Editing Services
Free Sample Line Edit
I offer a free sample line edit of 1,500 words, where I will refine your work while preserving your voice. At the same time, I’ll offer insight into how these edits might function in the context of the overall story. Obviously, a line edit can’t be fully comprehensive in such a short amount of words, but a free sample can give you a glimpse into my style.
Here’s how it works:
Submit Your Pages
Send me up to 1,500 words (around 5–6 double-spaced pages). This can be from your opening chapter, closing scene, or any section of your manuscript.
I’ll Edit Your Sample
I’ll return your submission with track changes in Word or Docs, showing exactly how I refine clarity, sentence structure/flow, word choice, and rhythm while keeping your unique voice intact.
See If It Fits
This gives you a clear idea of what my line edits look like, and whether or not they’re what your manuscript needs.
Developmental Editing
If your story is a car, I’m the greasy-handed mechanic with my nose under the hood, examining and tinkering with the parts that need work. Skip this stage, and you might miss details that seem small to you, but unforgivable to your audience of readers. Ever read a book and said to yourself: “Well, that was weird,” or “I just don’t understand Jason . . .” or “This doesn’t feel right . . .” These are often markers of stories that need developmental work. The first goal is to write a book that simply keeps readers engaged. No need for grammar, punctuation, or style guides here. If you can’t keep your readers hooked, your words hold no weight.
Rates:
Sample Pricing & Timelines (Developmental Editing):
You’ll receive:
A Full Developmental Edit
You’ll receive heavy marginal comments on plot/structure, character, pacing, dialogue, world-building, and etc.
An Editorial Letter
This can be anywhere between 5–30 pages. It all depends on the complexity of the project and how I need to organize my thoughts. The letter will be well structured, easily navigable, and clear on how you should progress in revision.
Extended Support
You will have access to email me anytime with any questions or concerns regarding your project up to 30 days after completion of the project.
Factors that affect the rate and timeline:
- Word count
- Structural Complexity
- Emotional and Thematic Depth
- Worldbuilding and Magic System Complexity
- Style of Prose
Line Editing/Copyediting
So, maybe you have a story that works, but don’t have an idea of how to express the emotions required to add depth to your plot, character, and theme. In my copyedits, I’ll strengthen your prose while maintaining your unique voice as an author, helping you craft a more polished novel.
Rates:
Sample Pricing & Timelines (Line Editing):
You’ll receive:
Detailed Line & Copyedit
A detailed line edit, or copyedit, with track changes, and marginal comments that will
Extended Support
You will have access to email me anytime with any questions or concerns regarding your project up to 30 days after completion of the project.
Copyediting Rate:
Timelines for a finished product can range anywhere from 1–4 weeks. This is going to, of course, depend on the length and overall quality of the manuscript. Alongside a polished copyedit, you’ll also receive a book-specific style sheet, which is a document that bookmarks specific preferences and style choices unique an author’s work. Spelling, grammar, and punctuation are among the most common preferences placed on a style sheet, and it’s useful to keep not only for your own use moving forward (especially if your work is the first of many in a series), but also for when you reach the proofreading process (should you decide to go and find a proofreader, which I highly encourage).
Sample Pricing & Timelines (Copyediting):
Proofreading
Proofreading is the final stage of a manuscript before it moves to print. When a manuscript makes it to this stage in the process, the manuscript has already been through one or two rounds of copyediting.
Both copyeditors and proofreaders are going to look for inconsistencies within the manuscript. Grammar mistakes, misspellings, and punctuation fall under both of their watches. However, while copyeditors are concerned with the logic, accessibility, and structure of the prose itself, proofreaders do not involve themselves with these elements. Furthermore, copyeditors help shape and mold the style and tone of the manuscript. A proofreader’s responsibilities won’t delve into any of these realms of the editing process. Proofreaders care more about how the words appear on the page instead of the substance of such words.
Furthermore, some proofreaders are responsible for things like typesetting the manuscript, which is a responsibility outside of the copyeditor’s tasks.
I have to make this distinction because, in my experience, many authors tend to make a false equivalency between copyediting and proofreading. If authors fail to understand this, their expectations may be unfulfilled. Unless an author has already gone through the proper copyediting process, authors should not look for their manuscript to be proofread.
This, I cannot stress enough.
So now I’ve made that quick little note, my proofreading rate is set at $0.018 USD per word. Also, minimum and maximum word count for projects I’m willing to take on is the same as my copyediting requirements: 5,000 words minimum, and 110,000 maximum.
Sample Pricing & Timelines (Proofreading):
Beta Reading
It’s a scary process, and though getting people to read your work is important and often tedious, you need more than just your friends and family’s opinion. They may read it, but how familiar are they with your world? They might give you feedback, but how applicable or enlightening is that feedback?
This is why you need a skilled reader; someone who can point out how your story feels, how it lands, how real your characters are—and ultimately, how your audience is likely to react to your book. Please, ladies and gentlemen, allow me to be introduced to you, the beta reader! (It’s my frickin’ job to read, so let me do my job!) All jokes aside, I’d love to give you gut-level, intuitive feedback on your work.
I’m not the type of beta reader that simply gives you feedback such as, “I didn’t like this . . . this is confusing . . . why did you do this?” Feedback like this, in my opinion, is rather vague and unhelpful. I like to be precise and point out why I feel the way I feel. Whether editing or reading, I like to be thorough to the point that you’ll be able to take something from it.
Pricing:
Tier one: General Impression ($100)
Here, I’ll provide general feedback, pointing out areas of confusion, pacing issues, engagement, and character believability/likability.
What you’ll get: A short summary letter (2–3 pages) of the things I saw within your manuscript, where issues may pop up later, your strengths, and subtle suggestions on how you can move forward.
Tier two: Report ($150)
Here, I’ll go a bit deeper into my thoughts and provide a slightly longer summary letter (3–4 pages) of your work, its strengths, and its weaknesses. You will also get a document with margin comments, where I’ll be providing a few of my thoughts at key moments within your story.
Tier three: Deep Dive ($200)
Here, you will get a highly detailed summary letter (4–5 pages) providing my full thoughts on engagement, character, structure, prose, strengths, and weaknesses, along with margin comments with my full/live reactions as I move throughout the manuscript. At a few points, I may dip slightly into developmental territory to offer you examples of what I might do if I were to perform a full developmental edit.
Sample Pricing & Tiers (Beta Reading):
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General Impression $100
A short 2–3 page letter with overall feedback on clarity, pacing, engagement, and character believability.
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Report $150
A longer 3–4 page letter covering strengths and weaknesses, plus a document with margin notes and comments at key points.
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Deep Dive $200
A 4–5 page detailed letter covering engagement, character, structure, prose, strengths, and weaknesses, plus margin comments and notes documenting my live reactions as I read.
Editorial Assessment
Editorial letters remove the comments and track changes often found in a developmental edit or even line edits. It is an assessment of your work that serves as a guide in your revision process. You may not want feedback on lines that are up for the cutting board, and you may not want to deal with the clutter of sifting through comment after comment.
Who is this for?
If you’re early in the process—whether that means you’ve just finished your first draft, or if you’re still in the process of writing, and need tailored feedback that will provide direction and clarity to push you forward—then an editorial letter may be for you. If you want intuitive feedback, book a beta read, and if you want intuitive and constructive/developmental feedback, purchase an editorial assessment. But this is also helpful if you are near publication, and you need the perspective of a strong and detailed eye.
Pricing:
What you will get:
An Editorial Letter detailing your big picture elements, strengths, weaknesses, and guidance for revision. As I mentioned with my developmental edits, this letter can range anywhere from 5–30 pages (or more).
How Booking Works
Decide whether you need a Sample Edit, Beta Read, Developmental Edit, Editorial Letter, or any other service.
● If you select Beta Read, you’ll also choose your tier: General Impression, Report, or Deep Dive.
Fill in the form with your name and email, exact word count, and brief description (genre, goals, concerns as well). Depending on your service, here’s what to send:
- Sample Edit→ Up to 1,500 words (5–6 double-spaced pages). I’ll return your pages with track changes, showing how I refine clarity, rhythm, and word choice while preserving your voice. If you’re considering a full line or developmental edit, I strongly recommend starting here.
- Developmental Editing → Submit 10–25 pages. I’ll review your story’s structure, pacing, and scope, then send a tailored proposal with pricing and timeline.
- Line Editing (Full Project) → For 5,000–50,000 words. Start with a sample edit first, then we’ll expand into a full project based on your manuscript’s needs.
- Beta Reads → Submit your full manuscript (up to 100,000 words) and select your tier: General Impression, Report, or Deep Dive.
For Developmental Edits, Line Edits, Beta Reads, and Editorial Letters (Skip if you only requested a sample edit.)
- I’ll send you a proposal outlining scope, pricing, and timeline.
- For Beta Reads, pricing is fixed — the proposal confirms acceptance + timeline.
- Once you confirm and make a payment, your project is officially booked.
I’ll complete your edit, read, or assessment within the agreed timeline. You’ll receive: ● Margin notes in your manuscript (with track changes depending on service).
- A detailed editorial letter explaining strengths, weaknesses, and next steps.
Once you’ve reviewed your feedback, you’ll have the clarity to revise with confidence. If you’d like, we can schedule a follow-up consultation call to walk through the notes together.