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First Words

Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

"It was a pleasure to burn." - Fahrenheit 451

The opening sentence of any piece of fiction is incredibly important. I am always grumbling and rethinking and unhappy with everything I wrote. The example I gave to open this post is tied for my favorite with Jane Austen's infinitely sarcastic:

"It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a large fortune must be in want of a wife."

I started writing a commissioned piece on the 2nd. As of yet untitled, probably something about Nuts.

"Emmy didn't even seen Adam: not in middle school, not in high school, and not on his bike while she was doing sixty in a thirty."

Good I think. But lo-ong. Should an opening line be punchy?

"Billy Pilgrim has come unstuck in time."

"Call me Ishmael."

I know I hate most stories that start with a rolling unhurried description of the setting.

"It was a crisp clear autumn day for the colored leaves had yet to fall and the pretty girls had yet the need for heavy figure concealing coats."

I don't know why that last one is in quotes. I made it up.

How do you guys start stories? Do you put much thought in first words? Is there a way to turn you off an author with that first sentence or can you give someone the opportunity to grip you? Is my potential traffic accident of interest or is it too clunky?

What are your best or favorite opening lines?

William Turney Morris ๐Ÿšซ

"It was a dark and stormy night"..... (just couldn't resist)

karactr ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Redsliver

"It was the best of times. It was the worst of times." My opinion, worst opening ever.

The Kurt Vonnegut from your post was one of the best.

As a reader, opening lines can set the tone for the entire story. Your one about car v. bike as an example; I expect she will after notice him. Or not and be blindsided later in her life be his awesomeness and her loss.

"God. What was i thinking to suggest this." Father's lament on a proposed dysfunctional family RV vacation including underage daughter's friend and mother-in-law. They get sucked into the depraved sphere of a genius psychopath who can TF the whole family at will; or, they just have a sucky vacation.

First impressions are always important.

graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

She sat rocking, humming a hymn from her childhood memories, blind to the body rotting at her feet.

- - -

--opening line for "Mummy Hated Zombies"

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Redsliver

I never thought much of "Call me Ishmael" as a great first line. I do like Orwell's "1984" opening: "It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen."

I don't believe the first line needs to be catchy. The beginning of the story needs to keep the reader reading. But no one will quit after just reading the first line.

My first line in my soon-to-be-published (in a few days) novel is: "The boy huddled behind the big gray dumpster in back of Cactus Point High School."

Not a catchy first sentence. But I'm hoping the beginning will keep the reader reading:

The boy huddled behind the big gray dumpster in back of Cactus Point High School. He sat on the asphalt with his back against the cool metal and knees raised. In a few months, the scorching summer heat in the tiny Arizona town not far from the Mexican border would bake the black asphalt, making it too hot to sit on, and so soft the heavy garbage truck would imprint wavy tire tracks in its surface.

But the beautiful spring morning had a slight desert chill in the air, so the boy wore a long-sleeved sweatshirt. It was black with the Cactus Point High School logo on the front. A circle of blue with a green saguaro inside it, with two arms, one on each side, both curved upward reaching for the sky. According to the school yearbook, it signified the sky's the limit for its students. The students, who felt their futures were limited, joked that it was a gesture for giving up. A white cowboy hat was perched on top of the saguaro, tilted on a slight angle. The yearbook claimed it honored the brave men who had founded their little town. The large Hispanic population viewed it differently.

The boy flipped the oversized sweatshirt hood over his head and, with the tip of his middle finger, shoved the mirrored sunglasses up the bridge of his nose. The dumpsters had been emptied the night before and classes had just begun so he was sure no one would disturb him. His heart pounded in his chest anyway. And his palms sweated inside the black, skin-tight leather gloves.

He lifted the bottom of the sweatshirt, snatched the semi-automatic pistol from the waistband of his jeans, and ejected the high-capacity magazine. It was full, as it had been the two previous times he had checked it. After snapping the magazine back into the handle and flipping off the safety, the boy pointed the muzzle toward the sky and racked the slide. The metallic shlick-shlick sound loading the round into the chamber was like a crack of thunder in his ears.

Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

True, you can't go wrong with Orwell. I see your point on Moby Dick. Though, it seems to be the most memorable first line on the planet. It had to do something right to have that memetic property to it. I also really like a three word start.

Your opening has my interest. It's well written, I'm excited for this kid. I'm interested in what he needs that gun for and all the whys that go along with it. It's that moment where he has to psych himself up to do what he has the gun to do. It does quiet before the storm well. Yet, it does feel like it's missing something when it takes three paragraphs to get to:

his palms sweated inside the black, skin-tight leather gloves.

Which is what I would've used to start the story. What I would do would probably ruin that psych up feeling of the piece.

It wouldn't lose me because the character is active from sentence one. What would lose me is a wander through the setting first, finding the kid by the dumpster, and then getting to your writing.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Redsliver

True, you can't go wrong with Orwell. I see your point on Moby Dick. Though, it seems to be the most memorable first line on the planet. It had to do something right to have that memetic property to it. I also really like a three word start.

It was necessary in a sense, because it's told in the first person, by a supporting character, not the main character, so he needs to introduce himself to the reader straight off.

Replies:   Redsliver
Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

And it sets the tone as conversational with a comfortable acquaintance. Call me Ishmael. Kinda of a "My father was Mr Whaler, call me Ishmael" thing. There's a lot to it, but Switch is right that it isn't Orwell.

Aside:
"Oh Mr Johnson was my father, call me Captain Johnson." The last name is wrong but I can't quite recall where I remember that from.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

I've always admired striking opening lines and quick, catchy quips, but I've also always thought that authors like Agatha Christie were nothing but hacks who just happen to have a knack for a turn of phrase. Her stories were really never anything to write home aboutโ‰ค but her one-liners were killers (pun intended).

In my case, I tend towards REALLY boring openings, where someone is going about their normal, daily activities and something shocks them their normal worlds: they discover a previously undiscovered principal of nature, people are strangely attracted or attack them for no specific reason, and then a long running mystery unfolds, whether the mystery is scientific or the hunt for a murderer.

Unfortunately, to set up such a story, you not only have to describe just how plain and boring the previous life was, you then get sucked into describing the details of the 'unexplained' event, so the first few chapters sink into unnecessary back story, setting up the larger mystery which drives the rest of the story.

I have yet to figure out how to circumvent that problem, but I continue working on it. Still, I'm working on stronger opening lines, yet it's simply not my strength as an author.

As a side note, someone needs to start a discussion that focuses exclusively on opening lines in SOL stories, whether submitted my authors or readers, and the opening lines can be either excellent, or simply strikingly bad, either way is ultimately enlightening.

Then, maybe another thread on opening line descriptions of scenery and weather. ;D

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

describing the details of the 'unexplained' event, so the first few chapters sink into unnecessary back story, setting up the larger mystery which drives the rest of the story.

I have yet to figure out how to circumvent that problem,

That's one use of a prologue (but probably why many people (at least the young ones on wattpad)) don't read prologues.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

That's one use of a prologue (but probably why many people (at least the young ones on wattpad)) don't read prologues.

Sorry, but the purpose of prologues is to either reveal information the characters don't know, or to draw the reader into the story. It's NOT to serve as an infodump for all the bogus crap which doesn't belong in the body of the story!!! :(

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

prologue

The difference between a prolog and and amateurlog is whether the logger is paid or not.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@richardshagrin

prologue

The difference between a prolog and and amateurlog is whether the logger is paid or not.

Is that a Login your eye, or are you Happy to see me? 'D (a REALLY weak 'speck in your eye' pun-ishment for my one-time readers).

Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

Sorry, but the purpose of prologues is to either reveal information the characters don't know, or to draw the reader into the story. It's NOT to serve as an infodump for all the bogus crap which doesn't belong in the body of the story!!! :(

Agreed! For example, Eye of The World by Robert Jordan has the kind of prologue that will give you the effort to get through the entire Wheel of Time series. (The series is a solid 5 to 6 / 10, but the prologue of Eye of the World is at worst a 12 / 10.)

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

In my case, I tend towards REALLY boring openings, where someone is going about their normal, daily activities and something shocks them their normal worlds:

There's probably a consensus amongst writing experts that starting a book, or even a chapter, with an alarm clock ringing is very poor.

I started an as yet incomplete story with an alarm clock ringing. However the twist was that the familiarity of the sound indicated to the protagonist that he was stuck in the same body as the previous X times, and doomed to live the same day yet again while trying to work out what he was supposed to do differently. So far the start hasn't been subject to external critique.

AJ

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

So far the start hasn't been subject to external critique.

Probably because, the protagonist is so used to the constantly ringing alarm, he continues to oversleep his posting deadlines. ;D

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

So far the start hasn't been subject to external critique.

Probably because, the protagonist is so used to the constantly ringing alarm, he continues to oversleep his posting deadlines. ;D

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

I never thought much of "Call me Ishmael" as a great first line.

Most of the nuances have been lost. The narrator almost certainly wasn't called Ishmael, and to understand the full significance the reader has to be intimately acquainted with parts of the Old Testament of the Christian Bible.

AJ

Replies:   richardshagrin
richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

the Old Testament of the Christian Bible

I seem to recall the religious writings in those books were Jewish before they were Christian.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@richardshagrin

Good point, but Herman Melville was almost certainly writing from a Christian point of view.

AJ

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@awnlee jawking

Good point, but Herman Melville was almost certainly writing from a Christian point of view.

So did C.S. Lewis, but his stories were much easier to read. As the old saying goes, "If your stories are too complex for adults, then write it for children instead." (Forgot who said that line, and I'm too lazy to waste time searching for it.)

Children are more flexible in their believes, and more willing to accept fantasy as valid than adults addicted to novels 'following the rules'.

Ah, found it just before posting. The correct epigraph is:

You have to write the book that wants to be written. And if the book will be too difficult for grown-ups, then you write it for children.

~ Madeline L'Engle

By the way, my first first-paragraph quote was a story tackling difficult issues dealing with childhood sexual abuse, so I decided to write it as a Children's book for adults. We'll see how it sells when I eventually post it on Amazon!

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

o I decided to write it as a Children's book for adults.

You're Only Old Once!: A Book for Obsolete Children (Classic Seuss)
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00ESF2AH4/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=UTF8&btkr=1

Joe_Bondi_Beach ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

My first line in my soon-to-be-published (in a few days) novel is: "The boy huddled behind the big gray dumpster in back of Cactus Point High School."

Big news, congratulations! Title? Publisher?
~ JBB

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Joe_Bondi_Beach

Big news, congratulations! Title? Publisher?

It took well over a year to write and edit so I do feel a sense of accomplishment. At over 91,000 words, it's also my longest.

As you can tell by the cover and title, it's more a mystery/thriller than erotica, but because of the graphic sex (which is integral to the plot) I couldn't even attempt the traditional route. So it's on Amazon. I was reading thrillers by best selling authors while writing it and I'll put mine up against any of those traditionally published novels.

It's called "High School Massacre" and published under my pen name S.W. Blayde. Links aren't allowed here, but the ASIN is B07XGBLDM9 which can be searched on Amazon.

Replies:   Joe_Bondi_Beach
Joe_Bondi_Beach ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

It's called "High School Massacre" and published under my pen name S.W. Blayde. Links aren't allowed here, but the ASIN is B07XGBLDM9 which can be searched on Amazon.

Great! Thanks.
~ JBB

StarFleet Carl ๐Ÿšซ

@Redsliver

"You're a boil on the ass of humanity!"

Since I wasn't human, I didn't take insult to that.

--
Still a WIP for me.

Replies:   Redsliver
Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

@StarFleet Carl

"You're a boil on the ass of humanity!"

Since I wasn't human, I didn't take insult to that.

--
Still a WIP for me.

This is a thing of beauty. Comedy sci-fi is my favorite genre and action comedies more broadly. This would hook me. We've got conflict, nonhumans, and smugness. That's a great way to open a story.

I was looking through my works and my potential projects looking for my best opener. Out of the stories that are up, I like Magic is Gross the best:

I had heard there was a new girl, but until I saw her: Holy Shit!

Out of the stuff that hasn't gone up for posting yet, maybe:

Marcie had held onto her heterosexuality through six orgies.

There've been no really genre setters from me... I'll look more into that.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

Not an opening line (more like two complete paragraphs), but here's the opening from my newest WIP:

The young girl skipped along the sidewalk near her home, when she pulled up short. She stood for a moment, tilting her head one way, then the other, before wrinkling her brow. Stepping aside, she circled the same eight inches, carefully studying the empty space.

"This is a new one. I'm familiar with the others, but I've never known them to just pop up like this. They're obnoxious enough, but if they just appear like this, that's an entirely different problem."

Unlike my typical openings, this is short, to the point, and establishes the essential story quandary without giving away exactly what she's even worried about. Though I'll probably continue tweaking it.

On the other hand, here's my weakest opening paragraph, from the very first book of my very first story:

My mind vacantly drifted as beautiful scenery floated by; vast expanses of misty twilight waters, little shacks housing potentially proud families, pelicans drifting by on the breeze. I glanced to my right and observed my sister Cate, who sat studying one of her various popular science books. Not that science is ever terribly popular, just that this was a mass-market book on science regarding DNA theory or something. My sister is a cute kid, not really beautiful yet, still a bit awkward and bookish. She has somewhat chubby cheeks with a nice shy smile with a gentle sprinkling of freckles across her cheeks and nose. She also has a really big, heartwarming smile, but her best feature is her eyes, which are large and round with an incredibly penetrating stare. She's not very social, neither of us is actually, but I'm simply shy. In her case she's too busy studying.

Talk about slow starts!

Replies:   Redsliver
Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

Yes, your starts are relatively slow. They're written well but if kept going for a while, I could see myself wandering off. The first has my attention. The girl has a Luna Lovegood feel to me. The latter has an unhurried psychedelia trip feel to it. Really getting drawn into the details. Though I think its lost me.

I've always admired striking opening lines and quick, catchy quips, but I've also always thought that authors like Agatha Christie were nothing but hacks who just happen to have a knack for a turn of phrase.

I'm the opposite. To say I have admiration falls short. Having a knack for a turn of phrase is enough for me to label someone as distinctly not a hack. I've always adored pithy quick witted writing. Terry Pratchett (or was it Douglas Adams?) said "Easy reading is hard writing." It was probably someone else entirely.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Redsliver

Yes, your starts are relatively slow. They're written well but if kept going for a while, I could see myself wandering off. The first has my attention. The girl has a Luna Lovegood feel to me. The latter has an unhurried psychedelia trip feel to it. Really getting drawn into the details. Though I think its lost me.

Much of that is the stories themselves. The first is written from a child's perspective, thus it uses simplistic sentences and shorter sentences. My normal stories involve a group of adults or late teens who encounter a scientific oddity and then seek to gather evidence and form hypotheses. (i.e. it's meant to be read slower).

Also, the second example was also overly flowerly and nice but largely meaningless scenery descriptions. It was my earliest work, and is now showing its age. :(

I'll have to dig out a more recent 'plodding' storyline so you get a better comparison, but I've NEVER been good at one-liners, and typically write in complex 30 to 50 word sentences.

Baltimore Rogers ๐Ÿšซ

@Redsliver

Terry Pratchett (or was it Douglas Adams?) said ...

"Easy reading is damned hard writing" is attributed to Nathaniel Hawthorne everywhere I've ever seen it.

Replies:   Redsliver
Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

@Baltimore Rogers

Thank you! I couldn't tell you why I thought it was Pratchett before I typed it but I knew I was wrong when I closed the quote. If only I had access to some worldwide web of knowledge by which I could have just checked and avoided some embarrassment. I can't wait for the future.

PotomacBob ๐Ÿšซ

Which story on SOL has the best opening line(s)?

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