A middleweight editor in a traditional publishing house will earn approximately $55,491 according to indeed.com — a figure that is based on the aggregation of 802
salaries (as of March 2021). Meanwhile, The Bureau of Labor Statistics puts the number for editor salary at $63,400 per year (roughly $30.48 per hour).
It looks like our chatroom survived to see another season. While my days grow longer I am aware our Southern Hemisphere chat regulars are looking forward to shorter days and milder temperatures.
Spring or Autumn, either way, I declare it a Blockbuster Season to Write.
It is a good time to wrap up a project and start something new. If not a WIP, maybe a new habit or try out new software. Start some good trouble.
Share your secrets of motivation. Tell us about your Muse. This will be a relaxed topic chat. Snacks are on the back table but you have to bring your own drinks. I am known worldwide as the Spillage Idiot. I have to stay away from anything not in a sippy cup. :)
A Snippet of Wednesday Chat as the Topic Turned to Critiques
* Niles! AKA Mel Newman
Editors don't make you a better writer, they make your writing better. There's a difference.F
Sally
Oh, so, then, Niles, Critiques are not editing?J
* Joe Cabadas
It depends on the editor. When I worked at the Detroit Athletic Club's magazine, I had a very good relationship with my editor. He offered plenty of tips... well, to
get my writing to where he wanted it.N
*Niles! AKA Mel Newman
Absolutely not. Critiques look at everything, plotting, pacing, characters, and grammar.
A bunch of people make suggestions to you. You have to absorb those suggestions and implement them yourself
More importantly though is that YOU have to critique THEM and that's where you improve your writingJ
* Joe Cabadas
Niles: I agree.N
* Niles! AKA Mel Newman
When you critique someone else, you become the editor. You view the material differently, like an editor
Then when you return to your own work, you have trained your brain to think like an editor, not a writer that is priceless.
Join us Sunday and we will continue our Editing Topic Chat
Revision . Editing . Picking at Nits
If you have participated in NaNoWriMo you probably know that March is NaNoEdMo. It is a month long glue your butt to a chair for 50 hours of Editing. Seriously, it’s true. I was successful in having a Manuscript accepted for Publication after EdMo.
When I talk about Editing it seems everyone has a slightly different idea about the meaning of Editing. It is different for everyone. For me, Editing travels hand in hand with Revision. Revision comes on the heels of Rewriting. For some, there are levels of editing.
Bring your own topic month at the Writer’s Chatroom
February is traditionally Romance Month but this year we are going to fling our doors open, turn up the music and mingle at the snack table at the back of the room.
Bring any topic or writing related question about anything from formatting to marketing, to neighborhood muse searches and we will try to address it. We don’t know everything and we aren’t afraid to say so. Maybe together, we can find an answer to your topic or writerly issue.
This Little Piggy Went to Market
This is the last Sunday Chat of Marketing Month.
It was only recently that I learned this little piggy was going to "MARKET." It changed a whole layer of my childhood and parenthood as well. The Piggy rhyme was visited on me and later I passed it to my children and their children. Not having a clue about the tragic event about to unfold when this little piggy arrived at his destination.
I am amusing myself by imagining you Submission Packet being sent to market. Will it meet the same fate? Will it be rejected and sent back to live another day? Will it be accepted? Either way, thank goodness I will see my manuscript again.
Come on in at 8PM ET to celebrate the end of marketing month at The Writer's Chatroom.
(Entry 1 of 3) 1a : the measured or measurable period during which an action, process, or condition exists or continues : duration. b : a nonspatial continuum that is measured in terms of events which succeed one another from past through present to future. c : leisure time for reading.
Mirriam-Webster
Time is a word or concept with very broad aspects. We could get lost in the various ways to explore time and what we think of as time. But, I think I am on the first few days of a Covid bug and leading a discussion on full fledged time is just too much.
The aspect of Time I want to explore is an author’s handling of time.
For example, in chapter one, scene two, the lion has broken free from the zoo. At the same time in scene four, Mandy’s house is on fire. In scene six, Thomas is looking around the empty lion enclosure and making a cellphone call to Animal Control.
Although these events are happening at the same time, they cannot be presented in writing or even by spoken word simultaneously. An author or story teller has to decide which of the three scenes to present first.
I’d like to discuss how we work with various elements of time. How do we decide the Zoo Escape should be given before Mandy runs out of her flaming abode?
Drop by the Writer’s Chatroom on Sunday, 23 January at 7PM ET and I will continue my plan to be socially distant.
The Art of Assembling the Parts of a Book
Craft & Marketing - Parts of a Book
If you are self-published or traditionally published, you should know the Parts of a Book.
My Orange Bible, CMoS, Chicago Manual of Style, has the best definition of the parts of a book, fiction or non-fiction. Because the book is HUGE and a bit expensive I found 2 websites.
If you are a DIY Author, the contents of these parts of a book are pretty much on you to write and format. If you have a traditional publisher, you are still going to be responsible for supplying this content.