Love you guys!

Oh and here's the link if you haven't seen it:
http://manuscriptstomarket.newyorkpitchconference.com
Six years ago I submitted a poorly written mystery novel manuscript to an editorial service called Iowa Book Editors or Doctors or something like that. They praised the ms ahead of time and I didn't know how bad it really was until I attended a workshop at Tin House over a year later. The Iowa editors did the best they could with if after flattering me into believing it had lots of potential. I was out a few thousand, sent the manuscript to 40 or so agents and bombed.A three-step editorial process (see more below) includes a preliminary story premise and plot review, a core manuscript development review, and finally, significant follow-up review of the manuscript rewrite. Why? Because there is rarely any such thing as one-shot manuscript editing that results directly in commercial publication. Follow-up reviews are mandatory from our standpoint, especially if we plan on moving successfully toward the querying process.
I'll raise my hand on this one also. It wasn't Iowa, but one of those editing sweat shops. Mediocre line edits and poor development notes. I didn't know better at the time. Everything they said about story development turned out to be wrong. VERY WRONG.HoffmanB wrote:If I had more carefully examined Iowa's track record of successful authors I would have seen a red flag immediately.
Wow! I too thank you for chiming in. I'll be contacting them soon. Maybe I can FINALLY get my twenty pounds of novel down to a salable five!cdarnell wrote:Paula is a muse as well. She and Michael are a great tag team to help the author.
I feel they both have become friends of mine.