[What’s with the
kerning letter-spacing?]
Poking around in a used-book store, I found a copy of Arthur Plotnik’s
The Elements of Editing: A Modern Guide for Editors and Journalists (1982). The cover is worth a look, both for its once-modern, now-dated Helvetica and for the positioning of the book as a companion to
The Elements of Style, also published by Macmillan. It’s not just the title or the
Publishers Weekly blurb or the “From the publisher of.” The cover even looks like that of the then-current
third edition of Strunk and White. (Plotnik went on to write
Spunk & Bite: A Writer’s Guide to Bold, Contemporary Style.)
Much of the advice in
The Elements of Editing applies beyond the world of publishing. Consider “Plotnik’s mantra of follow-up”: “NOTHING HAPPENS WHEN IT IS SUPPOSED TO HAPPEN WITHOUT WELL-TIMED REMINDERS.” Too true. Some explanation:
Trust and good faith. The words mean something different in communications than in the rest of life. Editors show trust and good faith by signing and renewing contracts, not by expecting people to have infallible memories and priorities identical to their own.
New editors who understand this principle will soon develop into functionally compulsive pests. They needn’t be insufferable. After all, “routine follow-up” is generally accepted as good business practice, and a reminder can always be tactful. Editors must also learn to distinguish between those who need frequent or infrequent nudging, firm or soft nudging. They must learn the best timing for a nudge.
The Elements of Editing is a dryly funny book. I can imagine Larry David and an adversary arguing about the firmness or timing of a nudge.
[It’s called
letter-spacing: see the comments for an explanation. Thanks,
Daughter Number Three.]