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The Critique Conversation
One of the most important steps in getting your story, poem or essay submission-ready, is to ask somebody to read it. If an agent or editor is the first person to read your unsolicited piece, itβs generally a bad sign.
You can ask friends and family, but donβt expect an honesty. You can pay for a professional critique, but you probably donβt need to.
One of the best ways to polish your work to a publishable standard is to seek help from fellow writers in a critiquing partnership or group, either locally or online. For me, online is better. The author of the steamy romantasy scenes you just critiqued as gymnastically implausible is not going to turn up in the produce aisle of the supermarket, and you wonβt find the writer who suggested you used too many adverbs sitting across from you in the dentistβs waiting room.
Mutual critiquing not only helps you, but it supports other writers, and giving critiques can improve your craft as much as receiving them. We are all too close to our own writing to see the gaps, the confusion, the repetition, the typos, but we might easily spot these things in other peopleβs work. By training our instincts with other writersβ works-in-progress, we can read our own afresh and more readily see those areas that need attention.
How to get the best from a critiquing partnership or group
The Litopia Prime Directive provides perfect ground-rules, and here are some more specific guidelines for giving and receiving critiques.
On giving critiques:
You donβt need any qualifications to critique. Every reader reaction is equally valid, and different opinions offer different perspectives.
Be kind but honest. If all they wanted was to be told how great their writing is, they could have asked their best mate.
But do nurture their confidence. Highlight the strengths of the writing, the parts that provoked your emotions, the words and sentences you loved, the aspect of the story that had you hooked.
Pay attention to what the writer has asked for. Do they need feedback on theme, pace, character, tension? Or are they looking for sentence-level editing advice? And whether your strengths lie with structure or syntax, think about what you can bring to the process.
Be specific about the good and the bad. Which particular lines did you love? Which turn of phrase jarred with you?
If you feel confused or you lose interest, tell them exactly where. They can then address those areas for clarity or to increase tension.
If itβs a genre youβre familiar with as a writer or reader, you can offer valuable insight on whatβs expected. But donβt let genre be a barrier. It broadens experience to critique beyond your normal reading habits, and an outsider opinion is helpful to the writer who shouldnβt assume that every reader is familiar with their world.
Donβt be tempted to fix things. Suggestions can be helpful, but donβt rewrite their work. Your voice is yours; they have their own.
Critique the writing, not the person. The writer is vulnerable enough without blaming them for any perceived personal failures.
βIt could do with a closer edit for punctuationβ is better than βyou donβt know how to use a comma.β
It is important to call-out racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, ageism, ablism, hate, misinformation, intolerance, etc, but better to point it out objectively in the writing than call the writer a bigot. We all need to grow rather than shut down the critique process in a haze of toxicity.
If itβs an open critique group, donβt criticise other critiques. You may have a different opinion, but it is up to the writer to decide what is useful about a critique. Discord between two or more readers is not helpful to anyone.
Review your critique before you deliver it. Have you been compassionate? Have you been honest? Have you critiqued the words and not the person?
On receiving critiques:
Be specific about what you want from the process:
Are you struggling with structure? Do you want to know what they think of the characters? Do you want them to pick up on typos or grammatical mistakes you might not have spotted for yourself? Or ask for general impressions; thatβs okay too.
If you get advice you didnβt ask for, see it as a bonus. And if the feedback isnβt helpful, just ignore it.
Listen or read with an open mind. If the critique feels harsh, put it aside and go back to it with a clear head; it could be the tough love your project needs. Itβs human nature to dwell on the negative, but thereβs likely to be as much, if not more, positivity there.
Resist the temptation to argue. Itβs natural to feel defensive, but successful authors move past this. If the reader asks for clarification about something, then give it, but if you disagree with their reaction, donβt start a debate. Thank them and move on.
If the reader says they are confused or bored, donβt dismiss it as their failure. Itβs your job as a writer to make things clear and to keep readers interested; itβs a cue for revision.
Itβs still your project. Donβt be railroaded into a direction you didnβt want to take. Keep advice which serves your writing and discard what doesnβt.
Thank the reader for their time and offer to reciprocate.
Remember, it may feel personal, but the only intention is to improve your writing. If you find anything upsetting or triggering, contact the moderator or speak to an impartial group member.
Do you have any top tips for critiquing? Please comment below.
Only you can say when your work is submission-ready, but with the help of a supportive critique group, you can greatly increase your chances of being published.
This article was nurtured with the support of my critique buddies at Litopia.
Rachel McCarron is the Forum Moderator for the Litopia Lab, a free mutual critique service. We’d love you to join us.