Guide to Writing an Excellent Synopsis for Unpublished Manuscript
Posted at 4:19 am
Editors hardly find time to go through your entire manuscript, and so it is the synopsis that they want to go through. Therefore, you have to be focused when writing the synopsis and punch in the crucial points to make it ideal for describing the manuscript.
Follow a few step-by-step procedures ensure a successful guide towards writing an apt synopsis of your unpublished manuscript.
Remember a successful synopsis is well-defined by its structured, surprise-free and succinct content. Long, meandering sentences won’t justify your writing. First off, you have to be well aware of your manuscript. Though, you may feel that the job is quite easy but you will be surprised to know how easy it is to forget the subtle details of what you have written since you have been working on it since a long time. Therefore, before you start jotting down the synopsis you need to go through the entire manuscript once again and be sure that you know all the information intimately.
Draft a summary first. Once you are confident about the storyline, characters and language; you can go well about it. A well-written synopsis should not be more than 300 words. Therefore, after finishing writing the draft, re-check it and edit the content to abridge it. Since 300 words is too short to describe a 1,00, 000 words manuscript you have to choose words wisely and trickily put in the information and essence of the matter in a way to convince readers. The advice is to avoid being too much descriptive, instead, be brief and to the point.
Remember, drafting, editing and then finalizing your summary play the major steps in preparing a validated summary for an unpublished manuscript. The crucial advice is to ask a professional to read your synopsis before it is being submitted. An objective opinion plays the best for your manuscript.
3 thoughts on “These Mistakes Could Prove Deadly in Medical Transcription”
Tiffany
August 29, 2017 at 5:45 am
One needs to be really careful while working on medical transcriptions. One wrong word and it could have serious consequences. Anyways, nice article.
medical research paper is deadly. Thanks for the tips.
Can you tell me how the data is feed and analysed in statistical tools for data analysis?