Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Ringing, Reading, and Reviewing in 2011

Dear Readers,

It is my great pleasure to welcome you to the first Bonnie Blog posting of 2011! Not only is this a new year, but an entirely new decade, as well. Now, as cheesy and scientifically unsubstantiated as it may be, I'm a firm believer in the symbolic power of the 'new beginning' and, as follows, hold the (somewhat dangerous) belief that how you spend the earliest part of the new year is somewhat and somehow indicative of the entire year to come. Sure, this theory may not be comforting for all but, at the moment, it's really working for me.

As you know, it is my great ambition to one day work (successfully!) as an acquiring and developmental editor. As such, you can imagine my delight in having spent the first full week of 2011 mired in the thick of the editorial process.

Let me back up. Some time ago (really, at least a couple of months), Jeevan approached me with the request to complete my first-ever in-depth and full-length manuscript review for Berrett-Koehler, specifically working on Barbara McAfee's upcoming book, Full Voice: The Art and Practice of Vocal Presence. Having attended the meetings in which this book proposal was first presented to the editorial team, I jumped at the chance to contribute to the work in a fundamental way, especially compelled by the challenge of bringing voice to the printed page.

Now, when I say 'jumped', I mean that in terms of the opportunity, and not so much the actual pursuit. As those who are familiar with my work already know, I have a slight tendency to engage in procrastination. Therefore, while I was given my material well before the end of 2010, I performed the entirety of the project the following year. And what a project it was! Never before have I approached a written work in quite the same way, armed with deep thoughts and strong feelings, not to mention notepaper, highlighters, and many many pens. I spent hours upon hours locked in my room, exiled from the revelry taking place elsewhere in the apartment.

And do you know what? I loved it. Sure, I may have moaned and groaned a bit, frustrated at the cramming situation I had brought upon myself once again. But, overall, I really really enjoyed it. While I wasn't sure what I was doing was necessarily correct, nor could I be sure that it would be helpful, what was important was that I was doing it. I worked hard, I cared, and I got it done. And the best part is that delivering my review was really just the beginning of the experience.

Only two days after I sent the review in, Barbara McAfee was in the BK office to meat with our staff and to give her Author Day presentation. Having worked on the manuscript, I was invited (along with the other on-staff reviewers, extremely talented interns Brad Casenave and Sam Calios) to attend all of the author's meetings with her editor, Neal Maillet. While I've been privy to the editorial process ever since I first began working at Berrett-Koehler, this marks the first time that I've been involved at such a crucial and constant level. And, let me tell you, it makes all of the difference. Not only seeing, but contributing to the creation of a piece of work, inherently binds you to it in an emotional capacity. Or, rather, it does that for me. And that feels good. No, that feels great. So, while it remains to be seen if I'm actually any good at being an editor, I can tell you at least one thing for sure: I really really enjoy it.

So, there you have it. This may be more like a journal entry than a blog entry, but I needed to get it out. And, as further proof of my New Year's hypothesis, I've already been given my next editorial assignment!

And, of course, here's to wishing you all a 2011 as exciting and fulfilling as mine is shaping up to be. I really really mean it!!



1 comment:

  1. "Barbara McAfee was in the BK office to meat with our staff"...

    I hope she didn't butcher your hard work!!!

    Happy New Year

    Perry White

    ReplyDelete