by Bethany Maines
Remember in school when the teacher would say those dreaded
five words? “This is a group project.” Your mind races into overdrive as you
scan the class room, searching for the few students who will hit trifecta of
smart enough, pulls their own weight, and doesn’t have BO. Select outside of
those parameters are a host of problems - too smart, too lazy, too socially
active, too socially impaired and the group will flounder and fail. A group
project is always a dual assignment: how well can you do the work and how well
can you work together? And we all think, “I cannot wait to get out of school,
so I never have to do another group project.”
Except, of course, that the joke is on us. Every job, with the
possible exception of Ranger Gord of the Canadian forest service, requires that
you have contact with someone to get the
job done. Ranger Gord, in case you haven’t watched the Canadian comedy show Red
Green, is a Forest Service Ranger who has been staring at the trees so long that
he now believes they talk to him and that some are possibly out to get him. You
would think that a writer and Ranger Gord would have about the same amount of
human contact, but the more I write the more I realize that writing truly is a
group project. Admittedly, I do the majority of the work and then I pass it out
to several people just so they can point out problems with my beautiful
manuscript. But those beta readers, agents, and editors do not have an easy
task. For one thing they have to deal with someone who thinks those beech trees
look suspicious and that her villain is attempting a coup to take over the
book, but beyond that they have to think critically about questions that a
casual reader can simply take for granted. For the end reader, the questions
have been answered, the decisions made, but the beta reader has to ask all the
difficult questions about when characters know something, does the timeline
actually work out, do the actions taken make sense, and the all important
question: “Why do you keep using that word? I do not think it means, what you
think it means.”
And so, as I round out the final edits on my next book (High-CaliberConcealer out in November 2015), I must thank all my readers, editors, and my oh,
so persnickety copyeditor who corrects my egregious use of their, there, and they’re.
Thank you all!
Bethany Maines is the author of the Carrie
Mae Mysteries, Tales from the City of
Destiny and An Unseen Current.
You can also view the Carrie Mae youtube video
or catch up with her on Twitter and Facebook.
Anyone who can reference Ranger Gord AND Princess Bride in the same blog post deserves a second look. ;-)
ReplyDeleteAnd I've always felt the same way about group projects.
LOVE Red Green - although my fave part is the way he hooks up stuff and repurposes them to make it work. LOL and I love that line from PB.
ReplyDelete