Want to capture readers and editors immediately? The important journalistic tools Who? Where? When? What? Why? and How? work as well in fiction as when writing articles.
I read as much as possible, especially, inspirational fiction. Most of the novels faithfully follow the rule of presenting the lead character(s) in the first few sentences or paragraphs and hinting at the problem. My favorite titles don't stop there. So what else do I want to know and look for right away to pull me in and make me part of the story?- Who? A lonely six-year-old? A heartbroken widower. A romantic young girl?
- Where? A city street in Seattle? A battle front in Afghanistan? At the Mardi Gras in New Orleans? Lost in the Far North?
- When? Now? During the Civil War? Sometime in the future? In Bible days?
- What? A problem significant enough to make me want to read on.
- Why/How? Relates to something in my life. I want to know more about it. I feel a kinship with the person facing it. I am appalled, excited, happy, or sad.
From my novella Winterlude, included in the upcoming TREASURED CHRISTMAS BRIDES collection (debuting September 2nd; available for pre-order. Amazon.com).
Early November, mid-1930s
Ariel
Dixon gazed into
the shadowy
image reflected
in the mirror on
her bedroom
wall. Dread of
the coming
interview with
her aunt showed
in the sea-green
eyes. An inner
voice taunted, You have to tell her.
Ariel
turned from the
mirror, but the
accusing voice
went on. Where
is your Dixon
courage?
You’ve faced
raging seas,
been chased by
wild animals.
How hard can
confessing to
Aunt Rebekah
be? You don’t
want her to
hear what
you’ve done
from someone
else, do you?
“No!
Please, God,
give me
strength,” Ariel
prayed. She sat
down on the
fluffy green
bedspread that
matched the
brocaded
draperies at her
window. Peace
gradually crept
into her
troubled heart.
God would not
desert her. She
took her
well-used Bible
from the bedside
stand. A tiny
envelope rested
inside the front
cover. Ariel’s
fingers trembled
when she opened
it. Even after
all these years,
the dusty
remains of a
single
forget-me-not
brought pain.
Why had her
girlhood
companion
vanished without
a trace? Why did
Jean Thoreau’s
memory still
have the power
to stir her?
Oh, for
those long-ago
carefree days!
The excitement
of life in San
Diego had pushed
precious
memories aside.
Now they
returned full
force, along
with contempt
for herself.
"How could I
have fallen prey
to the lure of
fool’s gold
after knowing
Jean?” Ariel
whispered.
The other novellas also offer intriguing beginnings
There has to be a way. Amanda Cabot's The Christmas Star Bride finds Esther Hathaway furiously kneading pumpernickel bread four weeks before Christmas 1885, Cheyenne, Wyoming Territory, and searching for a way to give her soon-to-be-married niece an unforgettable gift.
From Rebecca Germany's A Token of Promise. October 1897, San Francisco, Gabe Monroe appreciates the color red in a sunset, a strawberry pie, and in a woman's blushing cheeks. He does not appreciate tomato red on his freshly-polished top boots that may well stain the beaver cloth.
Band of Angel's, Cathy Marie Hake. Colorado 1893. After learning that gold fever doesn't always produce riches, Jarrod McLeod finds gold! He stares at his rusty, second-hand gold pan in disbelief. Not fool's gold. Not flakes. Or a nugget. A small woman's wedding band bearing the inscription AW & JM.
MaryLu Tyndall's Christmas Bounty, set in 1855 Santa Barbara, California opens with the poignant question? "What kind of God would allow children to go hungry?" Heroine Caroline Moreau jingles the few coins left in her purse and selects a few vegetables and a sack of beans. How can she and her eight-year-old son survive?
The Gold Rush Christmas, August 1897, Port Orchard, Washington. Samantha Harris brushes away tears and sadly watches the last quilt be packed. Alaska may be a land of opportunities, as her twin brother insists, but all Samantha wants is to find their minister father somewhere in its forbidding depths and bring him back to civilization.
The other novellas also offer intriguing beginnings
There has to be a way. Amanda Cabot's The Christmas Star Bride finds Esther Hathaway furiously kneading pumpernickel bread four weeks before Christmas 1885, Cheyenne, Wyoming Territory, and searching for a way to give her soon-to-be-married niece an unforgettable gift.
From Rebecca Germany's A Token of Promise. October 1897, San Francisco, Gabe Monroe appreciates the color red in a sunset, a strawberry pie, and in a woman's blushing cheeks. He does not appreciate tomato red on his freshly-polished top boots that may well stain the beaver cloth.
Band of Angel's, Cathy Marie Hake. Colorado 1893. After learning that gold fever doesn't always produce riches, Jarrod McLeod finds gold! He stares at his rusty, second-hand gold pan in disbelief. Not fool's gold. Not flakes. Or a nugget. A small woman's wedding band bearing the inscription AW & JM.
MaryLu Tyndall's Christmas Bounty, set in 1855 Santa Barbara, California opens with the poignant question? "What kind of God would allow children to go hungry?" Heroine Caroline Moreau jingles the few coins left in her purse and selects a few vegetables and a sack of beans. How can she and her eight-year-old son survive?
The Gold Rush Christmas, August 1897, Port Orchard, Washington. Samantha Harris brushes away tears and sadly watches the last quilt be packed. Alaska may be a land of opportunities, as her twin brother insists, but all Samantha wants is to find their minister father somewhere in its forbidding depths and bring him back to civilization.
* * *
Note:
The
original
version of
Winterlude
opened,
"It started
with a single
snowflake, as
out of place
on the
windshield of
Emmett Carey's
ostentatious
Pierce Silver
Arrow as a
date palm in
Alaska."
Statement of
fact. Appeal
only in that
it raises the
questions,
"What
started?" "How
could an
out-of-place
snowflake
start anything
important?"
Not enough to
keep many
readers
reading.
Emmett's
reaction to
Alaska
followed. Too
much focus on
someone other
than the
heroine and
real hero.
Many times I have pointed out the importance of hooking readers right away. The answer has often been, "I get into all that later." Sorry. Editors won't get to later. If they aren't intrigued with the first few paragraphs they stop reading and usually reject the manuscript."
Before I had a computer, the floor around my typewriter table was littered with discarded beginnings. Others write differently, but until I had an opening that satisfied me, I was unable to continue. It wasn't set in cement, just in place enough to let me get on with the story and revise later if necessary.
Available at
Many times I have pointed out the importance of hooking readers right away. The answer has often been, "I get into all that later." Sorry. Editors won't get to later. If they aren't intrigued with the first few paragraphs they stop reading and usually reject the manuscript."
Before I had a computer, the floor around my typewriter table was littered with discarded beginnings. Others write differently, but until I had an opening that satisfied me, I was unable to continue. It wasn't set in cement, just in place enough to let me get on with the story and revise later if necessary.
Available at
5 comments:
Great article! I loved it. I'll try and remember your advice.
Showing the opening of Interlude in contrast to your original beginning is worth a thousand other words. Great example. When I was a journalist, I was also adamant to get the opening right before I could proceed. The rest tended to fall into place after that.
Thanks, Lind. Glad you like.
Judy, yes--the old show versus tell! GRIN. A Tip. I also wrote and discarded a gazillion final paragraph endings before getting just the right one to tie up story.
Great examples of openings and the importance of grabbing readers from the get-go. Thank you for sharing the wisdom you've gained over your writing career.
Glad you like, Sandy.
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