Are you looking this product? Now you can get product in Kindle Format,just following step by step until finish you will be guided downloading this book for free, Enjoy it.
But why, you ask, should I--a writer/good writer/outstanding writer (circle one)--spend my finite supply of money on a book editor?
You've labored over your best seller--your literary baby--and it's time now either to self-publish it or to send it off to an agent or publishing house. Can't you just run your files through a spell checker and get on with it? Truth is, your chances of being published or--even if published--being happily read, improve dramatically if you let a professional book editor do his/her magic on it first. Here are five good reasons:
A book editor is a specialist. By aptitude, training, and experience a book editor is a professional just as much as the carburetor genius who fixes your sick 4-barrel, or the neurosurgeon who delicately rewires your one and only brain.
Publishing house editors and your eventual readers will be greatly put off by improper spelling, grammar, punctuation, capitalization, and "style" (the correct usage of various words, phrases, and numbers). An editor can whip all these into perfect shape for you.
Once the "mechanics" of your writing are up to par, your editor will spot and fix other things: poor transitions between paragraphs, errors of logic, deleting unneeded and repetitious words, and inconsistencies (the character you said was blue-eyed in chapter 1 but is suddenly brown-eyed in chapter 2).
Your book editor will also "smooth" your writing by choosing a better and more precise word where needed, by breaking long paragraphs or sentences apart into two or more, and by presenting your dialogue more realistically and in proper form.
Finally, your editor can advise you on where to go with the "next steps." If you plan to submit your manuscript to a publisher, he/she can tell you how to do that. If you plan to self-publish, she can help you find a pro to lay out your book pages, design your cover, and find a good printer/binder.
Since none of us is a professional at everything we attempt, we all use a wide variety of specialists in this life. And a mistake many writers make is to assume that a good writer is automatically a good editor. After all, both are "word" functions, right? But that's unfortunately not true. Writing and editing are separate functions. Yes, sometimes they can exist in the same person, but more often, that's not the case.
So if you want to give your writing it's best chance--put its best foot forward--you really truly DO need a book editor!