Friday, April 11, 2014

Editors Are Friends, Not Food

I recently posted a bit of flash fiction. I wrote that story for Lightspeed Magazine’s “Women Destroy Science Fiction” issue, due out this summer. They decided they weren’t interested, so I was free to publish it here. That is often the case with self-publishing: stories are rejected (for myriad reasons that don’t always involve the quality of the writing) but authors decide they really want their work to be read. I’m a huge proponent of self-publishing. I’m a bigger supporter, though, of self-publishing authors using editors.

I learned the hard way that no matter how many pairs of eyes read through your manuscript, mistakes slip through. This happens to all published works. Yes, mistakes happen even to the big boys. The goal with editors, though, is to limit the number of mistakes and improve the reading experience. When you sign a book deal with a major publisher, part of their cut of your royalties goes to pay for editors and proofreaders. When you are self-publishing, you need to spend this money up-front in order to realize the full potential of your book. Because, again, no matter how wonderful a writer you are, mistakes happen.

Just as self-publishers and small publishing houses have sprouted like mushrooms across a Seattle lawn, so too have small “mom and pop” businesses catering to these authors. Editors, proofreaders, cover artists, e-book formatters, even reviewers, offer their services to the mass of writers. I’ve been fortunate to meet many of these fine folk since my book launched in March of 2012. The editing group I’m writing about today, though, is headed by two people I’ve known for years. In this business, like in so many others, who you know is just as important as what you know.

I met Ed and Natalie Warneke through on-line gaming. After Dremiks was published, Ed came to me with several errors he’d found. I was properly mortified but also impressed by his thoroughness and professional demeanor. When Natalie approached me months later asking if I knew of anyone who’d be interested in paying for editing services, my answer was a resounding “YES”! After consulting current industry price points for both editing and proofreading (yes, there is a difference), crafting a website, and spending many hours networking on-line, the Warnekes launched Warneke Reading.

I could spend the next several paragraphs summarizing their website. However, as any good editor will tell you, it is better to show than to tell. Here, then, is an example of the edits made to my flash-fiction entitled “NBRUs”.






The Warnekes do more than just check for proper comma placement and count the number of spaces between sentences. They offer stylistic changes and are brutally honest when a passage makes absolutely no sense. Further down in the manuscript ( not pictured) they make this comment:
This sentence is confusing. In the beginning you make it sound as if none of the crew know the captain has been injured. If so, then how would this first officer know about the repair bot? Maybe you mean after the fact? Like the first officer might tear it apart after he found out it injured the captain? If so, this hasn’t happened yet.
Any writer will tell you that there are times when a sentence makes perfect sense in his or her head, but sounds like alien gibberish when written down. The Warnekes, and all good editors, catch those instances and bring them to your attention.

Another example of stylistic advice:
I know you don’t have the word space to explain this, but how come the first batch of bots had to be removed via syringe but the second just degrade?
While I absolutely fixed every single punctuation error that they caught, I picked which stylistic changes worked for the mood and purpose of my piece. This was a (very) short story that did not require much effort or consultation—but I know from experience that the Warnekes are willing to trade emails late into the night to explain their edits and suggestions. This was a professional editing job offered at a price well within a self-published author’s budget. Self-published authors absolutely must consult an editor, but there are financial limitations involved with that relationship. I’m happy to report that authors can find thorough, polite, informative, and knowledgeable editors at a price that won’t require a Kickstarter to cover fees.

We authors are very protective of our work. Our characters are our life-long friends and our plot points are absolutely, 100%, always necessary. Except… they aren’t. We don’t need editors governed by the price to print each word and thus ruthlessly chewing-up our prose with their red pens. On the flip side, we don’t need to be predators willing to maul anyone who dares to make a suggestion. This professional relationship only works when there is mutual acceptance of our roles. We cannot be sharks and clown fish and expect to produce a masterpiece. (That only works for Pixar.)

You can read more about the Warneke’s services on their website and connect with them on Facebook and Twitter.


No promotional consideration was given for this post.

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

NBRUs

A wee bit of flash fiction from the DREMIKS universe.

NBRUs


Human bodies are fragile things. I should know; I’ve been shot. Given that fragility, the dearth of human doctors in deep space has precipitated rapid advances in medical technology. We’ve developed ways for regular folks to treat all but the most grievous of injuries. In my med kit, I’ve got a little handheld unit for skin patches and grafts on superficial wounds. Those won’t be a damn bit of help for the 5-inch gash in my bicep. It requires internal muscle and blood vessel repair. For such invasive tasks the best minds in medicine have provided NBRUs (Nanomite Biological Repair Units for the blissfully unaware).
However useful these little wonders of modern tech are, their use isn’t something to contemplate lightly.  The nanomites were developed using Kigvan technology, and Kigvans, our alien allies, have no concept of pain. They find human pain responses to be endlessly fascinating but ultimately inconsequential to treatment. To break open a kit of NBRUs takes a dire need or a dangerous level of masochism. I’ve often been accused of the latter, but a 15-centimeter wide, titanium, bolt putting a hole where I didn’t need one definitely qualifies as “dire need”.
First step when using NBRUs is setting my bio-med chip to monitor blood pressure and cardiac rhythms. I also find it necessary to use the crew member alert function.  It’s generally a good idea for the crew to know when their captain passes out on the floor. Despite the fact there’s a pool of blood forming at my feet, I can’t pull any crew members off their tasks.  The engine has to be fixed or we all die a cold and lonely death. Honestly, if my Kigvan first officer, Karzak, was here he’d spend half the time reminding me how he recommended against using the engine repair robot that shot this bolt at me.
There are now several different pain sensations occurring simultaneously within my body. Severed nerves around the tear cause a dull ache. The deeper tissue wound feels like I’ve poured bourbon into it. Then there’s the roiling nausea of anticipation of how much more this will hurt once I actually start fixing it. Admittedly, some of the nausea might be due to blood loss.
I have to attach the migratory collar above the wound. NBRUs travel through the human body quicker than a heartbeat. Unfortunately for the human whose body is being repaired, the little devils don’t always stay where the wound is. They like to travel and “fix” other areas of the body. As I don’t really have time for a frontal lobotomy today, I’ll use the collar. It closes around my arm with a metallic snick and adjusts until it’s tight. I should point out that the collar prevents the NBRUs from traveling by zapping them with a targeted bolt of electricity.  Basically, it’s shocking me every half second. Now I’m twitching and flicking blood in an interesting arc across the floor.
The NBRU kit includes several metal cylinders the length of my index finger, a spray canister, and several syringes of fluid. There’s also an instructional hologram that auto-plays upon opening, but I close that immediately. The overly cheerful med-tech’s instructions would induce more rage than is healthy for my current cardiac state. I grab a vial marked Hemo-bot, twist off the cap with my good hand, and pour the contents into my wound. The NBRUs are too miniscule to see, of course, but they are transported into my body via a saline solution.
A bit of the solution splashes up near the collar. That produces a more powerful shock and elicits several choice words about the parentage of medical device manufacturers. Blood vessel repairs take a few minutes, so I flop into a chair to wait it out. My bio-chip chirps as my blood pressure improves. I try not to think about the microscopic little robots swirling through my bloodstream. They’re designed to travel through veins, arteries and capillaries, repairing tears and cleaning out foreign particles. Unfortunately, they won’t break down for natural reabsorption.  I have to extract the bots to avoid causing a deadly clot.
When my blood pressure readout and a quick pass of a scanner over my wound indicates that the bleeding has stopped, I grab a syringe from the kit. It’s labeled Hemo-bot Removal. Right above it is nestled a small metal disk.  I fumble that twice--my hands are slippery from the saline solution and my own blood--before slapping it against the back of my hand. I’ve been told many times, with lots of condescension, that the removal system is not a magnet. I’m sure the instructional video tells me how the little disk works to draw all the hemo-bots to one section of my arm so that I can extract them, but “it’s a special kind of magnet” works for me. Gritting my teeth, I wait for a lump to form under the metal disk. Once all of the bots are clumped up in one area, I jab the syringe in and pull them out.
I’m no longer in danger of bleeding out all over my stateroom, but the pain continues to intensify and I can still see torn bits of muscle and flesh inside the open wound. Oh, and the damn collar is still shocking the crap out of my arm at regular intervals. That’s actually serving a dual purpose now, as the constant low-level electrocution keeps me from passing out. I have to stay awake just a few more minutes.
Step two of open wound treatment involves another vial of NBRUs. This container is marked Tissue Repair. Apparently “Flesh Bots” had improper connotations. The conveying solution for these bots is gelatinous.  It oozes out of the vial and seeps into the jagged edges of my wound. The appearance of the gel is the least disturbing aspect of these bots. All of the accompanying information repeatedly assures users of NBRUs that they are too miniscule to feel as they crawl through the body. That’s utter bullshit.
Previously dulled nerves reignite in searing waves of agony the length of my arm. Bile rises far enough in my throat to make me gag. A trillion microscopic fire ants have just taken up residence in my body, and they are making a new home out of my tattered muscle fiber. I bite down so hard on my lip that blood seeps across my teeth and tongue. The small monitoring chip in my wrist chimes a warning about my heart rate. I can’t focus the energy to turn it off.
As distracting as the waves of pain are, I am not immune to the disquieting sight of my wound stitching itself back together. After just a minute, I can no longer see into the gash. At the two minute and thirty second mark, there is only an angry red zigzag where the open wound once was. These NBRUs, their job completed, will degrade into simple salts and water over the next twenty-four hours.
Wrung out, shaking, and nauseated, I weakly push the red button on the metal device still encircling my arm.  One final shriek inducing shock travels down my arm. I can only hope that all the bots are disabled, because there’s no way in hell I’m repeating that step. The collar detaches with a soft click and clatters onto the floor. Before I join the discarded devices, vials, and gauze down there on the floor, I inject antibiotics and painkillers into my uninjured arm. The wound still needs a skin graft ointment, but I just don’t have the willpower.
I actually manage to stumble to my bunk. Right before my tunneling vision blacks out entirely, I spare a final curse for robots of all sizes.  Human beings might be fragile things, but we’re resilient too. That’s a fact I intend to demonstrate to a certain engine repair bot, just as soon as I’m conscious again.