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AI Detection Software is Hit or Miss According to Most Experts

For this year’s Peer Review Week, the theme selected was “Innovation and Technology in Peer Review”. We’ve spoken at length in recent posts about how AI and technology have changed the nature of peer review. We’ve specifically discussed ChatGPT’s growing role in peer...

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LGBTQ+ Books for All Age Groups

LGBTQ+ Books for All Age Groups

June is pride month, and with this, we wanted to present a collection of LGBTQ+ books for any preteen/ adolescent/ human who might be interested in this genre! LGBTQ literature explores LGBTQ+ experiences, history, relationships, and more. Queer literature can be a...

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Feeling the Burn: How to Avoid Burnout While Writing a Book

Feeling the Burn: How to Avoid Burnout While Writing a Book

For most authors, writing is far more than just a career—it’s a passion. The thought of starting a new book project is, at first, one that sparks rigorous motivation and enthusiasm. But all too often, that initial “get up and go” mentally quickly melts away into...

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Celebrating and Honoring Freedom Day: Juneteenth

Celebrating and Honoring Freedom Day: Juneteenth

Juneteenth has been celebrated by Black Americans since 1866, but has been largely overlooked, marginalized, and unknown to many Americans until recently. Juneteenth would not become recognized as a federal holiday until June 18th, 2021, after a proclamation by...

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 Pride Month Book Recommendations Across Genres

 Pride Month Book Recommendations Across Genres

This June, we have a few book recommendations to celebrate Pride: skip the corporate rainbow-washing and instead curl up with a good book by a queer* author featuring queer themes, characters, and insights. The following books, encompassing just some of the diversity...

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7 Key Tips for Tackling a New Client’s Style Guide

7 Key Tips for Tackling a New Client’s Style Guide

Diving into work for a new copy editing client is always an exciting time for any editor—but it can also be an intimidating one. And it doesn’t help when you’re trying to wrap your mind around a 10-page style guide you’ve never seen before! But here’s the good news:...

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How to Procure a Cover Designer for Your Book

You should never judge a book by its cover, but that won’t prevent potential readers from passing over your book if they don’t like its cover artwork and design. So how can you commission a book cover that both attracts readers’ attention and accurately communicates what your book is about? Read on for your road map to success. Researching your target...

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Before You Start Writing Your Book: Twenty Things to Consider About Your Story

Are you considering writing a book? Maybe you have a vague idea of a story you’d like to tell, but you aren’t quite sure, or maybe you have a solid idea of what you want to write, but … What might you be missing? When I started writing my (still unfinished) book a few years ago, I had no understanding of the journey I was about to take. I later learned...

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Technically Speaking – Part 2

Part I of this two-part post focused on the five major steps to successfully approaching a technical writing project without a technical background. Now, in this second installment, we’ll focus on the list of 10 tips and tricks to successfully making that project happen! Tip #1: Focus on what you DO know. While you might not have a huge amount of knowledge...

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Word Count in Novels: Is It Important?

Word count — it’s a simple enough thing — write the words and count them. But do word counts really matter when you are writing your novel, and is book length an important thing to consider before publishing? Although there’s no absolute answer, and there’s always an example of that one book in that one genre that was super-short (or super-long) but still...

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How to Be a Good Beta Reader: Reading in Exchange for Critique

What Is a Beta Reader? A Beta Reader is asked to read an author’s work when they’ve finished their original edits, but before the professional editing has begun. They help the author handle big-picture questions regarding story, pacing, plot, character, etc. While they’re not typically looking for typos and grammatical mistakes, an author may ask them to...

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ISMTE Recap: When It Comes To Preprints, Trust, but Verify

With the open science movement growing in popularity in the last decade, preprints have become a bigger and bigger part of the publishing industry. They’ve also, in some ways, become a bigger and bigger problem for the publishing industry as well. ISMTE’s recent global event discussed preprints’ growing impact on the publishing industry in a panel titled,...

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Navigating Reviewer Fatigue

Peer reviewed journals often try to promote timely publication as a selling point to potential authors. An efficient publication process is crucial for scholars who are publishing time-sensitive research and who are required to publish in many disciplines for career advancement. In fact, refereeing speed is rated as the third most important factor for...

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ISMTE Recap: Is It Time To Pay Peer Reviewers?

It’s been this way for decades, but one of the biggest hurdles in peer-reviewed literature is waiting for peer reviewers. Yes, at the end of the day, no matter how good or important an article is, its processing time and publication date will ultimately be controlled by the peer reviewers who agree to review it. If an editor can’t get a reviewer to agree...

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Technically Speaking – Part 1

If you’re not a technical expert, the terms “technical writing” and “technical editing” can be intimidating—but they don’t have to be! Editing this kind of writing isn’t all about having an advanced degree, because the purpose of editing isn’t to be a subject matter expert in, say, engineering or environmental science. If that were the case, all the job...

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