Jodie's Editing Process
LET'S MAKE YOUR MANUSCRIPT PUBLISH-READY
Welcome, writers, authors,
and aspiring authors. I’m an award-winning author and highly respected editor
who can help you polish your manuscript and get it ready to publish or pitch to
agents. I edit POPULAR FICTION, specializing
in thrillers, suspenseful mysteries, romantic suspense,
and crime fiction (nothing too gory, though, and no horror). I also edit HISTORICAL FICTION and some fantasies, YA, and
middle-grade fiction. I accept novels of up to
about 97,000 words, as well as short stories and novellas, and also offer detailed critiques and edits of up to 50 pages (up
to the first 12,500 words).
I also edit NONFICTION books on selected topics (see below for
more info).
I’m a voracious reader of
popular fiction and a former English teacher and librarian with a master’s
degree. I’ve been an independent professional editor since 2007. I’m the author of three award-winning writing guides in the series An Editor’s Guide to Writing Compelling Fiction: Writing a
Killer Thriller, Fire up Your Fiction, and Captivate Your Readers. I’m also regularly
asked to serve as judge in short story and novel contests. I mainly edit for a
North American readership.
Thanks to Kindlepreneur for listing me among their Best Book Editors.
For client reviews of my editing by published authors, please click on the REVIEWS tab.
Is your novel over 97K
words? Check out this article: How to Slash Your Word
Count by 20-40% — and tighten up your story without losing any of the good
stuff!
Also, see “How to Save a Bundle on Editing Costs — without
sacrificing quality.”
EDITING
SERVICES:
My editing services
for FICTION range from developmental and “big picture”
advice, through structural editing, content editing, line editing, copy
editing, to final proofreading. I use Track Changes and comments in the margin. I send you both a
marked-up version and a “clean” version, which has all my changes accepted.
For a
full-package, comprehensive edit, I work in sections, with
payments in instalments as we go along. I’ll do several passes of your manuscript, sending it to you for
feedback and revisions between passes. My editing process
is interactive and collaborative, with lots of teaching moments,
links to related articles, and other suggested reading.
If I decide to
take on your story, I’ll do a free sample edit of about 1000 words and send it to you, along with
my fee for the whole manuscript. Then you can decide whether to proceed or not.
You can also
decide to go on an editing “date” of the first 10-20 pages to see if you like my
approach to your work.
I can also do a
detailed critique and edit of your first 10 to 50 pages (details below).
You may wish to choose this
more intensive option to see how I work, then do some revising based on my
suggestions. Then you can contact me about editing the rest of your manuscript,
likely at a lower rate.
Or, for a lower
fee, I can just do one or two thorough passes, then send it back to you.
Another option is to just
have me do a thorough final proofread of
your edited or thoroughly revised manuscript,.
I also offer substantive/structural editing, rewriting, and copyediting of NONFICTION topics such as lifestyles, wellness,
nutrition, self-help, herbal remedies, gardening, design, and more.
MENU:
·
OVERVIEW & FEE
STRUCTURE
·
WHAT TO INCLUDE WHEN YOU
FIRST CONTACT ME
·
SUBSTANTIVE/STRUCTURAL
EDITING of your NONFICTION BOOK
·
PROOFREADING OF YOUR
FICTION OR NONFICTION MANUSCRIPT
·
FICTION – MY EDITING
PROCESS
·
ASPECTS I CONSIDER WHEN
EDITING A FICTION MANUSCRIPT
·
INITIAL CRITIQUES of FIRST
10-50 PAGES
·
SHORT STORIES
OVERVIEW &
FEE STRUCTURE:
DETAILED LINE
EDITING & COPYEDITING
MOST
COMPREHENSIVE, INTERACTIVE PACKAGE:
My fee
for several in-depth passes, with revisions by you in between, starts at
1.8 cents ($0.018) USD per word ($18 per 1000 words; $1,440
for an 80,000-word manuscript) for already very good writing that may need the
following: help with point of view issues,
reducing info dumps and picking up the pace; showing instead of telling;
finding a more natural, authentic voice;
appropriate/effective word choice,
querying of character motivations and
actions; flagging of any plot holes, inconsistencies, discrepancies and implausibilities; streamlining the sentences; eliminating
redundancies and repetitions; and finally, light
copyediting and proofreading for spelling, grammar,
capitalization, and punctuation.
Prices go up to 5 cents ($0.05) USD per word ($50 per 1,000
words or $4,000 for 80,000 words), for a very comprehensive edit,
(several passes), including substantive or structural editing and deep content editing with lots of coaching geared specifically to make your story
stronger and improve your writing skills. You’ll get big-picture (developmental) advice first, offering
links to articles and books tailored to your needs, as well as ongoing
comments, suggestions and questions re: effective fiction techniques, character
motivations, and general logistics (all of the aspects mentioned in
the paragraph above). This is followed by stylistic editing / heavy copyediting to smooth
out and tighten your writing, with the sections going back and forth,
then final copyediting and proofreading.
Most
manuscripts I edit these days fall in the $0.018 to $0.03 USD per-word range
for a detailed, comprehensive edit (content/logistics editing, line editing,
stylistic editing, copy editing, and proofreading), so $19-$30 per 1000 words or from $1,520 to $2,400 USD for 80,000 words.
FOR THOSE ON A
BUDGET:
I can do one thorough line/copyedit for $0.012 to $0.014 per word
($12-$14 per 1000 words).
Or you can opt for two thorough passes for $0.014 to $0.017 per word ($14-$17 per 1000 words; $1120 – $1360 for 80K words)
depending on the amount of work needed, with no back and forth with the
author.
I would then send you
a marked-up copy with additions and deletions
clearly indicated by Track Changes and comments and suggestions in the margin,
and also a “clean” copy, with all my changes
accepted and no redlining, for easy reading. I’ll send you a style sheet as
well, tailored to your story, and some general advice, if needed.
You would then “accept” or
“reject” my changes and do revisions based on my suggestions. Then, if you
wish, you could send your revised manuscript to beta readers or another editor
or proofreader or back to me. I will then do another pass for $0.012 per word,
adding any new suggestions as needed.
Note: Even for these
passes, I always pay attention to what’s going on in the story, the logistics
of the plot and character motivations, and the effectiveness of the fiction
techniques used, as well as pacing, sentence structure, grammar, and spelling,
so my editing is always content and stylistic editing, too. If something
doesn’t make sense to me, I’ll mention it.
FINAL PROOFREAD
ONLY:
If your manuscript has
already undergone an edit, or you’ve had extensive feedback from beta readers
and have done revisions, I’ll do a detailed final proofread for word choice, grammar, spelling, punctuation, capitalization,
indents, spaces, formatting, headings, and more. My fee for this
normally ranges from $7 to $14 per 1000 words, but I have a special on now
for $0.006 per word, or $6 per 1000 words; $300 for 50K words; $480
for 80,000 words. Click HERE for more details on the proofreading only
option.
PAYMENT TERMS:
For copyediting a full manuscript,
I prefer payments of about $200 at a time, in advance as we go along, just
before I complete each section. For manuscript critiques, payment must be made
in full in advance. For a proofread only, you can pay me 50% at the beginning
and the rest at the end.
If you can’t afford my
rates for your whole manuscript, I can do a thorough edit and critique of your
first 10-50 pages, and you can then use the edits and advice to guide you on
your revisions of the rest of the novel, which will ultimately save you a great
deal of money.
WHAT TO INCLUDE WHEN YOU FIRST CONTACT ME:
In order for me
to consider whether I’d like to take on your manuscript, I need you to send me
the following as attachments when you first contact me. Use “Editing” in your
subject line. The documents need to be in Microsoft Word.
Please familiarize yourself with MS Word’s Track Changes before
contacting me or other editors.
·
The first ~20 pages of your manuscript, plus 5-10 pages from
somewhere in the middle:
– as an attachment in Microsoft Word (NOT a PDF)
– Times New Roman, 12-point
– double-spaced, left-justified
– one space (not two) between sentences
– Indent each paragraph by using the MS Word paragraphing or formatting tools.
(Do NOT press the space bar repeatedly to indent.) No extra space between
paragraphs.
For basic formatting instructions, see “Basic Formatting of Your
Manuscript.”
·
Author’s name (and
pen-name if both)
·
Title of
novel (or working title)
·
The genre (for fiction) or topic (for nonfiction)
·
Total number of words in manuscript (or projected).
Under 97K words for me, please.
·
Your target readership (audience). Who do you see as
your typical or ideal readers?
·
For nonfiction, a paragraph
on what your book is about and your goal with the book.
·
For fiction, a
brief plot outline or synopsis: a few paragraphs to half
a page, paragraph form, telling the main points of the story, with a beginning,
middle, and end. Start with your main character and be sure to include the main
story problem.
·
For fiction, a
brief description of each of the main characters, in order of importance
·
A sentence or
two about the stage your manuscript is at now.
Have you had beta (volunteer) readers read it and offer honest, helpful
feedback, then revised it afterward? Has another editor done some work on it?
Have you run it through a basic spell check and/or grammar check?
·
It’s best not
to send a rough draft or first draft, unless you’d like me to proofread it for
your, prior to sending it to beta readers. I can do so much more for you if you
send me a relatively clean manuscript that you’ve had feedback on and have gone
through at least a few times. Thanks.
·
The level of editing you think your manuscript may need. If you’re not sure,
that’s natural and perfectly fine. You can just say “Whatever the editor feels
the manuscript needs to bring it up to industry standards, appeal to readers,
and sell well.”
·
A brief bio and any other publications,
if any.
If I feel we can go
straight to copyediting (light, moderate, or heavy),
I will give you a per-word rate (and total fee) depending on the amount of work
the manuscript seems to need to make it publish-ready.
Or, you may need an initial assessment and overall
advice. I’ll first look at the “big picture” and address any
noticeable craft-of-fiction issues, such as your opening, characterization,
point of view, pacing, style, and dialogue. Then, after you’ve done subsequent
revisions of the first chapters and returned them to me, I’ll get started on
the copyediting stage.
SUBSTANTIVE/STRUCTURAL EDITING for NONFICTION WRITERS:
Are you an expert on or passionate
about a topic and want to share your knowledge about it in a book? And add to
your resume and make some money at the same time? Maybe you’ve made a good
start but are feeling a bit overwhelmed or have reached a roadblock with your
project. Now’s the time to find some professional help with rewriting,
revising, and restructuring your book so it will appeal to your target
readership and sell well.
As the author of three
award-winning nonfiction books, I’m accepting nonfiction books for substantive/structural editing on these or related
topics, aimed at a general (not academic or scientific) audience: personal growth, healthy living, self-help, wellness, lifestyles, nutrition, health, senior
living or issues, relationships, or alternative healthcare and wellness.
I will
work with you on your nonfiction book to do a
detailed substantive/structural edit, as well as a thorough copyedit and
final proofread, which will include:
· Helping
you define your target readership
· Clarifying
your goals with this book
· Discussing
the scope of your book (maybe too narrow or too broad?)
· Helping
you, if needed, to develop more of a “voice” and style that will appeal to your
target readership
· Discussing
the overall organization and flow of your book, and transitions between
chapters
· Helping
you with an enticing opening (first paragraphs)
· Checking
for overly technical phrases and jargon your target audience may not easily
understand
· Rearranging,
adding, or condensing chapters, topics, and subtopics to make the whole
structure more cohesive
· Moving,
adding, rewriting, or deleting details, sentences, and paragraphs
· Watching
for any inconsistencies and discrepancies
· Flagging
and helping you rewrite any confusing statements
· Asking
for clarification and examples if needed
· Suggesting
anecdotes, interesting facts, or a bit of humor, if needed
· Noting
repetitions or redundancies within a sentence, paragraph, or elsewhere in the
book
· Flagging
digressions and off-topic references
· Rewriting overly long,
overly formal, or convoluted sentences
· Fixing
spelling, grammar, capitalization, punctuation, spacing, and typos
· Clicking
through any references to make sure they lead to the intended source
· Proofreading
your references, using an acceptable style guide
I’m a former English
teacher and librarian with a Master’s degree. I’m an author and have been a
freelance editor since 2007. I edit American and Canadian English, and my main
two reference sources are The Chicago Manual of Style and Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary.
Finally, I will format your book for publishing, including
creating proper chapter headings, subheadings, and a Table of Contents (made
clickable for an ebook).
Fee range: I will take your
manuscript from first draft to polished, publish-ready copy for $0.03 to $0.08
per word, depending on how much work it needs to get to industry standards,
appeal to readers, and sell well. So if your book is about 50,000 words, my fee
for a substantive/structural edit and a copyedit would be
from $1,500 to $4,000, payable in instalments at a pace you’re comfortable with
as we go along. Rewriting from a rough draft
will be $0.10 per word.
My process is
interactive, so the
manuscript goes back and forth several times, with plenty of input by the
author.
If your nonfiction
manuscript, article, or webpage only needs a basic copyedit and proofread,
I can do that too, at a considerably lower fee.
Contact me at
info@JodieRenner.com with your topic, target readership, projected number of
words/pages, ideas and/or table of contents, and your first 10-20 pages. If
your project interests me or I have time to take it on, I’ll get back to you
with some ideas and a sample edit/rewrite.
FINAL PROOFREADING OF YOUR FICTION OR NONFICTION MANUSCRIPT
Has your
fiction or nonfiction manuscript already been edited? Or you’ve received
extensive feedback and have made revisions? I’ll do a detailed proofread for word
choice, grammar, spelling, punctuation, capitalization, sentence
structure, stylistic consistency, repetitions, indents, spaces, formatting,
headings, subheadings, and more.
Besides being an author and
independent publisher, I’m a former English teacher with a master’s degree and
have been a professional editor since 2007. My main reference guides are The Chicago Manual of Style and Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary. If you
have a preferred house style guide, I will use that.
My fee is $0.008-$0.012 per
word, or $8 to $12 per 1000 words. (Minimum 10,000 words.) Turnaround time is
usually two weeks or less.
I will send you back both a
marked-up copy, where you can “accept” or “reject” my changes if you wish, and
a “clean” copy, with all my changes accepted.
Fiction
writers, please note – Proofreading does NOT include: line editing or
copyediting for plot, characterization, dialogue, point of view, author
intrusions, showing instead of telling, voice, logistics, discrepancies,
pacing, or other effective fiction-writing techniques, all of which I look at
in my editing services. Proofreading is the final step
in the editing process.
Proofreading is best done
after a manuscript has undergone a thorough line edit or copy edit, or the
author has had significant feedback and has done a lot of revisions. There’s no
point in having a manuscript proofread if it’s going to undergo significant
changes, which would then require another proofreading pass at additional cost.
“I recently
needed a quick proofread of my first three chapters before sending them to an
agent. I contacted Jodie, and she did a thorough job of finding and fixing
spelling, grammar, punctuation, capitalization, and spacing errors and returned
the polished manuscript to me the same day. Very happy with the service and
quick turnaround.”
– Angela
Douglas, author of Every Fall
Below are some of the
problems I look for when proofreading your fiction or
nonfiction manuscript aimed at a general readership. (I don’t
proofread academic or scientific documents.)
WHEN
PROOFREADING, I LOOK FOR:
Spelling and
word choice confusions:
·
Spelling errors and typos: I’ll check for errors that spellcheck won’t
catch, including common typing mistakes (e.g. “manger” instead of “manager”,
“fried” instead of “friend”, etc.) and embarrassing errors, such as the “l”
missing in “public”.
·
Confusions between homophones, e.g., there/they’re/their or effect/affect or peak/peek or counsel/council
·
Missing words, e.g., “to
hospital” or word doubles, e.g. the the
·
Incorrect word choice (word used doesn’t fit the meaning desired)
·
Incorrect hyphenation of words and phrases: Is it takedown,
take-down, or take down? ripoff, rip-off, or rip off? follow-up or follow up?
rear-view mirror or rearview mirror?
·
Misuse
of definite and indefinite articles (the/a/an)
·
Misuse of
prepositions (of, at, in, from, between, among, etc.)
Grammar and
sentence structure:
·
Incomplete
sentences, run-on sentences
·
Overly long,
convoluted sentences
·
Inconsistent
verb tenses
·
Lack of
parallelism in lists
·
Passive
rather than active voice
Repetitions and
redundancies:
·
The same
noticeable or specific word or root word used within a sentence or paragraph,
e.g., “two big stacks of files were stacked on her desk.” or “Music blasted from a bar. A cold blast of air hit his face.”
·
Overuse of
words such as that, very, just, quite, smiled, etc.
·
Overuse of
generic words such as “thing” or “good” or “walked” instead of more specific
words
Capitalization
and Punctuation:
·
Missing,
extra, or misused commas
·
Confusion
between hyphens, em dashes, and en dashes
·
Incorrect
punctuation and/or capitalization for dialogue
·
Incorrect use
of apostrophes
·
Incorrect or
overuse of semicolons, colons, and ellipses
·
Missing end (closing) quotation marks, parentheses, and periods
·
Inconsistent capitalization of words and phrases
Overuse or
misuse of italics, underlining, bolding, or all caps:
·
Generally,
italics are more acceptable for emphasis than underlining, bolding, or all caps
·
Italics for
some but not all foreign phrases
Possible inappropriate style or word choices for your target
readership:
I’ll flag for your
attention:
·
Jargon –
technical terminology that a general readership might not understand
·
Pretentious language – wording or phrasing that might seem overly erudite, haughty, or
condescending to your target readers.
·
Course
language and profanities: If they seem a bit
overdone, I might point them out and you can decide whether to keep them or
tone them down.
Stylistic
inconsistency:
·
Inconsistency of style and tone (word choices, sentence structure), based on
target readership
·
Overly formal or overly casual wording that doesn’t fit the overall style
·
Consistency of UK, US, Canadian, or Australian spelling (labour/labor, theatre/theater, travelling/traveling, judgement/judgment, licence/license, organise/organize,
etc.)
·
Inconsistent treatment
of numbers (30/thirty, 65/sixty-five)
·
Inconsistent
capitalization and punctuation in headings and subheadings
·
Inconsistent
capitalization and punctuation in lists
·
Inconsistent
presentation of abbreviations (e.g. U.S./US;
Nasa/NASA/N.A.S.A.)
Basic
formatting issues:
·
Inconsistent font style or size
·
Incorrect spacing between words, sentences, and paragraphs
·
Inconsistent
paragraph indentation and spacing
·
Incorrect or
missing page breaks between chapters
·
Inconsistent
formatting of headings and subheadings
·
Inconsistent
formatting of lists and bullet points
·
Inconsistencies
between the Table of Contents and the
actual headings and subheadings
WHAT TO SEND ME
WHEN YOU FIRST CONTACT ME FOR PROOFREADING:
If you’d like me to do a
thorough, professional final proofread of your manuscript, please email me
at j.renner.editing@hotmail.com with:
·
Whether it’s
fiction or nonfiction
·
The subject
or genre
·
Total word
count
·
British,
American, Canadian, or Australian English
·
Target
readership
·
Your
preferred style (chatty, casual, formal, businesslike, etc.)
·
A brief
description of what it’s about (one paragraph)
·
10 pages of
the document
·
Your
preferred deadline
“Jodie Renner is the real deal. In a world awash with sketchy advice for writers, Jodie cuts through the darkness with the piercing light of her expertise. Her editing, advice, and suggested revisions are concrete, practical, and produce compelling prose. Jodie skillfully helped me navigate from the shores of my nonfiction through the treacherous waters of thriller writing. She helped me take a manuscript that was not ‘there’ yet to one that was. I feel fortunate to have found her and look forward to working with her on my next project.”
– Peter Eichstaedt, Sept. 19, 2014, journalist and author
of thriller, Borderland. www.petereichstaedt.com
MY COPYEDITING
PROCESS:
My
comprehensive editing process is instructive, interactive, and collaborative, with lots of teaching
moments and referrals to other resources. I or you will divide your manuscript
into sections of about 3-6 chapters each, and I’ll work on one section at a
time, then send it back to you for your reactions and revisions before going on
to the next section. We’ll usually send each section
back and forth several times, until we’re both happy with it, before
going on to the next section. And you’ll likely be going ahead and tweaking or
revising future chapters, based on what you’ve learned from feedback I’ve given
you on the early chapters.
At the
copyediting stage, I perform two very detailed edits on every section (with revisions by you in
between), then more passes to quickly check subsequent
changes only. The first pass is to address content and style issues,
as well as word choices, sentence construction, reducing wordiness, and
smoothing out awkward phrasing, etc. Then, when you send that section back to
me with your revisions, I go over it again with a fine-toothed comb.
Using Microsoft Word Track Changes and Comments and my
well-used copies of The Chicago Manual of Style (956
pages) and Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (1624
pages), as well as online resources, I’ll correct typos, spelling, punctuation,
and grammar, and make suggestions for word choice, sentence flow, and clarity.
After that, I’ll just look at final changes indicated through Track Changes.
For more detailed
information on my editing services, please contact me at j.renner.editing@hotmail.com.
“No matter
where you are with your project, Jodie can help. Her sense of dialogue is
superb. She will show you how to pace your work appropriately and is a master
at point of view issues and building more personality into your characters. She
does it all without infringing on your voice. Jodie is also a precise grammar
queen. Simply, Jodie is the best all-around editor I have ever used.”
~ John Tkac, author of the
award-winning Talking to Water – A Dolphin Chronicles Book,
edited by Jodie
ASPECTS I
CONSIDER WHEN EDITING A FICTION MANUSCRIPT
Here are a few of the many
issues I look at and advise on in all my fiction editing:
Opening:
Is the first page
compelling? Does it hook the reader in quickly? Does it introduce your
protagonist? Does it situate the reader as to Who, What, Where and When, so
they can quickly get into your story world and start enjoying your story?
Characterization:
Is your protagonist
likeable, smart, resourceful, and strong enough to appeal to your readers, but
with vulnerabilities and inner conflict? Are your main characters complex and
three-dimensional, or flat and predictable, cardboard cutouts? Do your characters
develop through the course of the novel? (Is there a good character arc?) Are
their motivations clear and plausible?
Point of view:
Is most of your story
anchored in the viewpoint of your protagonist? Is each scene in one character’s
point of view? Or is the viewpoint hovering above or ping-ponging among your
characters, all in one scene (“head-hopping”)?
Plot and Scene
Structure:
Do you have an inciting
incident and a main story problem/question? Is there enough conflict? Do you
have tension on every page, with rising stakes and ongoing complications? Are
the scenes well-written and well-structured? Is the climax nail-biting? Is the
ending satisfying? Do you have plot holes that need to be identified and
plugged? Are there inconsistencies, discrepancies, or illogical actions or
events that need to be addressed?
Style and
Pacing:
Does your prose meander
along, trying to find its way? Is it awkward, too wordy, or overly erudite? Or
is it clear, tight and compelling? Does your pacing fit the genre? Do you vary
the pace, depending on the scene?
Dialogue:
Does it sound natural, like
people in that milieu really talk? Does each character speak a little
differently? Or do your characters all sound like the author or university
professors?
Logic and
continuity:
Do you have sudden
unexplained changes or discrepancies in characters, time sequences, and other
circumstances? Do all the plot details make sense? Are your characters’ actions
and reactions logical and believable?
Grammar,
syntax, phrasing, punctuation, spelling, and typos:
I’ll help you smooth out
awkward or overly wordy phrasing to create a better flow of ideas. I’ll add the
final polish to make your story publish-ready. I’ve been called “a precise
grammar queen.” I know my stuff but won’t let correct English stifle your style
or voice – this is fiction, after all, not a doctoral dissertation!
DETAILED EDIT & CRITIQUE OF FIRST 10 to 50 PAGES ONLY:
If you’re on a
tight budget, you may
opt to have me do a thorough, detailed edit and critique of the first 10 to 50 pages (double-spaced),
including advice on your half- to one-page synopsis, for
$0.025 to $0.04 per word ($25 to $40 per 1000 words). This thorough
edit includes big-picture advice on fiction-writing techniques such as
your opening, characters, plot, point of view, pacing, reducing info
dumps, showing instead of telling, dialogue, etc., will help you
bring your characters and scenes to life. It also includes comments about
your character motivations and story logistics, advice on streamlining your writing to improve the flow of ideas, and finally a detailed,
comprehensive line edit and proofread of the
whole section. This fee includes several passes, including two complete ones:
the first to offer big-picture and stylistic advice, and the second to go over
every word again after you’ve done some revisions based on my suggestions.
After that, I’ll go over it again once or twice to check any subsequent changes
that are clearly evident through Track Changes.
After this thorough initial
critique and edit, you can use my advice on that section to guide your
revisions and even rewriting of the rest of the manuscript. Revising the rest of your manuscript based on advice in the
initial critique will save you hundreds or even thousands of dollars on the
editing process for the whole novel, either with me or someone else.
If we decide to continue working together on the rest of your manuscript, my
fee for the rest will be lower, depending on the extent of your subsequent
revisions/rewrites on future chapters before you send them to me.
“Jodie Renner’s
evaluation and critique of the first 40 pages of my crime thriller were
invaluable. Her analysis, edits, and suggestions were excellent, and she
improved my manuscript tremendously. Working with her was a pleasure. She was
prompt, thorough, and incredibly insightful. I couldn’t be more pleased and
strongly recommend her editing services to all writers.” ~Mary Bush, December
2013
SHORT STORIES:
I have served as judge for
many short story contests, including for Writer’s Digest, The
Federation of BC Writers, and Word on the Lake Writers Festival. I have also
organized and edited two high-quality anthologies for charity, which included
several rounds of editing for each story accepted. I edit and critique short
fiction for contests or publication. My fees for a thorough,
comprehensive edit of your short story, including big-picture advice on fiction
techniques, content editing, stylistic editing and a final proofread, with
several rounds of back-and-forth until we both feel it’s ready, start at $0.02 per word and go up to $0.035 per word,
depending on how much work the story needs to bring it up a competitive level,
so from $100 to $175 for a 5,000-word short story, or $200
to $400 for 10,000 words. This includes several passes, with the manuscript
going back and forth in between. I’ll do a short sample edit for you first.
For more detailed
information on manuscript critiques or my editing services, please contact
Jodie at j.renner.editing@hotmail.com. If your writing
intrigues me, I’ll be open to negotiation on the price.
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