Writing Beyond Your Experience Requires More Than Research: Hiring a Sensitivity Reader
Linda K. Sienkiewicz
Why would a writer hire a sensitivity reader? The biggest reason is to help ensure respectful, accurate portrayals of experiences outside their own. The goal isn’t censorship but to avoid harmful stereotypes, unconscious bias, and unintentional misrepresentation.
What a sensitivity reader gave me was not just correction but confidence that I had created a character who felt fully human instead of simply well-researched.


I’ve always been impressed by the author who can sweep the reader away with a magical opening sentence. Some may believe the first sentence is nothing more than the first of many other sentences. But writers worry a great deal about their first lines, as they should: A well-written opening can launch the reader out of port into the open sea of story, eager for adventure.
I felt completely lost when it was time to revise my first manuscript. There were countless books, articles, and classes available on the art of drafting a story, but few seemed to focus on revision.
Monica Cox
Beta readers are an important part of a writer’s revision process. After we draft and revise a manuscript, our characters and story worlds become a part of us. As a result, it can be difficult to recognize when important elements haven’t made it onto the page for the reader. Here is where a beta reader—an early reader acting as a stand-in for your eventual target reader—can help.