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What's your best opening line?

Paige Hawthorne 🚫

No, you gomers, I'm not talking about trying to pick up a chick in a bar. More like, "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times …"

Or, on the other side of the spectrum, "It was a dark and stormy night."

In any case, what is your favorite first sentence β€” in a story that you wrote your own damn self?

Okay, I'll start. My latest story is always my favorite, so here's the opener from "Hide & Seek":

'Jake Chancellor's 1970 Monte Carlo lowrider was so black the color was called Oblivion'.

Your turn.

Paige

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Paige Hawthorne

I'll eventually get back to working on it.

"You're a boil on the ass of humanity that needs lanced."

Nowhere near finished with it, don't know if it'll ever get finished.

Switch Blayde 🚫

@Paige Hawthorne

After stalking the minister's wife for over a month, Jeff Wateman was ready to put his plan into action.

Jason Samson 🚫

I think my entries would be more appropriate here -> https://www.bulwer-lytton.com/

Eddie Davidson 🚫

@Jason Samson

"You can have my dildo when you pry it from my cold, dead asshole"

"That's gross, mom!"

Dominions Son 🚫

@Jason Samson

Announcing our 2019 Grand Prize Winner

Space Fleet Commander Brad Brad sat in silence, surrounded by a slowly dissipating cloud of smoke, maintaining the same forlorn frown that had been fixed upon his face since he'd accidentally destroyed the phenomenon known as time, thirteen inches ago.

Honey_Moon 🚫

Brittney Anastasia Coates was a bitch, and proud of it.

awnlee jawking 🚫

I wonder whether writing a 'darling' first line actually discourages readers. How many of those first lines above make people want to read more?

AJ

PotomacBob 🚫

@Paige Hawthorne

Or, on the other side of the spectrum, "It was a dark and stormy night."

Several stories on SOL use that opening line. I wish there were more of them.

Dominions Son 🚫

@PotomacBob

I would be tempted to start a story set on a university campus with "It was a stark and dormy night."

awnlee jawking 🚫

@PotomacBob

I wish there were more of them.

I think it's much derided without reason. When you read that, the plain language lets you know that the author's intention is to tell you a story.

AJ

Replies:   BlacKnight
BlacKnight 🚫

@awnlee jawking

I think it's much derided without reason. When you read that, the plain language lets you know that the author's intention is to tell you a story.

The original sentence, the opening line of Edward Bulwer-Lytton's Paul Clifford, was:

It was a dark and stormy night; the rain fell in torrents – except at occasional intervals, when it was checked by a violent gust of wind which swept up the streets (for it is in London that our scene lies), rattling along the housetops, and fiercely agitating the scanty flame of the lamps that struggled against the darkness.

... which is several different kinds of bad, and "plain language" is not a thing that describes it.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@BlacKnight

... which is several different kinds of bad, and "plain language" is not a thing that describes it.

Which just goes to show you can turn anything into a turkey if you try hard enough :(

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son  Radagast
Dominions Son 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Which just goes to show you can turn anything into a turkey if you try hard enough :(

Nope, I tried really, really hard and I can't turn my dog into a turkey.

Replies:   Ernest Bywater
Ernest Bywater 🚫

@Dominions Son

Nope, I tried really, really hard and I can't turn my dog into a turkey.

You can turn your dog into a cat by freezing him solid then running him through a bench saw so he goes, "Meowww."

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@Ernest Bywater

I've never been good at either opening lines or quotable one-lines, but I've been working on my opening paragraphs. Rather than taking 3 to 5 chapters to get into the heart of the story, I'm now jumping right in. Here's the opening line from my just-published book The Holes Binding Us Together:

Interrupting her skipping, Peg stopped while wrinkling her brow. "This is a new one. I'm familiar with the others, but have never known one to just appear like this." She circled the same eight inches of concrete, carefully studying the empty space. "They're obnoxious enough, but holes that won't hold still are hardly helpful."

Another, not quite as strong from a now-dead almost complete first-draft (which never quite panned out) begins:

Opening his door and peeking out, Ben discovered his sister, Jackie, doing the same. "What's this about?" he whispered, hoping to be heard over the shouting from downstairs, yet still remain unnoticed.

A slightly less intriguing first line (this time, only a single line) is from my next book, tentatively titled Experiencing an Expanding Universe:

Staring out his temporary office window, Theo couldn't shake the perception he was somehow on the brink of a major breakthrough.

Though short and somewhat intriguing, it's generic enough to fit into ANY book, on nearly any subject. :(

Radagast 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Tofurky.

shaddoth1 🚫

Today has really sucked and it's only seven am.

Shad.

Radagast 🚫
Updated:

Back on topic, I am not an author, just a Criticcccc! So I'll throw in a couple of my favorites from Dead Tree Press.

"On one otherwise normal Tuesday evening I had the chance to live the American dream. I was able to throw my incompetent jackass of a boss from a fourteenth-story window."
Larry Corriea, Monster Hunter International.
&
"The wargs chased the elf over Pittsburgh Scrap and Salvage's tall chain-link fence shortly after the hyperphase gate powered down."
Wen Spencer, Tinker.

Both are great hooks, leading off good books, letting you know what you are going to read. Larry offers some good old ultra-violence with a side helping of American individualism. Wen Spencer writes a fairy tale / space opera mash up that works.

The first chapters can be read for free at Baen. Like your friendly neighborhood crack dealer, the first taste is free. Once hooked you have to keep paying.

Vincent Berg 🚫

Here's another from an older, 2015 publication, A House in Disarray.

From the initial Prologue, introducing the murder which kicks off the police procedural drama:

Councilman Adrian Adams rushed up the steep steps to the carefully maintained brownstone and slammed the heavy oak door behind him, blocking out the howling wind and icy sleet.

The opening line of the story itself (chapter one) is:

Em ignored the sleet lashing the windows, the rattling glass nearly overwhelming her voice. She curled her hair around her finger as she listened to the phone. The unsettling weather portended a more severe approaching storm.

Clearly, the weather plays a dominant character in the story, heralding what's about to happen throughout the story.

Mike-Kaye 🚫

"STOP IT. THAT HURTS. MOMMY HELP ME, MOMMY, I NEED YOU PLEASE HELP me…" Then nothing. "Mommy, I need you. I had a bad dream."

Dead Girl's Vengeance

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@Mike-Kaye

"STOP IT. THAT HURTS. MOMMY HELP ME, MOMMY, I NEED YOU PLEASE HELP me…" Then nothing. "Mommy, I need you. I had a bad dream."

I'm sorry, but if I read that opening line, I'd likely put the book away. Not only is it badly phrased, but you immediately cancel the key segment designed to capture the readers attention. That's the literary equivalent of "Never mind, nothing to look at here, folks".

joyR 🚫

" I'm nobody.

The woman staring across the sad, flaking grey metal table clearly knew that already. She never bothered asking my name. "

Tales from the shack - Nobody

Todd_d172

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@joyR

I'm nobody.

The woman staring across the sad, flaking grey metal table clearly knew that already. She never bothered asking my name. "

That's a good one, but it suggests that the entire premise of the book is one women's sense of worthlessness. That's fine if it is, otherwise I'd shift the focus slightly.

oldegrump 🚫

Here is one for a partial story I only have finished two pages.

'It was a cloudy night in mid-December in the Manistee National Forest; it was after midnight and my mode was blacker the then night outside.'

Dominions Son 🚫

@oldegrump

and my mode was blacker the then night outside.'

Mode? Was that supposed to be mood?

oldegrump 🚫

@Dominions Son

Yep, my bad will fix before posting

Replies:   helmut_meukel
helmut_meukel 🚫

@oldegrump

and my mode was blacker the then night outside.'

Mode? Was that supposed to be mood?

I think you have to fix more than 'mode/mood' in this sentence.
Shouldn't it read 'than the' instead of 'the then'?

HM.

Replies:   oldegrump
oldegrump 🚫

@helmut_meukel

It is still a work in progress, but you are right. Again, will fix before posting

richardshagrin 🚫

@Dominions Son

Mode

"What Is the Mode?
The mode is the number that appears most frequently in a set. A set of numbers may have one mode, more than one mode, or no mode at all. Other popular measures of central tendency include the mean, or the average (mean) of a set, and the median, the middle value in a set."

A la mode is with ice cream.

Mode also applies in fashion.

Mood is a lot harder to describe. I am not in the mood to do so.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@richardshagrin

the mean, or the average (mean) of a set

Why is the average so cruel?

Vincent Berg 🚫
Updated:

@oldegrump

'It was a cloudy night in mid-December in the Manistee National Forest; it was after midnight and my mode was blacker the then night outside.'

Rephrasing slightly (to shorten and tighten the impact):

'Twas a cloudy mid-December Manatee Forest post-midnight night, and my mood was darker than the overcast unseen sky.

By the way, it's a great scene setting!

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Vincent Berg

was darker the overcast moonless sky.

was darker than the overcast moonless sky.

If you are going to correct people, do it right.:)

BarBar 🚫

A recently read dead-tree favourite:

I died first, so I made cookies.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@BarBar

I died first, so I made cookies.

Now that would certainly keep me reading, wherever it led!

BarBar 🚫

A favourite from my own writing:

Silence draped over the suburban street like a hot and sticky blanket.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@BarBar

A favourite from my own writing:

Silence draped over the suburban street like a hot and sticky blanket.

Drop the "over" and it's even stronger, but you're right, it's powerful, though missing the 'hook' to really pull the reader into the story. It's similar to my weather-related openings, where it sets the opening mood rather than draws readers into the story.

Mushroom 🚫

From a famous movie a few years ago, a book in the movie.

The night was moist.

garymrssn 🚫

Dusty looked out the open door. He lowered his tail and looked back at me. "It's raining... You know I don't like rain... Make it stop."

joyR 🚫

"He is the kind of guy who can most generously be described as an utter waste of a Y chromosome."

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@joyR

"He is the kind of guy who can most generously be described as an utter waste of a Y chromosome."

But that would make him a woman, and the language it's couched in implies women are therefore inferior to men :(

AJ

Replies:   joyR
joyR 🚫
Updated:

@awnlee jawking

There are times you say something that inspires awe that you made it this far, yet at times it's more amazement...

:)

ETA

Whatever you do, please don't change, I've only just found the right antidote...

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@joyR

Apart from its role in mixing up the gene pool, endowing dinosaur-killing strength, and facilitating autism-related feats like flying to the moon, writing majestic symphonies and taking twenty years to build a matchstick model of the Titanic, the Y chromosome is pretty much a waste of space.

Girl Power!

AJ

Replies:   joyR
joyR 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Well, you know what 'they' say..

Behind every great man... is a bunch of relatives waiting impatiently to inherit.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@joyR

You really have a downer on women at the moment, don't you! Equating male greatness to wealth cf 'So what first attracted you to the millionaire Paul Daniels?'

AJ

Replies:   joyR
joyR 🚫

@awnlee jawking

'So what first attracted you to the millionaire Paul Daniels?'

The initial attraction was due to my wearing fetish panties made from velcro and his rather curly moustache...

It is just coincidence that since then Debbie waxes and never wears panties...

Replies:   awnlee_jawking
awnlee_jawking 🚫

@joyR

The initial attraction was due to my wearing fetish panties made from velcro and his rather curly moustache...

Hmmm. I'm rather partial to my 'tache so I think I'll give your velcro panties a wide berth. Unless they're yellow. I have a thing for yellow.

AJ

Replies:   joyR
joyR 🚫

@awnlee_jawking

If your thing is yellow you should see a doctor...

Unless it's fluorescent yellow, in which case everyone will see you...

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@joyR

Unless it's fluorescent yellow, in which case everyone will see you...

But they're so ubiquitous nowadays that nobody notices them ...

Are fluorescent panties a thing?

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@awnlee jawking

Are fluorescent panties a thing?

If you have to ask, you probably don't want to know the answer.

https://coquetryclothing.com/products/glow-worm-cheeky-booty-shorts?variant=11997552769&currency=USD&utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=google+shopping&cmp_id=947134267&adg_id=46002273814&kwd=&device=c&gclid=Cj0KCQjwmpb0BRCBARIsAG7y4zZmVhaIqedncvdr5oeIHO1DDBXD9Q4kS2K2rsifc3ASykR_3_AEeEIaAunuEALw_wcB

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

If you have to ask, you probably don't want to know the answer.

You're right - they're not yellow :(

AJ

Baltimore Rogers 🚫
Updated:

@Paige Hawthorne

I'm kinda partial to this line.

It's not all that earth-shattering, but in seems to draw in a certain kind of reader.

In the fen, not too far from the outskirts of the tiny hamlet, is a lump of broken sandstone known as the Angel Stone.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Baltimore Rogers

In the fen, not too far from the outskirts of the tiny hamlet, is a lump of broken sandstone known as the Angel Stone.

To me, that shows the writer is about to tell a decent story, one that's good enough not to need gaudy window-dressing.

AJ

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