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Hire a Proofreader
by Dan Poynter
Do not try to proof your own work. You are too close to the manuscript and will
miss some typographical errors. You need a professional with fresh eyes to proof
your work.
Your computer’s spelling and grammar checkers are good for a first pass, but
never rely on them exclusively. In fact, these computer marvels often teach us
more about the language but they are not perfect. So use them for a first pass.
Jan Nathan, Executive Director of the Publishers Marketing Association, tells of
an author/publisher who had his book professionally designed but decided to cut
corners on proofreading. He relied on his computer’s spellchecker.
After printing 5,000 copies, a colleague pointed out some misspelled words, both
on the cover and inside. For example, the spellchecker did not catch the
misspelling of “Foreword”. All 5,000 covers announced the “Forward” by a very
prominent person. By the way, this is a very common spelling mistake in books.
When you publish a book, it's the world's book. The world edits it. —Philip
Roth, New York Times Book Review.
Make sure your proofreader uses standard proofreading marks so the corrections
will be clear to all. For a chart of proofreader’s marks, see your dictionary
under (where else?) "proofreader's marks".
Mother Nature’s Nursery Rhymes, a children’s poetry book, was done. Bill Sheehan
was hand-carrying the art to his printer in Hong Kong. During the long flight,
he noticed that bees and their activity were mentioned in a poem on page 15, but
there were no bees in the accompanying illustration. Upon landing, he called
Itoko Maeno, the illustrator, back at Advocacy Press in Santa Barbara. She
suggested copying a bee from a previous page. Bill had the printer make the
addition and that change saved the day.
There is more to proofing than just punctuation and spelling. And, it is never
too late to proofread—again.
Do not skimp on proofreading. It is far more expensive to take ink off paper
than to put it on. Make the book right. The more eyes the better.
*****************
Dan
Poynter does not want you to die with a book still inside you. You have the
ingredients and he has your recipe. Dan has written more than 100 books since
1969 including Writing Nonfiction and The Self- Publishing Manual. For more help
on book writing, see
http://ParaPub.com. © 2003