How I edit

Editing, a process I love to hate, is perhaps the most important tool in a writer’s arsenal. What I absolutely love about editing is the process of finding the hidden diamond in a chunk of ore and how my piece evolves after every readthrough.

What I consequently hate about the process is how it can seem never ending, tiresome and just creating more problems than it solves!

Here’s my method to the madness of editing:

Walk away

I factor in that I will need time to put my post on the back burner for a while as I plan my post. So, if I have to post on Monday, my post is written by Saturday morning and then goes into editing by evening.

For novels, I stay away for at least a week as I distract myself with Netflix and chill.

First readthrough

Read and make corrections along the way โ€“ repeated words, wrong punctuation, grammar, spellings, etc. At this stage, my major concern is does it make sense. Is it worth publishing?

Second readthrough

Here my focus is removing unnecessary information to make the writing as crisp and tight as possible. I also check the words I have used. For example, saying he was angry vs. he was enraged have different connotations. Sometimes it is enough to say she was scared while sometimes it is important to say her mouth was dry and her heart was beating faster.

Third readthrough

By this time, a blog post is almost ready. This is usually done on a different medium, phone in the case of a blog post, Kindle in the case of a novel. Major reason being to distract the eye to catch mistakes.

My focus on this readthrough:

  1. For a nonfiction blog post that the conclusion works, or that there is a conclusion.
  2. For a fiction blog post that the story is well-rounded and doesn’t end with the reader feeling like they have hit a brick wall.
  3. For novels, chapter endings. I have come to realize that chapters are mini books in themselves and as such must serve some purpose in the overall narrative of the story.

Second opinion

For blog posts, I rarely ask for a second opinion, unless I know it doesn’t work but I don’t want to trash it and need someone else to tell me what I already know!

For novels, it is crucial to get a second opinion from a pair of eyes you trust.

Gap between the readthroughs depends on how much time I have. For novels, I try to keep at least a month in between if I have that luxury. If not, at least 3-4 days. For blog posts, an hour or 2 works. I usually re-read one last time before hitting the publish button.

When I am pressed for time and cannot go through the above process, I have found hearing the piece through word doc’s Read Aloud feature is a heaven-sent miracle.

One question I often struggle with is when do you stop editing. I havenโ€™t found a proper answer for that yet. For now, I only stop once I am satisfied with the piece.

So there, as promised, that’s how I edit my writing. How about you? Do you enjoy editing your piece?


The whole of September, I will be sharing posts on things I have learnt about writing. I am taking my blog to the next level with Blogchatterโ€™s #MyFriendAlexa.

22 responses to “How I edit”

  1. In the start, I use to take the second opinion but now anymore and take help of Grammarly instead.
    http://www.shaandaarjenie.com

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    1. Don’t actively use Grammarly but have used it before. It’s an amazing tool.

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  2. alpanadeo Avatar

    Editing is very important before we hit the publish button. I usually keep my posts in draft and come back to them the next day. It gives me a fresh outlook. So far it has worked for me.

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    1. Stepping away from what you have written is crucial. Works for me too ๐Ÿ™‚

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  3. Editing is an unexplored territory for me. I get an idea and I flush it out on word/ gmail draft in a go. Then i just go through it once before submitting and I am done. off late, i i am trying to be more patient with my work and give atleast a day to editing. Shutting off completely and coming back to it might help. As a writer, we get so much into the idea that we feel that it is nothing less than the best. it is only if we manage to see from a 3rd person’s eye, we realise the truth! Second opinion does make a lot of difference.

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    1. You are so right Supriti! We do think we have the best ideas but only a second and third viewing tells us that it may not be as good as we had thought it was. That’s why I always feel I am my best and worst critic.

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  4. Editing is a daunting task for me. I tend to edit so much at-times that the crux goes missing. Even after hitting publish I get a scope of edits in the post, which do scare me. Let’s try your tips for the next one.

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    1. Yes that is one thing you have to be careful about editing – to not over edit. Glad to know you’re going to try the tips mentioned. Let me know how they work out for you.

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  5. Editing is surely the most important part before publishing your work. Every writer comes across some edits before the final publishing happens. Reading on a different medium and listening to one’s blog post are good ideas that I am going to try.

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    1. So glad you found the pointers useful Geethica! And thank you for the reading marathon.

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  6. I am always hitting the preview mode multiple times to see how the blog post will look. It’s mostly in the preview mode that I catch the errors and some just like the first mentioned point, walk away ๐Ÿ™‚
    #myepicareads #MyFriendAlexa

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    1. I love the preview mode as well! Use it a little too much and yes seeing it as the final product does help in catching mistakes.

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  7. I always make my mom read my blog posts before I publish them. It has become a sort of a habit now.

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    1. I do that too sometimes. Moms work as excellent benchmarks, no?

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      1. Definitely!

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  8. Enjoyed your post, Suchita. I use a similar process for designing as well. Only that the client’s revisions are incorporated in it too.

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    1. Oh that is so cool! Interesting to note that creative processes more or less work in a similar way. Eesh client changes – hope you have decent clients ๐Ÿ™‚

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  9. I have a love-rate relationship with editing too. I’m not a big fan of editing but it is a necessary evil. I didn’t know about the read aloud feature.

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    1. Necessary evil is right! Read aloud feature is amaze. Try it.

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      1. I’ll definitely try it. But I mostly write through my phone these days. I take out the laptop only for editing-heavy works. With flash fiction, editing is a lot easier. ๐Ÿคญ

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  10. Its always fun to read about how people edit.The second opinion is difficult for a blog post thought.

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    1. Yup which is why I do it very rarely. Thanks for stopping by Amrita ๐Ÿ™‚

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