I've been asking my professors if there is a college resource I could use to get a professional editorial review of my novel. I was suggested the Writing Center. So, when asked to explain what type of project it was, I had to explain:
Content?
"I am attempting to revise a greater-than-100,000-word-long creative arts work (novel manuscript) as part of an ongoing hobby. Again, this is not for a class. I am specifically looking for review with regards to characterization, plot development, and both overarching and scene-level clarity."
How many pages is it? Greater than 30 (The highest option they gave me)
Foci? Development and Clarity.
Due Date? None.
Times Available? Tuesdays after 3PM
How did I learn about the program? I walked up to the front desk and asked who would handle something like this.
Yessss. *wants to go to the rally so fucking badly*
My mom was okay with it until I asked about it again tonight, when she said she'd be fine if it was a nonstop flight, but she doesn't want me to make a stop alone in an airport.
My problem was that she can't format or spell, and that apparently these things need to be laid out for us.
"Voice"? I haven't heard that one since grade school.
The active-voice thing is just her stating that like high school, she'll eviscerate you if you ever, ever use the verb "to be" in your paper, because it is 'bad writing'. Always. Period.
So if I argued after a quote in a paper that "It was at this moment that Jules Verne decided that he did not want to be a stockbroker" she'd chuck me out the window?
Look at it this way: It's an easy A. Those aren't easy to come by every semester. Better than a class I had in my first semester where the professor thought that gravity and air pressure were the same thing.