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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: book peer review, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Get Manuscript Help from Experts

Get Manuscript Help from Experts

by Dan Poynter

Savvy nonfiction author-publishers take each chapter of their nearly complete manuscript and send it off to at least four experts on that particular chapter’s subject. This step in book writing is called "peer review".

Some experts might get two or three chapters but most will get only one. Do not overwhelm them. If you send the whole manuscript, most experts will put it on their desk with the best of intentions and never get back to it.

An expert is a man who has made all the mistakes which can be made in a very narrow field.
—Niels Bohr (1885-1962), Danish physicist and Nobel Laureate.

Ken Blanchard, co-author of The One-Minute Manager Library, says “I don’t write my books, my friends write them for me.” He explains that he jots down some ideas and sends them off to friends for comment. They send back lots of good ideas that he puts into his manuscript. Ken is
being very generous, of course, and what he is describing is “peer review.”
http://www.BlanchardTraining.com

What you get back from your peer reviewers is extremely valuable: They may add two more items to your list; they sometimes delete whole paragraphs where the practice has changed; they occasionally cross out that comment you thought was cute but was potentially embarrassingly
stupid, and they sometimes even correct punctuation, grammar and style.

Also send copies of the complete manuscript off to friends, family, literate objective readers, potential buyers and even a Devil’s Advocate or two. The more feedback you get the better.

When your book comes out, you will receive far less adverse-reader reaction because the book will be bulletproof. After all, it has been reviewed and accepted by the best.

And, there is another valuable reason for peer review: You have more than two-dozen opinion molders telling everyone about your book—and how they helped you with it.

~~~~~
Dan Poynter does not want you to die with a book still inside you. You have the ingredients and he has your recipe. Dan has written more than 100 books since 1969 including Writing Nonfiction and The Self-
Publishing Manual. For more help on book writing, see http://ParaPub.com.
© 2003

~~~~~
Along with seeking the advice of experts, you'll need to self-edit your work before hand. For useful tips and advice on self-editing, check out: Editing Books Like a Pro. For only $3.99, it's a great deal.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
More 'Writing' Reading:

Writing a Memoir: 5 Rules
Writing Nonfiction: Using Quotes
Being a Writer: Learn the Craft of Writing

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To keep up with writing and marketing information, along with Free webinars - signup for A Writer's World Newsletter on the right top sidebar!

Karen Cioffi


Find Karen’s eBooks on writing and marketi

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