The Questions a Serious Editor Asks of a Manuscript cover art

The Questions a Serious Editor Asks of a Manuscript

The Questions a Serious Editor Asks of a Manuscript

Listen for free

View show details

Monday’s episode last week was about green-lighting yourself, refusing to wait for institutions to validate your work. Today we go one layer deeper. Green-lighting yourself does not mean publishing whatever you’ve got. It means doing the editorial work seriously, on your own behalf, so what you publish is actually ready.

Editorial direction is more specific than most writers think. Here are six questions a serious editor asks of a manuscript before saying yes to it. You can start asking these of your own work today.

* What is this book actually about

* Who is the reader

* What shelf does this book sit on

* What is the reader’s journey

* Where is the prose working and where is it slipping

* What is the work remaining

Each question comes with an exercise you can do on your own manuscript right now.

This episode also covers when outside editorial direction is most useful (later than most writers think) and what Crossroads’s Editorial Framing Brief actually provides for writers who have done their own work and still can’t see what they’re missing.

If you’re working on a manuscript and want a publisher who thinks this way about the editorial standard—voice, testimony, weight per paragraph—Crossroads is that press.

We’re in our founding season through summer 2026 with founding-rate engagements.

Discovery call → 20 min, free, let’s chat.

Author Engagement and First Draft Cohort here!

—Chad



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit chadprevost.substack.com
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet