The editor's red pen

I substituted for an English teacher Friday. Since my students were occupied with tests and research papers, I was free to edit. I cut, rearranged and added words through 69 pages, finishing the book as school day expired. My eyes were bleary, but I was happy. I can see the end of her project. After five (or more) readings, we are nearing the point of diminishing returns. A graphic arts student at Marilyns college has designed one preliminary cover with another design upcoming. Soon, we will be able to put together the book. I can hardly wait.
I always have enjoyed editing. This skill came naturally to me. Even in grade school, I edited my classmates work. I could hear proper English in my ears and envision it on the page. If any question arose, I had only to close my eyes and mentally move around the words, both visually and audibly, until I saw or heard the answer. This trick rarely failed me.
My parents deserve credit. I was immersed in proper English grammar and syntax at home. My mother was a stickler for proper speech. Dad loved word play. They read to me and I learned to read early. Since we owned no television until I was in junior high, reading was my main entertainment. The flow of words deeply imprinted my mind. I loved to escape into the authors world and I loved to create my own. Words were my toys.
Playing with words still is pure joy, and editing my dear friends book is a high privilege. Thanks, Marilyn.
2 Comments:
In a former life I frequently edited employee's work. I did a job on a speech a dean was preparing (with red pen rather than blue pencil) and when he got it back he said it looked like somebody had killed a chicken on his paper!
I'm sure Marilyn feels about the same when she receives her Word document full of red bracketed passages and red strike throughs.
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