Originally Posted by crimson
Ok... i am a spelling and grammar fiend. Part of the problem with having a forum full of writers submitting their work, is that most of your readers, are in fact, also writers. This tends to raise the bar, so to speak, when it comes to writing mechanics.
For me, if a story is penetrated with grammar mistakes and serious misspellings, it ruins it for me. i find the sentences no longer flow and i find myself distracted by the technical flaws, which make it impossible for me to focus on the content, regardless of how good the actual content IS.
(Yes, my "i"s are not capped - this is intentional, as i am a sub)
Are my stories completely void of mistakes? Of course not! Everyone makes mistakes! What works for me, may not work for others. i usually rake through my work before submitting it, looking for errors, run-on sentences, misspelled words (frankly, spell checks tend to do a lousy job), awkward paragraphs and the like. One reviewer commented about my formatting - i really didn't understand, since i use MS Word and paragraphs are clearly separated. As i did not receive any other such comments, i can only assume that perhaps the program the critic was using, jumbled the formatting.
Readers must be aware that writers use what turns themselves on as the foundation for erotica. That is the whole point of having the codes, providing a synopsis and posting in the first place for others to read.
Writers must be aware that no matter how "brutal" the critique, there is always a lesson you can take with you. i highly recommend discarding the "i was in a rush" excuse in addition to the "American versus British" english language debate. For the former - no one is holding a gun to your head on this site to post your work right away; therefore, take your time revewing and editing your own damn work before posting it. In reference to the latter - who the hell invented the damn language? Yes, that's right - there is a reason the language is called "English", now isn't there? Every region of every country has its own dialect - dialect is what i call the US version of English. That, of course, is *my* opinion.
Perhaps the other thing we are forgetting here... we take reviewers for granted. The fact that they actually took the time to read our work should make us grateful, not to mention taking the time to REVIEW it.
So if you're too lazy or in too much of a rush to edit your own work or learn the english language properly, be prepared for critiques that results in. If you are like me, a never-ending student always learning and improving her writing skills, then at least you can respond to those reviews with a simple "thank you - i'll keep your words in mind. i am always trying to improve."