Developmental Editing: How to Find the Narrative Arc

Reshape every piece of writing to produce a smooth and compelling presentation.

Ratings: 5.00 / 5.00




Description

If you want to master developmental editing, whether in your own work or editing someone else's, this is the course for you. The focus will be on non-fiction writing, but many of the points can be useful for editing fiction writing as well (I do both).

In this course, we will begin with an overview of all types of editing. Then we take a deep dive into developmental editing, where we will look at how to organize information, different ways to read the text, and techniques for creating a narrative flow out of any argument. Finally, we will touch on line editing and look at some classic blunders that make a piece less readable and how to avoid them.

After completing this course, you should be able to take any piece of writing, figure out its main flow, decide on the most compelling way to present the information, argument, or story, identify which details are most pertinent and/or interesting and which are superfluous or off-message, and decide how to put it all back together into a cohesive piece.

An editor is like a lawyer for the piece, and we want to do our best to make our clients come out looking as good as they can, including and especially if we are our own clients.

What You Will Learn!

  • Determine the main theme of a piece
  • Restructure an article or chapter
  • Rewrite material crisply and cleanly
  • Wordsmithing a piece for greater clarity and readability

Who Should Attend!

  • If you are a professional editor or just helping someone polish their work, the course will be very useful. It can also be helpful for people editing their own work. My main focus is non-fiction, but much of it can be used on fiction as well.