Wednesday, August 17, 2016

"Tic-ked off....by Cathy Ace" said every editor I ever had



Do you have any writing tics (habits or problems which you repeat in your prose)? How do you deal with them?

Yes, I do. And. But. Very. But. That. But. And. Very. That. There you go – out of my system now.
Some things are true writing tics, some I see as habits of speech my characters use – there’s a difference. 


The tics are things I search for – hunting them down and getting rid of them when I can. But I still enjoy starting the odd sentence with “But”. And I reserve the right to do so (and to begin a sentence with the word “And”!)  Beyond that I do seem to develop a couple of tics with each different manuscript, and my editors tend to spot them – thank goodness, because I honestly don’t even know they are there. I read past them as I comb through the manuscript – or else I’m too distracted by all the Ands, Buts, Verys and That’s.


Beyond that, we all have tics when we speak – a turn of phrase, a favourite saying – and they work just fine in real life, but they can grate on the page. Thus, I try to use a character’s speaking tics in a spare manner, though I admit it’s not always easy and I often need an editor to reel me back in.

None of us is perfect – I know I’m not, and I also know I’m always learning. I doubt I’ll ever learn enough to become a totally tic-free writer, though. But I’ll try. And try. Very hard. There, that’s that. (Editor keels over, weeping.)



Cathy Ace writes the WISE Enquiries Agency Mysteries (book #2 THE CASE OF THE MISSING MORRIS DANCER will be available in trade paperback on August 31st in the UK, and in November in the US/Canada, and the Cait Morgan Mysteries (book #7 THE CORPSE WITH THE GARNET FACE was published in paperback in April). Find out more about Cathy and her work, and sign up for her newsletter at http://cathyace.com/   

7 comments:

  1. Thanks, Cathy! And it was a great column! But don't feel very bad about these tics. I think they're very common. And I do them myself--very often as well! ;-)

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  2. Yup, I do the 'But', 'And', bit too, plus a few 'just's and 'even's too many. I agree. Thank goodness for good editors. Good post, Cathy.

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  3. Thanks for the post, Cathy. Like you, I'm try to eliminate intensifiers (is that the word?) like "very", except in dialogue, and also weeding out starting sentences with "And/But". But occasionally it's the only way to go!

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  4. Thanks for the support folks....I fell very much better now. But, you know, each to their own! And I mean that most sincerely, folks ;-)

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  5. Hi Cathy,
    I had to grin at your post. I felt as if you were looking for my shoulder. I right there with you. Thanks for sharing.
    @sheilamgood at Cow Pasture Chronicles

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  6. Hi Sheila - glad I could make you smile...it makes up for all the teeth-grinding I cause my editors ;-)

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  7. I don't know what I'd do if I couldn't start a sentence now and again with But or And. I like fragments too on occasion. I don't call these tics. For me, the single most disturbing tic and one I'm coming up against today as I read page proofs, is the habit of using the same word twice in a paragraph or on a page. Lazy, I know, and something I tend not to see until it's staring at me in page proofs.

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