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Simply submit the new version as you submitted the old one, only adding the word "EDITED" to the title (ex. "My Sexy Firefighter Ch. 03 - EDITED") so that we know to replace the old text with the new text. We will then replace the original text with the new text. Your story will retain its previous voting score and views.
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The above replies tell you how it’s done, but ethically speaking, there has to be a point at which a story is “finished.” I always think that point should be publication. If you’ve published something, then surely that’s got to be the final version, warts and all?
I still find occasional typos in my published work, and though I roll my eyes at my own lack of attention to detail, I don’t go back and change them. For better or for worse, I feel it’s a done deal when I hit submit.
Beware. Remember: George Lucas’ reputation didn’t start crashing when he released that horror The Phantom Menace. It started crashing two years before, when he sent Jabba to Mos Eisly and tried to claim Greedo shot first. The story’s got to be finished at some point; it’s unfair to fans to go changing things after publication.
It was up to me to get it in the best shape possible before submitting it.
Thanks for the replies y'all, these answered my questions. Mainly I'm trying to craft an ongoing narrative, and would like the ability to go back and retcon parts of previous chapters as necessary, I don't foresee it happening too often, but I was curious just in case. Thanks again!
Combine this with the constant requests for follow-ups (very tempting for the dreamers; isn’t that the ultimate proof that readers like your stories?) and, at least to me, it makes perfect sense that people sometimes want to improve and/or modify their stories.
Would Literotica improve, if the dreamers get discouraged to improve their stories on Lit? The option is provided, and I think it is a sensible service.
I'd just like to say thanks, that was an interesting read of everyone's views and it's helped me make up my own mind not to waste time going back and editing already posted stories. Move on to the next one!
Keep going the way you are, you'll be biting Pilot on the ass for productivity - I can just picture him, furiously pounding away in his attic, thinking, "fuck, gotta keep ahead of that bitch, she types as fast with only her right hand as I do with my left... thank Christ she don't write GM!"![]()
I take an opposite approach - a couple of weeks after I submit a story, I submit a revised version that cleans up the errors that my readers catch. I put in the author's notes at the end of each story, "If you find any typos or grammar problems, please PM them to me and I will post a cleaned up version of this story." I'm about to submit the cleaned-up version of my latest story.The above replies tell you how it’s done, but ethically speaking, there has to be a point at which a story is “finished.” I always think that point should be publication. If you’ve published something, then surely that’s got to be the final version, warts and all?
I still find occasional typos in my published work, and though I roll my eyes at my own lack of attention to detail, I don’t go back and change them. For better or for worse, I feel it’s a done deal when I hit submit.
That's a totally different issue. I clean up minor mistakes and don't change the plot of the story (though I'm kind of breaking that with this clean up as I have the Astros losing in the World Series and I'm going to change the story to have them win).Beware. Remember: George Lucas’ reputation didn’t start crashing when he released that horror The Phantom Menace. It started crashing two years before, when he sent Jabba to Mos Eisly and tried to claim Greedo shot first. The story’s got to be finished at some point; it’s unfair to fans to go changing things after publication.
You have one view on how this website should be operated. Laurel has a different view.Again, you aren't the only one involved with any rework you do. By using Lit. like it was the Cloud or something, you are multiplying the work the Lit. editor has to do to accommodate you and denying other authors, who aren't this fussy and selfish, her submissions services while she's back to working on your messing about with something you jolly well should have gotten in the condition you could live with before submitting it.
......their darling diamond.
Speaking of darling diamonds, do you do your covers yourself? I've always liked them. That one for "The Aviators" is just .... yum!
There are a number of reasons why I do this. #1 is that I hate it when readers post a comment like "It should be 'breaths' instead of 'breathes' on page 6." It's a six-page story and the commenter's only thought when he/she was done is that I made a minor mistake? By telling readers to PM me the the mistakes they catch, it reduces the number of such comments. #2 is that my stories are regularly read after the first few weeks of publication and I want my readers to have the best reading experience they can have when they read my story. Not fixing mistakes that I'm aware seems counterproductive.
I'm not talking about submitting a new story that is a revised version of an existing story. I'm talking about what the OP is talking about - submitting a cleaned-up version of an existing story that, when approved, overlays the existing version.Total waste of time.
1. Readers who catch minor problems have already read your story. They are unlikely to read it again and notice your rewrites.
2. The number of comments go down on a rewrite because nearly everyone who would have an interest in it probably read it the first time around.