Proofreading
Proofreading is the final quality-control review before publication or submission. It is the last step in the editing process and is intended for manuscripts that have already been revised, edited, and copy edited.
During a proofread, I review your manuscript for remaining surface-level errors and formatting issues (if your manuscript has already been typeset) that may have been introduced during the previous stage of editing or formatting. I adhere to The Chicago Manual of Style, 18th Edition, and the rules of Standard American English.
Proofreading is not a substitute for developmental editing, line editing, or copy editing. It does not address plot, structure, pacing, characterization, voice, sentence-level style, or substantial grammar and usage concerns. The focus is on catching the small mistakes that can distract readers and diminish a professional presentation.
A proofread may address
- typographical errors;
- misspellings;
- missing or repeated words;
- punctuation errors;
- incorrect spacing;
- formatting inconsistencies;
- page numbering issues;
- minor grammar errors that were previously overlooked;
- inconsistencies in headings, chapter titles, or front/back matter.
Proofreading is best for
- manuscripts that have already undergone professional editing;
- books that have been formatted for print or ebook publication;
- authors preparing to submit to agents, publishers, or printers;
- final review before publication.
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