Showing posts with label proofreading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label proofreading. Show all posts

Friday, February 21, 2025

The Art of Adaptation - Authors' Response to External Pressures

Crazy Chaos by Yaoyao Ma Van As

Welcome, my readerly and writerly friends! Let's talk about another form of adaptation, the adjustments authors make when turning their manuscripts into books. 

It falls under the category of 'revision' and, there are multiple reasons to do it.

Adapting for Marketability

This form of adaptation falls squarely under Category #3 listed in the original post a response to external pressures. "It snowed so she put on her coat." 

Image from The Left Hand of Darkness

Here the snow is pressure to change some part of the submitted story. Putting on the coat is the willingness to make those changes.

Where does the 'snow' come from?

It might be the author's agent, suggesting changes that will make the work easier to sell. It might be the editorial department asking for a change that puts the work more in line with the imprint. Perhaps it is a more specific issue such as sensitivity readers catching where the book succumbs to stereotyping, racial profiling, cultural appropriation or biases (unless such writing is part of the character or story). 

Whatever the pressure, if it is meaningful to the book's publication and success, writers usually will adapt.

I mean, we want our stories to reach the readership in the best possible form.

Publishers are Gatekeepers

Remember, publishers are the gateway to the readers, even though their focus is on the business side of the equation.

The Gunslinger
NOTE: It's not irregular for a publisher to suggest changes to a work. Quite the opposite! It's expected. The editors are there to hone the story, find holes in the plot, suggest different structuring, snappier dialogue, more multifaceted characters etc. 

Most writers, famous or unknown, need this kind of support to do their best work. 

Hopefully, the suggested though often optional changes don't go too far, tipping over to censorship or removing the author's voice or style. 

Still, as said, even well-known authors will adapt. As an example, J K Rowling was asked to revise the HP series for greater suspense, repetition removal and the addition of details about certain characters. -From the Writer's Desk

It's known that Stephen King was asked to tone down the horror in some of his stories. Yikes!

Ursula K Le Guin was rejected outright for one of her most recognized works based on ... well, just about everything. The rejecting editor said:

" ... the book is so endlessly complicated by details of reference and information, the interim legends become so much of a nuisance despite their relevance, that the very action of the story seems to be to become hopelessly bogged down and the book, eventually, unreadable. The whole is so dry and airless, so lacking in pace, that whatever drama and excitement the novel might have had is entirely dissipated by what does seem, a great deal of the time, to be extraneous material. My thanks nonetheless for having thought of us. The manuscript of The Left Hand of Darkness is returned herewith."

Read the Process Online

To normalize this process a little more, Brandon Sanderson takes us step by step through his revision journey, a rare treat and up on his website for all to view. 

But sometimes it is too late for the author to adapt to changing society,  language, meaning and new publishing norms. 

When it is Too Late to Adapt

One example is the broadcaster Greg James who was criticised over a promotional video for the Roald Dahl novel, The Twits. Here it was suggested giving one of the principal characters a glass eye would make her disgusting - Rawlinson and Creamer

And, in February 2023, controversy followed a report that publishers at Penguin Random House were rereleasing books by Roald Dahl after sensitivity reader input. The changes included removing every instance of the words fat and ugly. So Augustus Gloop becomes “enormous,” and Mrs. Twit is “beastly” not “ugly and beastly.”  Some text was also added to The Witches: A passage about how witches are bald under their wigs now ends with, “There are plenty of other reasons why women might wear wigs and there is certainly nothing wrong with that.”  

Mrs. Twit et al

Do you think these are positive changes for young readers or a muffling of Dahl's edge?

Sensitivity Readers - Support or Censorship?

The same type of arguments were raised recently when Kathryn Stockett’s The Help was published in 2009. The book attracted huge commercial success but was also criticised. The key issue was that Stockett, a white middle-class American, wrote about African American maids working in white households in Mississippi in the 1960s. The book was accused by the African American community of being a "shallow portrayal of black people’s experiences in that setting and era."

And then, the 2019 novel American Dirt attracted harsh publicity for similar reasons. A story of a Mexican mother and her child's journey to the border after their family's murder, the book has been accused of clichéd writing, and tagged “opportunistic, selfish, and parasitic” while appropriating the stories of Mexican immigrants to America. 

But is Cummmins a middle-class white woman or a person of mixed race? Until the book’s release, she had identified as white but revealed in the lead-up to publication, and during the negative scrutiny, that she has a Puerto Rican grandmother. The timing may not have been perfect.

For or against, it didn't help mitigate the outcry. Cummins’ book tour was cancelled over concerns for her safety. Though, you can see on Goodreads that in spite of all, American Dirt has sold 2+ million copies.

Summary 

Ultimately, authors need to be flexible and at least consider suggestions made by their trusted proofers, editors and sensitivity readers. Better to have a chance to adapt to wider views of a rapidly changing market before the work goes to print than to try to edit editions years down the track. 

Have any of you, as readers and/or writers, seen cases where adapting to such pressures went too far? Not far enough?  

We'd love to hear about it in the comments.

xxKim

Other Posts in the Art of Adaptation 2025

January - The Art of Adaptation - Films in 2025

February - The Art of Adaptation - Authors' Response to External Pressures

March - The Art of Adaptation - The Healing Magic of KDrama

April - The Art of Adaptation -  Reader Persuasion

May - The Art of Adaptation - Fantasy Monsters Part 1

June - The Art of Adaptation - Fantasy Monsters Part 2 

July - The Art of Adaptation - Alternate History

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About Kim Falconer 


Kim Falconer, also writing as AK Wilder, has released Crown of Bones, a YA Epic Fantasy with Curse of Shadows as book 2 in the series. Currently, she is ready with the third book, out in 2025. TBA

Kim can be found on AKWilder.com, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and KimFalconer.com

Throw the bones on the AKWilder.com site See you there!



 


Saturday, July 16, 2022

The Road of Trials

Artist: Igor Morski 

Inspired by Helen Lowe and her Hero Series, today I'm writing about this wonderful journey we writers take when bringing a new book to life.

Joseph Campbell in his Hero of a Thousand Faces talks about how we are all on the hero's journey and knowing which stage we are in can be amazing support when things get challenging.

And holy moly, they do get challenging! 

Vi Vi Arcane 

I've discussed the stages of this mythic journey for writers, and though everyone has their own experiences, I think many will relate. (If you want to check out a full depiction of my first publishing journey, you can find it here - Writing and the Hero's Journey)

My most recent book has been a similar path, especially on the last Road of Trials. I wasn't sure I (or my book) would survive.

I'm talking about the Editing Process.

This is where the writer encounters a series of tests, tasks and ordeals in the form of editorial notes. If it's their first time, they walk in blind, like the Fool, because they thought once their manuscript was ‘completed’, all the hard work was done. 

Ha!

It has only just begun.

Example of COS Copyedits 

Depending on the publisher, the process can include many rounds of editing by different people - structural, line, copy and proofreading. All this happens under the looming 'hard deadline'. (They don't call it DEADline for nothing - it's do or die!)

Example of COS Proofreader Notes

To top it off, my editors for Curse of Shadows were all in different timezones. That meant, in the final days before the deadline, I caught quick naps between midnight and 2am. That was it...

But the results, I believe, are spectacular and I'm happy to announce that Curse of Shadows made it to the printers on time! 

Which puts me up on Cloud 9. Seriously, my feet have yet to touch the ground (see Refusal to Return after the Ultimate Boon.)

Out December 6, 2022

But return I must because the process starts all over again with the next book in the series.

Just not today. Not yet.

For now, I will continue to sup with the gods.

If you've yet to read Crown of Bones, it's on special now -- Kindle $2.80

Crown of Bones Special $2.80 on Kindle

And, if any of you are interested in an ARC - advanced reader copy - of Curse of Shadows, please email me with ARC for Curse of Shadows in the subject bar. Thanks!

And happy journeys.

xxkim

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Kim Falconer, currently writing as A K Wilder, has just released Crown of Bones, a YA Epic Fantasy with Curse of Shadows coming out December 6, 2022.

Kim can be found on  AKWilder TwitterFacebook and Instagram

Throw the bones, read your horoscopes or Raise Your Phantom on the AKWilder.com site