Waubonsee Community College

The Chicago guide to copyediting fiction, Amy J. Schneider

Label
The Chicago guide to copyediting fiction, Amy J. Schneider
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The Chicago guide to copyediting fiction
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1346152881
Responsibility statement
Amy J. Schneider
Series statement
Chicago guides to writing, editing, and publishing
Summary
"Although The Chicago Manual of Style is widely used by writers and editors of all stripes, it is primarily geared toward nonfiction. In this book, Amy J. Schneider--who has copyedited fiction in all genres, from mystery and romance to literary fiction, including many bestsellers--provides a companion to the Manual for those working on fiction. Hers is the first guide designed specifically for this major segment of the editorial community. Schneider highlights and offers advice on issues unique to fiction, such as how to deal with various types of dialogue and when incomplete and ungrammatical sentences are acceptable. She discusses best practices for conscious language issues that are increasingly important to authors, publishers, and readers. She also explains the larger purpose and vastly expanded scope of style sheets in editing fiction, illustrating how to track the details of fictional characters, places, and events to ensure continuity across a work or a series. And she covers workflow and administrative practices that work well for the fiction editing process, based on her own 25 years of experience as a freelancer working for publishers large and small"--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Introduction -- Part I: The process of copyediting fiction. The fiction copyeditor's mindset -- The fiction copyeditor's workflow -- Part II: Building your fiction style sheet. General style -- Characters -- Places -- Timeline -- Part III. Editorial issues specific to fiction. Grammar and usage in fiction -- Copyediting dialogue -- When fact and fiction collide -- Conclusion
Classification
Content
Mapped to

Incoming Resources