Subject: Speaking only for myself here, of course.
Author:
Posted on: 2011-12-01 00:17:00 UTC

1) No idea. Sorry.

2) ...no idea. Sorry.

3) Linking is good.

4) This is why I'm sometimes so hesitant to respond to requests. (SOMETIMES. Usually, I either see it and go "Ah, I'll get to that later," not having the time at the moment, and then July or someone Ninjas it out from under me, or I don't see it.) Because I am terribly uncomfortable saying "Yes, absolutely, go ahead!" to someone whose writing I really don't like. Or, as July pointed out, who I don't feel is going to do the PPC any favors. (And here we all owe Nakkel a big hand for being the shameless troll that he is, and providing us with a perfect example subject.)

But the request isn't... doing anything wrong that I can pin-point. (I will say that, unlike what July says below, I wouldn't say yes to someone if I noticed a lot of SpaG errors.) So I just worry and think and go over it in my head repeatedly until someone else comes along and takes the decision out of my hands.

...I'm actually not very good at this job.

It just doesn't sit right with me, stamping "Yes Go Ahead" on someone who I don't think has grasped A) the PPC, in general, B) writing consistently in character, C) syntax skills in English. If I can make good points and it's a clear Yes or a clear No, then fine. But if it's not a clear Yes, I can't just red-stamp it-- and if it's not a clear No, I want someone else's say-so before I go ahead.

So-- what I'm looking for in a writing sample? Good spelling, good grammar, a style that doesn't crunch like a fancy cake being shoved haphazardly into a too-small box. A deft hand with the canons, and someone whose face I recognize from more than just "Hi Newbie!" posts and "Hey, when going for permission..." posts.

That's about it, really. Make sense?

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