Tactical Tuesdays: Advice for Self-Editing

Tactical Tuesdays: Advice for Self-Editing

Clichés. We’ve all heard about them. Most writers cringe when an editor or critique partner points out a cliché line like “a penny saved is a penny earned.” Sometimes it’s best to delete a cliché from a manuscript, but sometimes just the right line will allow an author to amp…

Clichés. We’ve all heard
about them. Most writers cringe when an editor or critique partner points out a
cliché line like “a penny saved is a penny earned.”
Sometimes it’s best to
delete a cliché from a manuscript, but sometimes just the right line will allow
an author to amp up the cliché and make it fresh and new. What if an author has
a cynical character standing in the grocery line? He’s holding out his hand in
order to receive a mere penny in change. The cashier looks at
him as if to say, “Mister, really? You want the penny?” He takes it from her
and with a smirk holds it above the little cup left there for other customers
to dig out of when they’re short a few cents. “A penny saved is a penny given
to the poor sap who didn’t earn enough.” Plink.
He drops the penny into the cup.
Clichés can also
encompass more than a line in a manuscript. An entire character may be cliché.
For example, if I mentioned the name Snidely Whiplash, what picture comes to
mind? A mustache that curls at its ends, a black top hat and a coat to match. A
man standing over poor Pauline, the hapless, and also cliché, heroine he’s tied
to the railroad tracks.
Unless the story is a
parody, a Snidely Whiplash-type villain just isn’t going to work. So what can
be done with him and with other cliché characters? Turn those characters inside
out. Rather than a handlebar mustaches and an evil laugh, Snidely has a smooth
baby face with blue eyes that can charm most women into doing anything he
wants. His laugh is soothing and draws people in. The heroine comes to believe
he’s the man she wants to take home to meet mother. He’s so perfect, and his
name is Brian or Josh or David—nothing to make the reader assume his villainy.
Then little by little,
we see his imperfections. We get a look into the evil that dwells just beneath
the surface, and we scream for Pauline (who also isn’t a helpless heroine. She’s
smart, and crafty, and she’ll be able to get away with or without help from a
hero) to run as fast as she can.
When editing, authors
should look for familiar and overused lines to either delete, change, or
whenever possible amp up with a new twist. Characters should be examined to
determine if anything about them is cliché. If so, add a little twist to the
character and bring someone new to life.
Happy editing.

0 Comments

Other Articles of Interest

Bayou, Boots & Belief: Inside the Heart of Blue Jean Bayou

Bayou, Boots & Belief: Inside the Heart of Blue Jean Bayou

On the surface, Blue Jean Bayou by Janis Jakes is a slow-burn contemporary romance, but it doesn't take long to notice the richness behind the genre. It's a story about the wounds we carry from early loss, the identities we build to survive them, and the grace that...

read more
Anita Klumpers on Faith, Small Towns, and Killing Spring

Anita Klumpers on Faith, Small Towns, and Killing Spring

Some stories arrive dressed as mysteries but turn out to be something far richer, like meditations on grace, community, and the stubborn persistence of hope in the face of old wounds. Killing Spring by Anita Klumpers is that kind of story, but then, that's just the...

read more
Pelican Book Group Official Blog