Lisa Wrote:Thanks for posting the edits! You should post some more
Okay. One more.
As you can see, I'm doing a very close line edit -- I find my rampant use of the passive voice back then appalling. Plus the novel is overwritten, so I'm tightening up the prose. It still won't be as lean and mean as the books from LEGACIES onward, but at least stylistically closer.
I'm also tweaking the Rakoshi myth and changing the caliber of some of the weaponry. I've found a few anachronisms I missed in the 1998 version. They've been zapped.
I'm catching embarrassing redundancies: people crouching down, smoke rising up, the dying mother rakosh falling to her death "trailing smoke and flame behind her." (Like where else would she trail them? Ahead of her? Nice trick.)
The good news is I've found I don't have to change the characters. At all. They hold up just fine. The problem was all the excess verbiage I forced them (and the reader) to wade though.
If nothing else, this process has shown me that I'm a better writer now than I was in the early eighties. And I'm still learning.
BEFORE: (comments in paras)
Oil. Fire! He finally had a weapon—if it was not too late. The Mother had pulled herself almost to within reach of the roof edge. He twisted at the metal cap, but it wouldn't budge—it was rusted shut. In desperation he slammed the edge of the cap twice against the generator and tried again. Pain shot through the earlier wound in his palm, but he kept up the pressure. Finally it came loose and he was up and scrambling across the roof, unscrewing the cap as he moved, thanking Con Ed for the last blackout—if there hadn't been a blackout
,(didn’t I just mention a blackout?) the tenants wouldn't have chipped in for an emergency generator, and Jack would have been completely defenseless now.
(that’s obvious)
AFTER:
Oil. Fire!
He finally had a weapon—if it wasn’t too late.
The Mother had pulled herself almost to within reach of the roof edge. He twisted at the metal cap but it wouldn't budge—rusted shut. In desperation he slammed the edge of the cap twice against the generator and tried again. Pain shot through the earlier wound in his palm, but he kept up the pressure. Finally it came loose and he was up and scrambling across the roof, unscrewing the cap as he moved, thanking the faulty power grip for the last blackout. Without it, he and the other tenants wouldn't have chipped in for an emergency generator.