Vanessa Macfarlane | Proofreader | Proof-editor

Vanessa Macfarlane | Proofreader | Proof-editor

@myproofreadinglife.bsky.social

Zurich🇨🇭 | London 🇬🇧 | Polishing words globally 🌍 Freelance Proof-editor and Proofreader. CIEP member. Often found in the #writingcommunity. vanessatheproofreader.com https://uk.bookshop.org/shop/vanessatheproofreader

211 Followers 384 Following 289 Posts Joined Jan 2025
8 months ago

Well, that's it from me… your reminder that English is a beautiful disaster and we're all just doing our best!

Keep a cheat sheet, embrace the chaos, and remember that spell-check is your frenemy… it'll catch "you're" vs "your" but miss when you use "martial" instead of "marital"!

0 0 0 0
8 months ago

🔟 Crevice vs. Crevasse
Small crack vs. massive glacier split. Size matters (and so does your survival).

Memory trick:
CrevaSSe = Super Sized crack

Example:
The coin fell through a crevice, unlike the climber who fell into a crevasse.

0 0 2 0
8 months ago

9️⃣ Tortuous vs. Torturous
Winding/complex vs. causing torture. Both could describe IKEA… shop vs building furniture.

Memory trick:
Torturous = torture + us = causes extreme pain

Example:
The tortuous mountain road was torturous to drive.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

8️⃣ Marshal vs. Martial
The lawman vs. relating to war. Both involve people who could kick your butt.

Memory trick:
Martial = is partial to combat

Example:
The marshal declared martial law.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

7️⃣ Faze vs. Phase
To disturb vs. a stage/period. One messes with your head, the other messes with your calendar.

Memory trick:
Faze rhymes with "daze" – both involve your brain going "???"

Example:
The lunar phase didn't faze the werewolf.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

6️⃣ Chord vs. Cord
Musical harmony vs. rope/wire. Both can get tangled.

Memory trick:
Musical cHord has an "h" for harmony

Example:
He struck a chord while tripping over the extension cord.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

5️⃣ Baited vs. Bated
One involves worms, the other involves barely breathing. Both involve waiting uncomfortably.

Memory trick:
Bated breath = abated breath (held back)

Example:
She baited the hook with bated breath.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

4️⃣ Populace vs. Populous
The people vs. describing lots of people. Both involve crowds you'd rather avoid.

Memory trick:
PopuLACE = the people in this pLACE

Example:
The populous city had an angry populace.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

3️⃣ Canvas vs. Canvass
One's for painting, the other's for pestering people about their political opinions.

Memory trick:
CanvaSS = Stupid Survey (or an extra s for super annoying)

Example:
She painted on canvas while volunteers canvassed the neighbourhood.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

2️⃣ Palate vs. Palette vs. Pallet
Your taste buds, your paint colors, or your shipping platform.

Memory trick:
PalaTe = one T for Taste
Palette = ETTE is an artist flair
Pallet = needs ll to slide the fork lift in

Example:
The artist's palette pleased my palate while I sat on a pallet.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

1️⃣ Hoard vs. Horde
One's a pile of treasure, the other's an army. Both involve questionable life choices.

Memory trick:
You hoard things in a pile (think "oa" = "oh, all my stuff")

Example:
The dragon's hoard attracted a horde of adventurers.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

#writersky #amwriting #amediting #writing #authors #proofreading #writingcommunity

Question:
Which HOMOPHONES make even experienced writers question their entire existence?

Answer:
Here are 10 word pairs that humble us all ⬇️

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

If you’re one of my lovely followers and have a book listed on the UK site, drop it in the comments. I’d be delighted to add it to my storefront.

0 0 0 0
8 months ago
Preview
Vanessa the Proofreader Bookshop UK Welcome to my bookshop! I love supporting indie bookshops and featuring books I have worked on whenever possible. As a freelance proof-editor and proofreader, I appreciate great stories across all gen...

It’s Indie Bookshop Week here in the UK, and to celebrate, Bookshop .org is offering FREE SHIPPING all weekend. The perfect excuse to show some love to the brilliant independent bookshops that keep our literary world spinning. 💛📚

#booksky #readersky #amreading

uk.bookshop.org/shop/vanessa...

5 0 1 0
8 months ago

Well, that's it from me…

Good pacing isn't about constant action; it's about constant tension.

Every page should either answer a question (while raising new ones) or promise that answers are coming soon. When readers think “just one more chapter,” you've mastered the dark art of addictive pacing…

0 0 0 0
8 months ago

🔟 End Scenes Mid-Action
Don't wait for natural stopping points. Stop in the middle of the good stuff.

Examples:

She lunged for the bat. Her fingers, so close—
[SCENE BREAK]

"Behind you!" he screamed. She spun around to see—
[SCENE BREAK]

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

9️⃣ Raise New Questions While Answering Old Ones
Every answer should spawn three new mysteries. Keep them chasing.

Examples:

"Your father didn't die in the accident. He was murdered."
"By who?"
"That's... complicated."

The DNA test proved he wasn't the father. It also proved something much worse.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

8️⃣ The Almost Reveal
Get them 99% of the way to the truth, then make them wait for that final 1%.

Examples:

"I know who you really are," she whispered. "You're—"
"Not here. Too dangerous."

The file contained everything: names, dates, photos. Everything except the one page that mattered most.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

7️⃣ Switch POV at Peak Tension
Right when readers are dying to know what happens next, show them someone else's crisis.

Example:

The gun is raised, finger on trigger...
CUT TO: Three hours earlier, someone else was planning this exact moment.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

6️⃣ The Ticking Clock
Nothing speeds up pacing like a deadline that seems impossible to meet.

Examples:

"You're getting married tomorrow. This is our last chance."

"You have until midnight." She glanced at her watch. 11:47 PM.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

5️⃣ Micro-Cliffhangers Every Few Pages
Don't save the tension for chapter ends. Sprinkle it everywhere like addictive seasoning.

Examples:

She opened the envelope. Her blood ran cold.

"You recognise him, don't you?" The photo fell from her trembling fingers.

1 0 1 0
8 months ago

4️⃣ The Interrupted Answer
Start to give them what they want, then snatch it away with perfect timing.

Examples:

"The killer is—" The phone line went dead.

"I love—"
The explosion cut off her words.

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

3️⃣ Drop Bombs in Quiet Moments
Hit them with revelations when they least expect it, not during action scenes.

Examples:

They were making pancakes when she casually mentioned, "Oh, by the way, I'm pregnant."

"Pass the salt," he said. "And I killed your brother."

0 0 1 0
8 months ago

2️⃣ The False Resolution
Let them think the problem's solved... then pull the rug out from under them.

Examples:

The bomb was defused. Finally, they could breathe. Then she noticed the second timer.

"We're safe now," he whispered, pulling her close. The footsteps in the hallway suggested otherwise.

1 0 1 0
8 months ago

1️⃣ End Chapters Mid-Conversation
Nothing says "just one more page" like cutting off dialogue at the worst possible moment.

Examples:

"There's something I need to tell you about your father—"
[CHAPTER BREAK]

"The test results came back. You're going to want to sit down for this."
[CHAPTER BREAK]

1 0 1 1
8 months ago

#writersky #amwriting #amediting #writing #authors #proofreading #writingcommunity

Question:
How do you write pages that are PHYSICALLY IMPOSSIBLE to put down?

Answer:
Here are 10 PACING TRICKS that turn readers into sleep-deprived zombies ⬇️

0 0 1 0
9 months ago

Glad you like them 😊

1 0 0 0
9 months ago

Well, that’s it from me.

Remember, protective characters will burn the world down for the one they love… then deny it for 300 pages. Think tough on the outside, marshmallow on the inside!

They’ll never say “I love you” – but they will throw themselves in front of a dragon for you.

1 0 1 0
9 months ago

🔟 Small Touches, Big Meaning
A hand on your back. Fingers brushing yours. A touch that lingers a moment too long.

Example 1:
He adjusted her necklace, hands careful, expression unreadable.

Example 2:
She brushed the hair from his face, pretending not to care that her hand trembled.

1 0 1 0
9 months ago

9️⃣ Soft Words Only in the Dark
Vulnerability comes out when no one else is around… and only if you don’t make it weird.

Example 1:
“If something ever happened to you…” He didn’t finish the sentence. Just looked at her like that said enough.

Example 2:
“You matter to me. More than you should.”

1 0 1 0