An editor’s work stays behind the scenes. We see the finished product
and laud the author—quite rightfully—for the skill and talent that
brought ideas and people to life. But I don’t imagine we think much
about the editor who coaxed the author along, pointing out
inconsistencies or raising questions and correcting glaring errors. I
only hear editors talked about when errors aren’t corrected. We don’t
realize what else might have gone wrong had an editor not been there.
(As an editor myself, I wince when I see obvious errors in
professionally published work, not because I’m horrified at low
standards but because I know some editor somewhere is horrified to have
let that pass. It’s only massive error pile-ups that agitate me.)
In her memoir, Diana Athill, a former editor at André Deutsch, steps
out from behind the scenes and looks back over her long career, which
involved editing such luminaries as V.S. Naipaul, Jean Rhys, and Molly
Keane. But she also worked on cookbooks, poetry collections, and works
of nonfiction on a variety of topics. She was involved in almost every
aspect of the process: selecting manuscripts, editing, copyediting and
proofing, and even placing ads.
One nonfiction work she remembers particularly fondly is a book about
the discovery of Tahiti, which, she says, “taught me once and for all
about the true nature of my job.” The author was obsessed with the topic
and knew everything there was to know about it, but the manuscript was
unreadable. Athill’s firm, Allan Wingate, put the author in touch with
an outside editor to help him get it into shape, but “that lazy old Sir
Whatsit had become bored after about six pages, and from then on had
done almost nothing.” Athill took on the manuscript and whipped it into
shape:
I doubt if there was a sentence—certainly there was not a
paragraph—that I did not alter and often have to retype, sending it
through chapter by chapter to the author for his approval which—although
he was naturally grouchy—he always gave. I enjoyed the work. It was
like removing layers of crumpled brown paper from an awkwardly shaped
parcel, and revealing the attractive present which it contained.
It’s rare for me to have to do such extensive editing in my work, but
it has happened, and it is a great pleasure to bring those presents out
of an author’s mind and into the light for others to enjoy and learn
from. The punchline to this story is that when the book was published to
good reviews, the author sent her a note about the commendations of the
writing:
‘You will observe the comment about the writing which
confirms what I have thought all along, that none of that fuss about it
was necessary.’ When I had stopped laughing I accepted the message: an
editor must never expect thanks (sometimes they come, but they must
always be seen as a bonus). We must always remember that we are only
midwives—if we want praise for progeny we must give birth to our own.
I loved this story for what it reveals about the work of an editor
and what it reveals about Athill herself. She’s aware of her own talent
and wishes to do well, but she recognizes her place in the process, and
she has a sense of humor about the sometimes preposterous aspects of the
job. I liked her attitude so much, and I think I would have liked to
work with her.
Although I hesitate to say it out loud at a time when we women are
being told to “lean in” and be more ambitious, her sensible attitude
toward the place of work in her life also appealed to me:
And even as an editor, a job which I thoroughly enjoyed, I
betrayed my amateurish nature by drawing the line at working outside
office hours. The working breakfast, and taking work home at
weekends—two activities regarded by many as necessary evidence of
commitment, both of them much indulged in by that born publisher, André
Deutsch—were to me an abomination. Very rarely someone from my work
moved over into my private life, but generally office and home were far
apart, and home was much more important than office. I was not ashamed
of valuing my private life more highly than my work; that, to my mind,
is what everyone ought to do.
Reading this, I had to remind myself that Athill retired in the
1980s, before we were attached to our e-mail and smartphones, and yet
she felt the same pressure we feel today to make our work into our
lives. I feel—quite strongly—that I’m better at my job for taking time
away from it. But such detachment comes at a cost, then and now. Looking
back, Athill sees that she could have earned more and gained more
authority if she’d pushed a little harder, but she’s honest enough to
admit that she was glad not to have the responsibility that would have
come with a higher position. She acknowledges the tension between her
own complacency and the push for women’s rights, but she feels no guilt
about being content where she was. Here, the book’s title
Stet—an editor’s term for
let it stand—seems especially appropriate.
Being an editor myself, I was drawn most to her depictions of the
nuts and bolts of her work; it’s always interesting to see how the job
is done elsewhere, and in a different form, since I’m a magazine editor
and haven’t worked on books for years. Her years in publishing give her
valuable insights into the selection of manuscripts and balancing the
desire to publish good books and the need to publish books that sell.
And she makes some amusing and interesting points about taste—I laughed
at her observation that we sometimes call something good when we don’t
understand it, “a betrayal of intelligence that has allowed a good deal
of junk to masquerade as art.”
The last half of the book, which focuses on specific authors she
worked with, interested me less than the first half. I’ve only read one
of the authors she discussed, Jean Rhys, and I didn’t like
Wide Sargasso Sea
much, so I didn’t care that much about her relationships with these
people, except in the way those relationships affected the work. In the
chapter on V.S. Naipaul, for example, she reveals how her personal
feelings influenced her assessment of a book loosely based a story of on
people she knew and how those feelings led her firm to lose Naipaul for
a time. Bits like that were what I enjoyed. I was less interested in
the authors’ lives and personalities.
Also posted at
Shelf Love.