I've never tried google docs for my betas...how does this magical thing work?
Phone Menu Voice ,'Conviction (1)'
The Great Write Way, Act Three: Where's the gun?
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
Clicky the linky, log in to google, edit as usual but with no emailing pages back and forth. It's very easy.
Does Google docs track changes?
Chipping away at revised chapter 15 now. I keep wanting to get to the next chapter of the rough draft, then when I get there I want to get to the next one.
I'm gonna try to really condense the next two chapters of the rough draft to tighten things up, but the days of throwing out page after page from the rough draft may be ending. There is a lot less unneeded junk now.
Four more rough draft chapters, two of them short, and I'll hit the middle part of the story where the plot goes into overdrive. I'm looking forward to getting there.
Gudanov, it can track changes under 'revision history' in Tools
Nifty, it's nice to know that Google docs does that. It doesn't sound as hidden as OpenOffice's. Not that I'm going to shift to using something other than MS Word.
I may pick up another beta swap reader. She approached me about it, but is concerned about the size of my book. We shall see.
I don't want to get over-committed, but I appear to be going along about an order of magnitude faster than my current beta swap partner.
Speaking of over commitment I'm starting to really kick around an idea for another unrelated book. Must. finish. current. book.
Why is current chapter going so slow? Maybe I'm trying to compress too many little plot points into too few words.
Sometimes, writing by hand's just the only way to break through a block.
My hands hurt, but I've got a better handle on what I'm doing.
I think.
That sounds promising. I hope you really do have the handle.
I hope to bludgeon my way through revised chapter 15 tonight, or at least the tricky part of it.
I have run into another dilemma. I have a female protagonist. In the rough draft there are a total of two guys who take an interest in her, though there is never any competition. Is adding another too much? Nothing actually ever comes of it and it would make a couple of things work nicely with regard to his behavior. I worry that is too many though, no matter how it's handled. There are maybe 11 significant male characters in the story. Maybe I should just go with it and see what beta readers think.
Well, if she's attractive she's bound to get lots of attention, but personally, I wouldn't want to create a Bella-in-Forks type sitch where you spend time making every guy around fancy her like they've been in Em City and haven't seen a woman for a year.