Paul Whybrow
Full Member
I've just bought An Editor's Advice to Writers: The Forest for the Trees, by Betsy Lerner. It's a highly praised advice book, and I was delighted to get for a Buy It Now price of £2.49 on eBay. Having lost thousands of hours of my life to editing, I could do with all of the help a seasoned professional can offer me.
A previous owner of the book added underlinings, asterisks, arrows and exclamation points in black biro. It's easy to imagine the writer using the tips to sort out their manuscript. The marked sections say much about their insecurities.
As an ex-librarian, I deplore what amounts to vandalism—had it been done to a library book that many will borrow—keep your opinions to yourself! As a book-lover, a part of me still feels uncomfortable about scrawling on the printed page. I was raised to take care of my books.
Occasionally a reader writes comments on a book's pages that are helpful, though this happens more often in non-fiction. The only times I've written in books is for car or motorcycle workshop manuals. Haynes may be the world leaders in this field, but as anyone who's used one of their manuals will agree, they miss out tons of information and what is on the page is ambiguous. Often, there's a simpler way of removing a component, so I've made a note of the method in the margin—to remind me—and to assist any future owners of the manual.
Some comments found in books are amusing. I recently read one of Jo Nesbo's excellent Harry Hole detective novels. The story was fine, but whoever did the editing must have done so in a darkened room. A previous reader, (I guessed an irate female pensioner from the handwriting), had neatly added missing commas, speech marks and full stops. She became more angry deeper into the book, adding 'Idiot', 'Fool' and 'I don't believe it' to the margins beside her corrections. Next to her final amendment she'd written, 'Who the hell edited this story, and can I have their job, please?'
So, do you write in books...and why?
A previous owner of the book added underlinings, asterisks, arrows and exclamation points in black biro. It's easy to imagine the writer using the tips to sort out their manuscript. The marked sections say much about their insecurities.
As an ex-librarian, I deplore what amounts to vandalism—had it been done to a library book that many will borrow—keep your opinions to yourself! As a book-lover, a part of me still feels uncomfortable about scrawling on the printed page. I was raised to take care of my books.
Occasionally a reader writes comments on a book's pages that are helpful, though this happens more often in non-fiction. The only times I've written in books is for car or motorcycle workshop manuals. Haynes may be the world leaders in this field, but as anyone who's used one of their manuals will agree, they miss out tons of information and what is on the page is ambiguous. Often, there's a simpler way of removing a component, so I've made a note of the method in the margin—to remind me—and to assist any future owners of the manual.
Some comments found in books are amusing. I recently read one of Jo Nesbo's excellent Harry Hole detective novels. The story was fine, but whoever did the editing must have done so in a darkened room. A previous reader, (I guessed an irate female pensioner from the handwriting), had neatly added missing commas, speech marks and full stops. She became more angry deeper into the book, adding 'Idiot', 'Fool' and 'I don't believe it' to the margins beside her corrections. Next to her final amendment she'd written, 'Who the hell edited this story, and can I have their job, please?'
So, do you write in books...and why?
