I always felt the long list of acknowledgements for assistance in the writing of a novel, increasingly prevalent it seems, was just a tiny bit pathetic - after all, if they were proper writers surely they could do it all themselves?
Humbled, I now know different. A complete stranger, met only through the good offices of the 'whole MS read-swapping' group at WriteWords, not only read the whole of my second draft of 'Not wanted on Voyage', she also made sixty-one comments. Some were a treat, noting phrases she particularly liked (and henceforth I will always include them in any critique I do), some were small but vital (like pointing out I'd written 'Madigan' when I'd meant 'Mirabel') and several were "too much show, not enough tell".
Having dealt with the minor points I am now tackling these larger ones and already I can see that I am making vast improvements. Yes - I am making them, it is still my book, but I might not have done so had it not been for her pointing them out, and so I will gladly include her name among other acknowledgements.
And I am very slightly less trepidatious knowing this will be the novel I shall, in September, be handing first to a 'book-doctor' and then pitching to an agent at the York Festival of Writing.
I have to admit, when I read long lists of acknowledgements I wonder what half the people did.
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