

Gregory Michael
6.9K posts

@_GregoryMichael
Author of Chloe’s Kingdom: The Koin Vault Heist & Chloe’s Kingdom: The Lost Colony





What happens when a veteran lands a surprising security job? Microfiction (1900 words): csoandy.com/files/jumper/ (Yes, I could post it all here to please the timeline gods, but I'm not going to muck around with that).


What happens when a veteran lands a surprising security job? Microfiction (1900 words): csoandy.com/files/jumper/ (Yes, I could post it all here to please the timeline gods, but I'm not going to muck around with that).

Gavin NewSCUM promised to build a wildlife bridge over a highway by 2025. It's now $21 MILLION over budget and nowhere near completion.













The last time I entered a book competition, Chloe’s Kingdom made the quarterfinals. Then the organizers removed a great author because they didn’t like his politics. So I withdrew. That same week I sold 1,000+ books and hit number one on Amazon in three categories. I’ve learned this: When you do the right thing, the rewards usually come. Sometimes financially. But more importantly, soulfully.


I'm not going to be as nice as this lady. If you don't have an editor, please don't publish. I don't care if you're paying that editor or not, but they need to be someone who *can* edit professionally. Technically, yes, you have a choice of whether or not to get outside help with your book, but I have yet to find the unicorn miracle that is good without any outside professional help. Opting to "not" is a great way to produce trash. However, a good edit is going to run $3-5k. The £880 quoted as an average here for an 80k manuscript is only around 13 hours of work at $60/hr (which is a good editor's rate). That's not really realistic. I expect the quoted average, then, is not really a dev or line editor's average, but is a blend including copy, which is a lot cheaper. I recommend, if you can't afford this, to work on your own editing skills (check out our videos--we discuss a lot of developmental editing topics in the context of actual books) and then *swap* work with other people. Basically, use your time as currency instead to get others to help you edit. But do not publish without outside editing advice.