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Important Information About Our Instructor-Led Courses
Our courses are asynchronous, meaning you never need to be at your computer at any specific hour. Instructors provide guidance through forum discussions and feedback on assignments. More information about our courses and webinars is available
here.
After you place your order, your course will be added to your personal course library on our education site. That site has different login information from the main EFA site. Please check your email for
information on how to access the course.
If these dates don’t work for you, sign up to be notified when the next session of this course is open for registration.
Line editing is one of the most important editorial passes a fiction manuscript undergoes before publishing. Developmental editing and copyediting perch at opposite peaks of the editorial process, handling story structure and grammar usage respectively,
while line editing navigates the valley between them to refine both narrative flow and syntactical styling. It's the bridge that connects storytelling with the intricate details of language mechanics, offering writers a holistic approach to enhancing
their most important feature: their voice.
This four-week intermediate course for line editing builds on a line editor's foundational understanding of voice and syntactic style to focus on how to edit the different modes of voice within a novel.
- Week One: In the first week, we'll review our mission as line editors to be "intentional and defensible" before introducing the first of the course's two modes of storytelling: dialogue. We'll dive right in to cover how to juggle
the many voices found in dialogue and keep it all straight in your line edit notes.
- Week Two: Next, we discuss the other mode of storytelling: narrative. We'll talk about identifying purple prose and how to edit its negative effects in commercial fiction without removing the author's voice or agency in their story
craft. Then we focus on how to balance the novel's use of exposition, narrative, and description as well as how to weave dialogue effectively into the scene. In our editor application section, we'll discuss the pitfalls of project scope creep
and what to do if a manuscript isn't ready for an editor.
- Week Three: In our penultimate week, we talk about all things "show don't tell" and how to address this narrative technique in dialogue, narrative, exposition, and characterization. In our editor application portion, we'll discuss
aiding authors' voice designs and how to encourage their creative experimentation while advocating for their readers' experience.
- Week Four: Our final week of the course covers how to level up your deliverable packaging in a way that fosters continued author growth, clear-cut expectations for post-project scopes, and overall client satisfaction. We'll turn your
"just an edit" service into a valuable resource your clients will reference again and again in their author careers.
You'll receive one-on-one feedback from the instructor on your editing assignments while discussing the coursework and broader editorial implications with your fellow students in the class forum.
This approach to line editing will most benefit editors of commercial (or genre) fiction, though the writing principles may apply to other styles of narrative as well. This course is perfect for both new and experienced editors looking to strengthen the
foundation of their editing craft.
Our students say...
Amber's enthusiasm for the work, in addition to her wide range of experience, shows in every lesson and module. She's incredibly generous with both her time and knowledge, especially when giving feedback on our editing assignments. —A.K.
Amber's warm, deeply thoughtful, and responsive presence online made me want to get involved. Her discussion forum assignments were created in a way that compelled us to interact with one another. —C.R.C
Prerequisites
Students need to have a strong foundational understanding of fiction line editing, or to have completed Line Editing of Commercial Fiction: Beginning.
Amber Helt (she/her) is a professional editor, writing instructor, and editor coach with over 10 years of experience working with traditional publishers and independent authors. She is the owner and managing editor of Rooted in Writing, an editorial agency that works with speculative fiction authors of all publishing paths to help their novels flourish in their competitive markets. Her editorial agency prides itself on strong client relationships and gardener-minded editing, where writers leave with not just a pruned manuscript but seeds to grow as authors in their next project. Amber was the chapter coordinator for the EFA's North Texas chapter for five years and loves sharing her knowledge with fellow editors. Amber has a BA in English creative writing with a certificate in historical linguistics.
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