Books for kids, teens, & those who are young at heart

Meet Kai Strand author of Beware of the White

Today I’m doing an interview over at the new MuseItUp Young and YA blog. In my absence, please welcome fellow Muser Kai Strand, author of the middle grade fantasy Beware of the White (check out my Goodreads review), as she discusses her editorial process. 

DO THE HARD WORK

Hi everybody! I’m Kai Strand, author of the newly released middle grade fantasy adventure, Beware of the White. I’m thrilled to be on Katie’s blog. Katie was my content editor for Beware of the White and she helped me SO much!

I have a love/hate relationship with editing. I cannot stand the initial revisions, the first pass review that follows the creative high of the first draft. As painfully boring as those revisions are to me, I understand they are crucial to the process. I have great critique partners and I don’t want to jeopardize our working relationship by sending them work I haven’t done due diligence in. It is disrespectful of their time and expertise to send sloppy work.

Once I get their input, I enjoy the editing process again. I like to see how they suggest improvement to the storyline or character development. I love to see where they melt over a character or shake a fist in frustration. I even find the occasional question mark (the ‘what-exactly-do-you-mean-here’ question mark) challenging. As an author, it isn’t my job to defend my work, it is my job to make the story and characters clear to the reader so that no defense is required.

After that, I usually go into another funk of  ‘this is so boring’ as I prepare the manuscript for submission. Once I get an editor assigned from the publisher I fall back in love again. I love when an editor really challenges me to improve the book. I love wanting to tear my hair out because it feels like so much work after having put in so much work already. Because I know that will make it a stronger story that will resonate with the reader.

So here comes my last hateful relationship with the editing process. The hard work. Ah, you thought I already mentioned the hard work above, huh? There is one more crucial step. When a content editor reads your work, she examines the story for logic, gaps, motivation. She notes if the pace falls off, mentions an awkward dialogue exchange, points out where your heroine suddenly jumps out of character. You fix the things she mentions and the two of you exchange the manuscript a few times to tweak and refine your words. The line editor points out all of your misuse of commas, grammatical errors, and tweaks to the formatting.

But wait…who is making sure that after all these changes, the words still flow? OH! The author. Before those final edits are turned in, do the hard work and read your story aloud. When you are micro-editing it is so easy to edit in duplicate words or phrases, awkward transitions or a different writing voice. The only way to make absolutely certain the edits are a success is to start at the beginning and read all the way to the end. And do it OUT LOUD! Don’t cry. I know it’s a lot of work, but your story will be stronger for it. I promise.

About Beware of the White:

As is tradition, Terra learns on the Saturday past her twelfth birthday that she is a Natures Spirit. It is her legacy to serve in the peaceful underground city of Concord. Learning she is named in a prophecy and being threatened by the leader of the death tribe…that part breaks tradition.

The Trepidus are the death janitors of the Underworld, responsible for delivering fatalities with a smile and cleaning up after themselves until Blanco, recent leader of the Trepidus, decides the day of reckoning for his species is coming. He begins organizing the creatures and leads them toward an uprising. The prophecy says there is one person who can stop him. Terra.

With Spirit of Security, Frank, protecting her, Terra attempts to complete her training and discover her Spirit talents. Together, they go on a rogue investigation to learn how to defeat Blanco. In the end, it comes down to a battle of the minds. The future of Concord is at stake. Will Blanco, the older, more experienced being win? Or will Terra, the young, new Spirit earn back the peace of the city?

Buy It:

MuseItUp Publishing

Amazon

Barnes & Noble

To celebrate the launch of BEWARE OF THE WHITE, Kai Strand has awesome book related prize packages. Be sure to enter to win. And return again and again to claim entries as you qualify. Kai will also have Spontaneous Giveaways during her book tour. Those giveaways won’t be announced so be sure to follow Kai’s tour. Only virtual stalkers will have the opportunity at all the fun!

About the author:

Kai Strand writes fiction for kids and teens. Her debut novel, The Weaver, was a finalist in the 2012 EPIC eBook Awards. She is a (very lucky) wife and the mother of four amazing kids. The most common sound in her household is laughter. The second most common is, “Do your dishes!” She and her family hike, geocache, and canoe in beautiful Central Oregon, where they call home.

To find out more about Kai’s books, download companion documents, find links to her published short stories and discover all the places to find Kai both virtually and in person, visit her website: www.kaistrand.com. She loves to hear from readers, so feel free to send her an email or visit her facebook page, Kai Strand, Author.

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25 Comments

  1. Katie L. Carroll

    Thanks for being on the blog today, Kai…and thanks for being a wonderful author to work with. I hope many, many, many readers meet (and fall love with) Terra and Frank. 🙂

  2. Suzanne de Montigny

    I so agree about reading the story out loud. It’s amazing how many awkward things come out when you read aloud.

    • Katie L. Carroll

      Yes, reading aloud (or having your computer read it to you) is a very useful tool.

  3. Kai Strand

    Thank you for having me, Katie and for your hard work.

    Suzanne, it’s good to know I’m not the only one sitting on the couch yammering aloud – constantly! Oh, I mean editing.

  4. Mary Waibel

    Great interview Katie and Kai.

    I never realized until recently how much you can catch by reading it aloud! Good advice.

  5. Meradeth

    That first pass through a story can be so frustrating! I am not a big fan of it either 🙂 I definitely agree on read out loud–it’s amazing what you catch that way!

    • Kai Strand

      Nice to hear someone shares my aversion to that first trudge through the muck. Thanks for visiting, Meradeth.

  6. Kelly Hashway

    Huge congrats to Kai!

    • Kai Strand

      Thank you, Kelly!

  7. Erin

    Good information, Kai! I like to act out scenes from my stories sometimes! LOL! 😉

    • Kai Strand

      That sounds like fun, Erin. I know sometimes I act out the action I’m trying to describe – which can be entertaining if I’m writing in a coffee shop and suddenly start making faces or gestures. Thanks for visiting!

      • Erin

        I know people must think I’m crazy when I’m out in public talking to myself too! 😉

    • Katie L. Carroll

      That does sound fun, Erin. I’d love to find the time to do that with my own stories.

      • Erin

        Katie- I do it while I put on my makeup and flat iron my hair! LOL! 🙂

  8. Sharon Ledwith

    Never thought of reading the entire manuscript out loud! You’re right, that is hard work! I guess I’ll make sure I have some throat lozenges in the house! Cheers for an excellent post, Kai!

    • Kai Strand

      Hot tea works well too. Ha ha. Thanks for stopping in, Sharon.

    • Katie L. Carroll

      Hi, Sharon…thanks for stopping by!

  9. Rick Taliaferro

    Hi Kai,
    Congrats on the publication!
    I like all the phases of writing, but yeah, sometimes I have the old love-hate relationship with the editor, especially the ever-present one who sits on your shoulder. Speaking of edits — don’t hate me, but, ahem, “When a content editor reads your work, she exams the story for logic, gaps, motivation.”
    Regarding reading your draft outloud, or having it read to you… this might be old news, but in Adobe Acrobat Pro, there’s a feature that reads a PDF outloud. The voice is robotic, but it’s one way to get an objective, cold, hearing of your work. (Adobe can convert various formats to PDF.)
    Well, hope you have many more publications.

    Cheers,
    Rick

    • Kai Strand

      Hey Rick. I don’t hate you for pointing out my mistake. I’m always making them. A big reason I need an editor. I don’t like the robotic voice of the readers, but I know other people use them. My kids will take turns reading a chapter or two also, which I enjoy.

    • Katie L. Carroll

      Well, I maybe I should start “exams” a story.:) I went in and changed it to examines. BTW, I make mistakes all the time…one reason why I tend to stick to content editing instead of line editing…line editing kind of makes me cringe, though I’ll do it when I have to. The ebook version of Elixir Bound actually has a couple of minor errors in it (apparently I like to have things “peak” around corners!). Hopefully I’ll catch them all for the print version.

  10. Beth Overmyer

    I like editing–sometimes. It’s my way of procrastinating. I edit what I’ve already written instead of writing new words a lot of times *blush* Other times, I tear my hair out because it can be so overwhelming!

    • Katie L. Carroll

      Hi, Beth! Editing as procrastination…I love it…I’ve never quite heard of it in that way!

    • Kai Strand

      Yeah, I’ve never heard of editing being used for procrastination either. Facebook, maybe… I have to force myself to edit. Deadlines work so well for me because it is the thing I put off and put off. Thanks for visiting, Beth.

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