From Editing to Publication: How a Book makes it onto Book Shop Shelves

Structural and Line Edits

A question I get asked many times is how the process of editing works with my UK and US editors: what if I don’t agree with what they say? Isn’t it my book to do with as I like? What about editors in other countries – do they have any input? What if my English-speaking editors don’t agree with each other? Who makes the changes? And then when I answer these, often another question comes: What happens next?

I thought I would start a regular post about how the process has been working for my next book, Hunger and Thirst, due for publication in May 2026. Keep in mind, though that this is me and this book, and my editors. The process won’t be the same for every published author, and isn’t exactly the same for every one of my books.

And also keep in mind that I’m describing the process after I’ve done all the self-editing I think I can do, and after my editors at Fig Tree / Penguin in the UK, and Tin House / Zando in the US have read the book, bought it, and read it with their editing hats on.

What I got from them both were editing notes. The first round came only from my UK editor (as my prime publisher), and later I got notes from them both. They didn’t particularly confer, but as we got further down the line they talked together before they talked to me so they could agree on what changes they were going to suggest, so I didn’t face too much of issue of conflicting opinions. (Although this was a challenge at some points.)

  1. I’m emailed editing notes by my UK editor. At this stage they’re very high level, and they’re general questions, things for us to discuss. For example,
    ‘The ending feels a little too rushed’, ‘I would love us to work out how best to weave in both the art and the moments when we zoom out of Ursula’s story and into the narrative about the filming of the documentary’, and, ‘Ursula’s strangeness. Just how weird is she!?’ There were seven pages of notes like this.
  2. We meet to talk through them, resolving some of the questions as we talk and agreeing that some might be sorted out on the page. We wonder what will the impact on X be if I change Y. And so on, for a few hours.
  3. I spend several weeks working on these suggestions – the written ones and the things we discussed in person. Agreeing with most, disagreeing with some, or realising as I edit that something else now needs to change.
  4. I send the revised draft to my UK editor, and there is another round of edits. More in depth than the first.
  5. My US editor now sees a draft and is now also involved in making suggestions, and giving me editing notes.
  6. I do another draft and receive more notes; another draft, and more notes. Sometimes I make too many changes and have to replace what I took out earlier, sometimes the story is too clear, sometimes too opaque. We all feel we are getting closer to the finish line.
  7. The last round are line edits – minor changes to make sure everything links together, the pacing is right, the themes work, and more.
  8. This whole process takes about a year.
  9. And then the manuscript goes to copyediting.

    I’ve just received the manuscript back from my US copyeditor, so watch out for a post next month about how this next stage of the process works.

    Any questions? Or anything I’ve missed out? Let me know either in a comment on this post, or send me a message here, and I’ll try and cover them next time.

(The image used at the top of this post was strangely influential in writing this novel. I found it online when I was looking for an old-fashioned medicine bottle. It informed one of the character’s names, the name of some medicine another character takes, and even the year in which most of the book is set.)

Your Next Favorite Read: Get Personalized Book Recommendations

Are you stuck on what you should read next? Perhaps you know what you like and you’re looking for a similar book, or you want to read something completely different. Or maybe you need something different from the bestsellers that the big booksellers chuck at you. Don’t worry – I can help!

In my next newsletter I’ll be starting a Recommended Reads section. Subscribers will be able to ask me for a book recommendation either for themselves or for a friend that they want to buy a book for. If you’re not already a subscriber that’s no problem – just sign up here.

I’ll be picking one subscriber each newsletter and making some suggestions on what books they might like to try, which will hopefully guide other people to fiction and non-fiction isn’t as well known as the books everyone else is reading.

To kick off the first Recommended Reads section, I’d love a new subscriber to let me know what kind of next read they’d like. If you’d like me to recommend a read or two to you in my next newsletter, then just subscribe here, and send me a message with what you’re looking for*. (Please include as much or as little information on what you like to read, what you don’t, what you’re in the mood for next, fiction or non-fiction, or something about the person you need to buy a book for.)

* I’ll only be recommending books for adults, since I don’t generally read books for children or YA.

Join Me for Writing Sessions in Dorset, Devon and Cornwall

Currently, for the rest of 2025 I’ve got three Creative Writing teaching sessions booked in. They are all in person, so apologies for all those who live a bit further than the South / South West of England. Keep a look out for an online course in the near future.

27th June: Bournemouth. I’m teaching a two and a half hour session on plot as part of Bournemouth Writing Sanctuary. The event last three days and includes teaching from other writers including Judith Heneghan, writing time, lunch and dinner, and networking with other writers. More information here.

4th July: Penzance. I’m teaching a two-hour workshop on the Art of Editing Your Own Work. More information here. This is part of the Penzance Literary Festival, where I’m also being interviewed about my writing. Book for this event.

24th November to 29th November: I’m back at Arvon, but this time in Totleigh Barton, Devon, teaching Editing Fiction and Non-fiction together with Chatto & Windus (Penguin) Editor, Kaiya Shang. Find out more.

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Subscribe to my newsletter, and receive a personalised recommendation for what to read next. If you haven’t already subscribed, you’re missing out on news about my next book, what events I’ll be appearing at, and what I’m reading. Subscribe here.

Pre-Order ‘Unquiet Guests’: Spooky Stories Await

I’m delighted that I have a short ghost story included in this spooky anthology, Unquiet Guests, and alongside such amazing authors as Chuck Palahniuk, Kirsty Logan, Irenosen Okojie, and Alison Moore. The book will be published by Dead Ink Books at the end of October 2025. Dan Coxon is the editor and commissioned us each to write a story about a haunted house.

I started my story some time ago about two sisters who arrive at their father’s house, after he has died. One of the sisters has the key and is waiting for the other. About a month after I’d written the first draft, devastatingly my own father died. Two days later I realised I was outside his place with the key, waiting for my sister to arrive…

The book is available to pre-order now, in the UK (I’m not sure whether it will be published in other countries), either via Dead Ink Books, or Waterstones, and it will drop through your letterbox at the end of October.

Happy reading.

Essie Fox’s Top 3 Hidden Gem Books You Should Know

Read This: Books under the Radar is a weekly post written by a guest author – often a friend of mine, someone I’ve met on my writerly travels, or an author I admire – who recommends three books they think deserve more recognition. If you’re interested in buying any of the books, please click on the covers and give these hidden gems some love. You can see the full list of books which have been selected, as well as the author’s latest book on Bookshop.org, where you can have a browse and buy any that take your fancy. Happy reading!

Read This: Essie Fox

Essie and I met when we both helped form, and joined, The Prime Writers. This was a group of writers whose debuts were published when we were all over forty. At the time it felt that debuts were all about young writers (and to an extent they still are) and we were all feeling a little lost. We were there to commiserate when things weren’t going well, and to cheer when they were. We’re all loosely still in touch, and I feel a huge camaraderie with this group of writers, and love to see them doing well, and I’m always ready to support them when they have a new book out. Essie’s latest is available to pre-order now. Here’s what she has to say about herself:

Essie Fox writes historical gothic novels. Her debut, The Somnambulist, was shortlisted for the National Book Awards, and featured on Channel 4’s TV Book Club. The Last Days of Leda Grey, set in the early years of silent film, was selected as The Times Historical Book of the Month. The Fascination was an instant Sunday Times Top Ten Bestseller, and her forthcoming novel, Dangerous is a dark and vampiric-themed mystery featuring Lord Byron, when the poet resided in Venice.

Essie has lectured on the historical themes behind her novels at the Victoria and Albert Museum, the National Gallery in London, as well as at literary festivals and bookshop events.

Discover more about Essie at her website: essiefox.com
Here are the books Essie chose:

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Uncovering Hidden Gems: Viv Groskop’s Top Book Picks

Read This: Books under the Radar is a weekly post written by a guest author – often a friend of mine, someone I’ve met on my writerly travels, or an author I admire – who recommends three books they think deserve more recognition. If you’re interested in buying any of the books, please click on the covers and give these hidden gems some love. You can see the full list of books which have been selected, as well as the author’s latest book on Bookshop.org, where you can have a browse and buy any that take your fancy. Happy reading!

Read This: Viv Groskop

Viv and I have known each other for ten years, when my debut, Our Endless Numbered Days won the Desmond Elliott Prize and she was one of the judges – and the chair of the judges let it slip that Viv didn’t vote for my book! I’m not sure whether it was embarrassment at the reveal but when she was booking authors for the Bath Literary Festival she invited me, and since then (and because I’ve of course forgiven her) we’ve bumped into each other at many literary events. I’ve read most of her books and they’re always an inspiration, and I particularly loved her latest, One Ukrainian Summer, a memoir of her time in the 1980s in the USSR and Ukraine. I highly recommend it. Here’s what she has to say about herself:

Viv Groskop is an author, comedian and playwright. She is the author of seven non-fiction books including the best-seller How to Own the Room: Women and the Art of Brilliant Speaking. Her latest book One Ukrainian Summer is a memoir set after the fall of the Iron Curtain and is about being young and stupidly in love with a Ukrainian punk rock guitarist who repeatedly gives you headlice. It comes out in paperback in April 2025. All author proceeds for this book go to PEN International for their work with Writers at Risk.

Find her on Instagram @vivgroskop and subscribe to her weekly newsletter at vivgroskop.com.

Here are the books Viv chose:

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Under-the-Radar Book Picks by Beth O’Leary

Read This: Books under the Radar is a weekly post written by a guest author – often a friend of mine, someone I’ve met on my writerly travels, or an author I admire – who recommends three books they think deserve more recognition. If you’re interested in buying any of the books, please click on the covers and give these hidden gems some love. You can see the full list of books which have been selected, as well as the author’s latest book on Bookshop.org, where you can have a browse and buy any that take your fancy. Happy reading!

Read This: Beth O’Leary

Beth lives in my neck of the woods and once upon a time was in my writing group, so I was very privileged to read some of her novels as she was writing them. But family commitments took over, and to be honest, I’m not sure that Beth needs the help of a writing group – her novels are so wonderful. I have been sent a copy of Swept Away but I haven’t yet found the time to pick it up. Soon, I promise! It will be published on 8th April, and if you click on the picture you can pre-order (or order) a copy. Here’s what she has to say about herself:

Beth O’Leary is a Sunday Times bestselling author whose novels have been translated into more than thirty languages. Her debut, The Flatshare, sold over a million copies and is now a major TV series, as is her third novel, The Road Trip. All her other novels – The Switch, The No-Show and The Wake-Up Call – were also instant bestsellers. Beth writes her books in the Hampshire countryside with a very badly behaved Golden Retriever for company. If she’s not in her writing shed, you’ll usually find her curled up somewhere with a book, a cup of tea and several woolly jumpers (whatever the weather).

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/betholearyauthor/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/betholearyauthor

Here are the books Beth chose:

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Explore Overlooked Books Worth Your Time selected by food writer, Claire Thomson, aka @5oclockapron

Read This: Books under the Radar is a weekly post written by a guest author – often a friend of mine, someone I’ve met on my writerly travels, or an author I admire – who recommends three books they think deserve more recognition. If you’re interested in buying any of the books, please click on the covers and give these hidden gems some love. You can see the full list of books which have been selected, as well as the author’s latest book on Bookshop.org, where you can have a browse and buy any that take your fancy. Happy reading!

Read This: Claire Thomson

You might not know this, but as well as novels, I LOVE cookbooks. I have a pretty big collection and love sitting down on my kitchen floor besides the shelves where I keep them all and browsing through. I can’t remember when I first started following Claire Thomson on Instagram with her vegetable-led recipes, but I have loved her easy to follow but interesting style of cooking. I urge you to follow her too: @5oclockapron. Her 10th cookbook, One Pan Beans is out this week and I also urge you to buy it, because it’s brilliant and I’ve already cooked several delicious recipes from it. Here’s what she has to say about herself:

Claire Thomson is a chef, food writer and a constant source of family-cooking inspiration to her 180,000 Instagram followers. Claire has written for the GuardianTelegraphBBC Good Food Magazine and Delicious and is a Guild of Food Writers award winner. She has appeared on BBC1’s Saturday Kitchen, Channel 4’s Sunday Brunch and BBC Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour. On her podcast The 5 O’Clock Apron, she chats and chops with people from other professions about what they cook for dinner. Her previous books include Art of the Larder, Home Cookery Year, One Pan Chicken and Veggie Family Cookbook. @5oclockapron

Podcast https://shows.acast.com/the-5-o-clock-apron-podcast

Instagram @5oclockapron 
And here are the books Claire has chosen:

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Discover Hidden Gem Books You Must Read, selected by author Sophie Haydock

Read This: Books under the Radar is a weekly post written by a guest author – often a friend of mine, someone I’ve met on my writerly travels, or an author I admire – who recommends three books they think deserve more recognition. If you’re interested in buying any of the books, please click on the covers and give these hidden gems some love. You can see the full list of books which have been selected, as well as the author’s latest book on Bookshop.org, where you can have a browse and buy any that take your fancy. Happy reading!

Read This: Sophie Haydock

I’ve been aware of Sophie’s debut novel, The Flames for a while, and then I ‘met’ her – virtually at least – when we both judged the ALCS Tom-Gallon Trust Award short story competition for three years running. And now I have her next novel Madame Matisse in my sights. Here’s what she has to say about herself:

Sophie Haydock is an award-winning author, journalist and curator, living by the sea in Folkestone. She has a passion for uncovering hidden stories – whether in the archives, on the foreshore of the Thames as a licensed mudlark or in the pages of history. Her debut novel, The Flames, tells the story of the four women who posed for the scandalous Viennese artist Egon Schiele. Her second novel, Madame Matisse, explores the lives of the women who propelled Henri Matisse to immortality. Sophie is the curator of the Folkestone Book Festival, where she champions forgotten voices and shines a light on the stories that deserve to be told.

Find out more: www.sophie-haydock.com; Instagram @egonschieleswomen and _SophieHaydock_

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Books Under the Radar selected by Huma Qureshi: Worth Your Time and Attention

Read This: Books under the Radar is a weekly post written by a guest author – often a friend of mine, someone I’ve met on my writerly travels, or an author I admire – who recommends three books they think deserve more recognition. If you’re interested in buying any of the books, please click on the covers and give these hidden gems some love. You can see the full list of books which have been selected, as well as the author’s latest book on Bookshop.org, where you can have a browse and buy any that take your fancy. Happy reading!

Read This: Huma Qureshi

I met Huma when she was the guest author on an Editing Fiction and Non-fiction course I taught for Arvon. Huma came on Wednesday evening and read from her books and told the students about her writing and how she edits. She seemed such a warm and friendly person and was incredibly generous with her time and in answering the students’ questions. Here’s what she has to say about herself:

Huma Qureshi is an award-winning writer and author of four books. Her memoir, How We Met: A Memoir of Love and Other Misadventures, was published in 2021 (Elliott & Thompson), and shortlisted for the Indie Book Awards. Her debut short-story collection, Things We Do Not Tell the People We Love, also published in 2021 (Sceptre), was longlisted for both The Jhalak Prize Book of The Year and The Edge Hill Prize for excellence in a single authored short story collection. In 2020, she won the coveted Harper’s Bazaar short story literary prize. Her first book, In Spite of Oceans, was published in 2014 (The History Press) and received the John C. Laurence award from The Authors ’Foundation. Her debut novel, Playing Games, a poignant story of art and sisterhood, family, marriage and betrayal, was published to critical acclaim in 2023 (Sceptre). Huma writes the popular newsletter Dear Huma and teaches a range of creative writing courses via her website, http://www.humaqureshi.co.uk.

On Instagram: @humaqureshiwriter

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