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Editing Fact and Fiction : A Concise Guide to Book Editing |
List Price: $31.99
Your Price: $31.99 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: A Great Teaching Tool Review: As an editor, I'm always amazed at how few texts are out there to teach young editors how to edit. I discovered this book, when it was first published years ago, and gave it to my junior staff to read and, hopefully, teach them the basic principles of editing. Which it did, really well. I went back looking for it again, and I was amazed and delighted that it's still in print (though it could indeed us an update in the tech chapter especially). But the core chapters--on principles, senses, and sensibility--are still solid, fresh, and very, very useful. I'm going to recommend it to this new generation of editors. And I'm so pleased it's still around!
Rating: Summary: Well Worth the Purchase Review: One Stop shopping for editing information. This is a great tool for beginning editors and writers. The book is concise, easily readable and contains a wealth of information about the editing role in publishing. There is also great insight and tips for freelance editing and excellent reference information in the back. This is the best book of its type that I've come across to date.
Rating: Summary: Well Worth the Purchase Review: One Stop shopping for editing information. This is a great tool for beginning editors and writers. The book is concise, easily readable and contains a wealth of information about the editing role in publishing. There is also great insight and tips for freelance editing and excellent reference information in the back. This is the best book of its type that I've come across to date.
Rating: Summary: An Editing Classic Review: This is an editing book that practices what it preaches--it's well written as well as well edited. Most of all, it's the first book I've found that tells exactly what editors do--or, more to the point, exactly what editors should do and just don't these days. That, is, edit, and not write--that is, intervene, without changing the author's words or meaning. At a time when both editing and writing are on the decline, this book seems to me to be even more relevant than when it was published, nearly ten years ago. No wonder that it's still in print, but I would advise the publisher (Cambridge University Press) to get the authors to do a new edition. The chapter on technology is out of date, and the freelance chapter needs to be updated too. But for the core chapters on editing principles and philosophy, this book is the best I've read!
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