to the rule, "you and I" is the object of the preposition "for," thus it should be "for you and me." The cheat involves pretending "you and" isn't there, and just instinctively knowing "for I" just doesn't sound right. (I think only native English speakers can use my cheat. For the record, I have great admiration for anyone who's writing in a language that isn't their native tongue.)
  • Should of, would of, could of. This one can make me throw things. It's wrong! What you mean is should have, would have, could have. Or maybe you mean the contractions. Should've, would've, could've. And maybe 've sounds a bit like of. But it's not! Of is not a verb. Not now, not ever.
  • More, shorter sentences are better. Always. Don't ask a single sentence to do too much work or advance the action too much, because then you've got lots of words scattered about like "that" and "however" and "because" and "or" and "as" and "and" and "while," much like this rather pathetic excuse for a sentence right here.
  • On a similar (exaggerated) note: "He laughed a wicked laugh as he kicked Ralphie in the face while he aimed the gun at Lerod and pulled the trigger and then laughed maniacally as Lerod twisted in agony because of the bullet that burned through his face and splattered his brains against the wall and made the wall look like an overcooked lasagne or an abstract painting." Now tell me this sentence isn't trying to do too much.
  • Too means also or very, two is a number, to is a preposition.
  • He said/she said. Use those only when necessary to establish who's speaking. They distract the reader, pulling him out of the story and saying, "Hey look, you're reading a book." Ideally, within the context of the dialogue, we know who's talking just by the style or the ideas. When a new speaker arrives on the scene, identify him or her immediately. Beyond that, keep it to a minimum. I don't mean delete them all, because it's really frustrating counting backward to see who is speaking because you forgot. Just don't go overboard with them. Oh yeah, and give every speaker his/her own paragraph.
  • Billy-Bob smiled his most winning smile and said, "What's a nice girl like you doing in a place like this?" I don't like this. Use two shorter sentences in the same paragraph. Billy-Bob smiled his most winning smile. "What's a nice girl like you doing in a place like this?" Same effect, fewer words, no dialogue tag (he said).
  • In the previous example, I don't like "smiled his most winning smile," because it's redundant, but I'd probably let it slide. But please, if you find yourself writing something like that, try to find a better way to express it before you just give up and leave it like it is. During the self-edit, I mean, not during the initial writing.
  • "The glow-in-the-dark poster of Jesus glowed in the dark." This editor won't let that one go. Much too redundant, and it appeared in a published novel.
  • Lie is what you do when you lie down on the bed, lay is what you do to another object that you lay on the table. Just to confuse matters, the past tense of lie is lay. Whenever I hit a lay/lie word in reading, I stop and think. Do that when you self-edit. (Note: Don't fix this one in dialogue unless your character is quite well-educated, because most people say it wrong. I do.)
  • Beware of the dangling modifier. "Rushing into the room, the exploding bombs dropped seven of the soldiers." Wait a minute! The bombs didn't rush into the room. The soldiers did. To get all technical about it, the first part is the "dependent clause," and it must have the same subject as the "independent clause" which follows. Otherwise it's amateur, distracting, and a real pain for your poor overworked editor.
  • When something dark gets lighter, that is lightening. Them things that flash through the skies during a thunderstorm are called lightning bolts. No e, okay? [/SIZE][/FONT]
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If you are able (many readers are not), keep an eye out for missing periods, weird commas, closing quotes, opening quotes, etc. When I read a book, be it an e-book or a printed book, I can't help but spot every single one that's missing. They slap me upside the head, which makes me a great editor but a lousy reader. If you're like me, use that to your advantage. If not, that's what editors are for.

Grammar Quiz is 10 questions. If you get any of them wrong, it does a great job of explaining why.

Looking for the rules on how to punctuate dialogue? Here are two fine sites that explain them well:

http://www.authorinresidence.ecsd.net/Dialogue Punctuation.htm [/SIZE][/FONT][FONT=Georgia,Verdana,Arial][SIZE=+1]http://www.gabwhacker.com/xwp/bluequill/said1/asp[/SIZE][/FONT]
 
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Jamesaritchie

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Rejections

From my experience, minor grammar errors seldom cause rejection. Bad story, bad characters, and bad writing cause the vast majority of rejections.
 

larocca

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I wrote this when, as an Acquisitions Editor, I was shooting down dozens of manuscripts before I even learned what they were about. Give me too many mistakes to fix in the grammar department and I won't even discover the bad story, bad characters and bad writing.

I've since moved on to a better publisher, where I can reject manuscripts for more solid reasons, but I still like the list of common errors. They do remain common, unfortunately, and I find myself "teaching" the same things over and over again. These things.
 

tomW

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Not minor errors...

These aren't minor errors--they're only minor errors if they appear very, very rarely. But any set of several such "minor" errors, taken as a whole, when each appears with significant frequency, is bad writing.

(More accurately, it's bad editing, of the sort that an author ought to be doing right after his first draft is finished. Not that he ought to make most of those mistakes in the first place--but what he does make, he ought to catch right away when he reads it through.)
 

ErylRavenwell

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I wrote this when, as an Acquisitions Editor, I was shooting down dozens of manuscripts before I even learned what they were about. Give me too many mistakes to fix in the grammar department and I won't even discover the bad story, bad characters and bad writing.

I've since moved on to a better publisher, where I can reject manuscripts for more solid reasons, but I still like the list of common errors. They do remain common, unfortunately, and I find myself "teaching" the same things over and over again. These things.

Good post. Are you the editor in question, Larocca?

All of the points made are legitimate, bar this:

In the previous example, I don't like "smiled his most winning smile," because it's redundant, but I'd probably let it slide. But please, if you find yourself writing something like that, try to find a better way to express it before you just give up and leave it like it is. During the self-edit, I mean, not during the initial writing.
 

Tish Davidson

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From my experience, minor grammar errors seldom cause rejection. Bad story, bad characters, and bad writing cause the vast majority of rejections.


From my experience, excessive mechanical errors usually go along with bad story. People who can't be bothered to learn the basics of writing mechanics usually come from the barf it out on the page and send it in school of writing and can't be bothered to edit their story content into anything worth reading. A mechanically perfect manuscript doesn't make a story good, but a mechanically dreadful one almost guarantees a dreadful story.
 
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