"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?