I know this is a major red flag, but once I write a chapter, I don’t look back at it anymore. Until now, I’ve never read my story as a whole, and I’ve ignored all the mistakes because reading my own work is the least enjoyable part for me.
My story has some potential, and I am passionate about it, but the thought of reading it after I’m done writing is just dreadful. Has anyone else felt this way? Or do you usually review your work along with the previous chapters as you go?
For me, after I “finish” writing a chapter, I don’t touch it right away.
I move on to the next one and come back to it a day or two later.
When I revisit it, I try to read not as the writer, but as a reader just to see what stands out or needs improvement.
Reading it on the same day it was written doesn’t help much, since everything tends to look fine right after creating it.
Even for published chapters, I often go back and reread some. Not all, just a random pick.
I’m not a professional author, just an amateur one. So how do I cope with the pros?
By reading more, doing more, working harder, and most importantly, enjoying the whole process, especially it is fun to revisit your own creations and live with them.
Whenever I’m stuck with new ideas, I also flip through older chapters.
Sometimes that’s where inspiration hides along with a few typos I missed. ?
My story has some potential,
, and I’ve ignored all the mistakes
Since your story has real potential, it means you’ll keep gaining new readers and leaving mistakes uncorrected isn’t a good habit. If your current readers rate it 100 out of 100, why not aim for 110 for the next ones? And if you ever plan to publish on Amazon or elsewhere, fixing things regularly now will make future editing much easier.
Well, all of this is just my personal take. It works for me, but it might not be the right approach for everyone. Still, I think if your story has potential and keeps attracting new readers, it doesn’t hurt to keep polishing it. Even small improvements can go a long way, especially if you’re thinking about publishing for real someday.