Sharing a draft of your novel with anyone for the first time can be scary. The stress of waiting to hear back from your readers or editor, of worrying about what they might say, and wondering if your writing is ready to submit can take its toll.
So why would you share your work with anyone before you’ve revised your first draft, improved it, making sure it’s as good as you can make it before anyone else reads it?
You wouldn’t. That’s why you rewrite.
Rewrite: to write (something) again especially in a different way in order to improve it or to include new information – Merriam-Webster Dictionary
A comprehensive rewrite is the first step in the self-editing process. I’m not talking about copyediting or proofreading. You can do that after you’ve completed your rewrite.
Rewriting your first draft means analyzing your story from a high-level perspective and fixing…
Source: Feedback For Fiction | Rewriting: What Is it And How Do You Go About It?
Hmm, I think most of us (we?) writers could use some serious “Feedback!” 🙂
–Michael
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Thank you, Michael. Love your play on words.
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