There seem to be some editors that feel a need to find something wrong, no matter how well everything was done. Is this the exception?
I've done about 40 shops now and have run into this a couple of times.
Clearly written narratives and marking, yet some editors want to call you on something they don't like.
I try to use the "Napoleon's Corporal" approach to a narrative. If somebody who was not there can read it and tell me accurately what happened based on the narrative as written then I expect an editor should be able to get the same understanding.
Just like a shop can have everything go right and gets high marks across the board, there can be times where nothing happens and you can summarize that in a sentence or two. To ask for a long descriptive narrative of an event where nothing happened is a waste of my time and the MSC's.
Has this happened a lot to others?
I've done about 40 shops now and have run into this a couple of times.
Clearly written narratives and marking, yet some editors want to call you on something they don't like.
I try to use the "Napoleon's Corporal" approach to a narrative. If somebody who was not there can read it and tell me accurately what happened based on the narrative as written then I expect an editor should be able to get the same understanding.
Just like a shop can have everything go right and gets high marks across the board, there can be times where nothing happens and you can summarize that in a sentence or two. To ask for a long descriptive narrative of an event where nothing happened is a waste of my time and the MSC's.
Has this happened a lot to others?