Monday, October 11, 2010

Experiences in Editing

For the past few weeks we've been working hard to pick submissions for Dust and Fire and it's been a fun experience. I'm one of those people who have a hard time saying no to anything, but I found it was easy to do that with these submissions. As with other groups, there were probably those obvious "no" pieces, and absolute "yes" pieces. I was afraid that I would not say no to enough pieces. (I remember I said no to an entire packet that was still on its first read.) We obvious had too many prose pieces in the end and had a dificult time narrowing it down to what we now have.
It was hard to decide what exactly was a no or a yes. I felt like I was using a mental number scale while rating each piece. Like 1 was a no and 10 was a yes. On a lot of pieces I felt like giving it a 7 or 8, or maybe a 3 or 4 and there was a lot of 5s. I felt that those pieces could have gone in there or they didn't and I had to look at it again and force myself to decide. Or I waited until other people said yes or no to make my decision.
It's hard being a first-timer because I'm unsure of what exactly we all want in the anthology. I guess I say that because I'm not a big advocate for much. That's probably makes me sounds boring, and if it does, too bad. If I absolute love something then I'll say something, but other than that, I don't care much. I look for things that I am interested in, things that I haven't experienced before. I enjoy learning new things. For example, there was a piece set in Duluth, MN. I was born there and have lived in or around Duluth for most of my life. I wasn't as interested in the piece as other submissions. Same as stories about winter, the outdoors or Bemidji. Don't get me wrong, if the writing was beautiful, I did enjoy it but not as much as others.

1 comment:

  1. This is all a process. The more you read, the more you are able to tell what makes one piece of writing move you when another doesn't. It's good to listen to people when they talk about what they admire or dislike in pieces -- it's how you begin to form your own aesthetic.

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