Facebook flog - Feb 20 2014
Feb. 20th, 2014 09:14 pmLink: Feb 20 2014, 13:36
Disclaimer: This blog entry is verbatim, as originally posted on LKH's Facebook. Copyright belongs to Ma Petite Enterprises.
The deal I made with my editor was that I'd work on the copy edits for, A Shiver of Light, on my birthday, in exchange for getting to have a long weekend over Valentine's Day. I've been too sick to work on them today, but they are waiting on my desk for tomorrow morning. I'll work on the small queries first, and then the minor/major rewrites last, so the page numbers don't change between the printed out copy and the computer file. I have until the 24th to finish and deliver them back to New York.
Do I hear, Mission Impossible, music? Or maybe circus music?
Disclaimer: This blog entry is verbatim, as originally posted on LKH's Facebook. Copyright belongs to Ma Petite Enterprises.
The deal I made with my editor was that I'd work on the copy edits for, A Shiver of Light, on my birthday, in exchange for getting to have a long weekend over Valentine's Day. I've been too sick to work on them today, but they are waiting on my desk for tomorrow morning. I'll work on the small queries first, and then the minor/major rewrites last, so the page numbers don't change between the printed out copy and the computer file. I have until the 24th to finish and deliver them back to New York.
Do I hear, Mission Impossible, music? Or maybe circus music?
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Date: 2014-02-20 11:45 am (UTC)Anyone want to place bets on her not meeting that (to my eyes) really short deadline?
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Date: 2014-02-20 11:50 am (UTC)Unless you are hugging the toilet bowl or if your insides are making a bid for independence, then nothing is stopping you from sitting up in bed with your laptop or a printed copy of the manuscript to do your edits. But I get it. The editor is breathing down your neck, tearing apart your masterpiece, and if you dither on your deadline you don't have to make massive changes. Poor you.
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Date: 2014-02-20 12:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-02-20 12:49 pm (UTC)Also, maybe I'm mean and cynical and awful, but the whole not-so-subtle "it's my birthday" combined with "I'm sick and working hard anyway" with a smattering of "oh no, my deadline is so close and even though it's entirely my fault, I'm going to be a brave little soldier trucking on!" smacks of just...a trifecta of attention-pandering. Normally she only gives us one or two at a time.
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Date: 2014-02-20 01:23 pm (UTC)I am truly astonished that the publisher still puts up with her and her shenanigans. I fully expected them to cut her loose years ago.
So you're too sick to work on edits, but not too sick to post on Facebook, huh Lala?
Oh, I can only imagine the hissy fit when her ass IS finally dropped. It shall be glorious.
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Date: 2014-02-20 01:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-02-20 01:44 pm (UTC)(I'm blaming her for this, btw, not her editors.)
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Date: 2014-02-20 05:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-02-20 05:53 pm (UTC)If it were nearly anyone else, I'd defend them. Surfing the internet and posting on Facebook and etc. don't take brainpower, whereas copy edits do. Writing and editing are difficult or impossible when ill -- surfing the internet is the equivalent of reading a trashy paperback.
But this is LKH. She constantly whines about having to do her cushy job and about the problems that she's caused herself.
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Date: 2014-02-20 05:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-02-20 08:17 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-02-20 09:15 pm (UTC)SERIOUSLY?
My horn is swoggled.
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Date: 2014-02-20 09:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-02-20 09:43 pm (UTC)Am I seeing things wrong, but isn't it the author who's supposed to be the one that cares the most about their work? The one that wants the audience to love reading their stuff? Isn't it?
*reaches for smelling salts*
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Date: 2014-02-20 11:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-02-20 11:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-02-20 11:29 pm (UTC)Then this pops up.
Right.
'Edits'
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Date: 2014-02-21 12:45 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-02-21 04:01 am (UTC)I've joked about it before, but I feel sorry for her editor. Especially since this book is over a year overdue...
My inner fan is weeping for the last shreds of the Merry series's dignity, but my inner snarker is rejoicing at the pile of zombie fish in a barrel this book will become. It will spork itself.
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Date: 2014-02-21 04:06 am (UTC)She's probably not going to even make it through the grammatical edits. Anyone want to take bets on how much blogging and Twittering she does over the next few days? Calling at least one blog entry, then another the morning of the 24th, and... a whole lot of Tweets.
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Date: 2014-02-21 05:21 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-02-22 02:25 am (UTC)"I never worked in drafts. I never sat down and wrote a 'first draft' of anything. I wrote only through slow and polished and highly edited evolution, discarding as I went along until --- by the very end -- I had a completed and polished and deeply thought out and, above all, deeply felt and executed manuscript. One version of that manuscript existed, and nothing more. There was never a sloppy first draft or second draft or third draft."
...oh wait, that was Anne Rice. I'm getting my self-important, wanky vampire fetishists mixed up again.
Sadly, I tried, but couldn't find LKH's quote about how 90% of what she writes is "gold" now.
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Date: 2014-02-22 05:04 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-02-23 03:51 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-02-24 04:55 am (UTC)Don’t Let Perfectionism Stop You (http://www.laurellkhamilton.org/2012/08/dont-let-perfectionism-stop-you/), August 4, 2012:
"Perfection, if it exists, comes with editing that rough stuff into finished product. When I talked to the woman who would be my first agent, her first question was, “How many drafts of your first novel have you done?” My reply, “Seven.” That was an answer that let her know I was serious and not caught in the perfection trap. I went home and did one more edit of my first novel and sent it off. Months later she’d take me on as a client, and I had an agent. It would take almost four years for the book to hit the shelves, but that’s another story. The point is that writing, good, professional writing is rewriting.
I’ve now written over thirty novels and my garbage quotient has gotten lower just by practice and knowing my craft. Some first drafts are 80% gold and only 20% garbage, but not always. Sometimes it’s more like 50/50. It just depends on the book. I routinely throw out hundreds of pages in a book, winnowing it down through edits and that’s before it ever leaves me and goes to New York for my editor to read."
Uh... huh...
Funny how this paragraph mirrors her history: starts out good, veers into "WHAT?!" territory out of nowhere.