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some of it is intentionally stylistic (e.g. I refuse to use semicolons) the rest I catch over time when I review. if you mean passages that don't need to be there, I must have looked at every paragraph at least three or four times.
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I absolutely do not mean passages that shouldn't be there, nor semicolons. None of that is any of my business. Is your book. I mean grammatical mistakes and typos that don't seem intentional, a few inconsistent details that may be intentional or gaffes. Stuff you wouldn't catch.
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Ultimately, though, unless they just really hate others touching their work, nobody should edit their own books. Errors are far too stereotyped and idiosyncratic for that. Ditto on the limits of perspective. But yeah, much editorial advice is just BS ('use semicolons!').
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Oops. Went a bit off script with this rant. Spent two years doing freelance editing (not for novelists, mind). Most people have no idea what to expect, why it matters or how it can help - and many editors do very little to better that impression.
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