SFWRITER.COM > How to Write > On Writing: Great Beginnings
"ON WRITING"
by Robert J. Sawyer
Great Beginnings
Copyright © 1995 by Robert J. Sawyer. All
rights reserved.
Boo!
Scared you, didn't I? But I also got you to read on to this second
sentence. So, even though it was only four characters long, that first line
did its job: it served as a hook to bring you into this piece of writing.
In that sense, it was a great beginning and "great beginnings" are the
topic of this, the first installment of my "On Writing" series of columns.
A Canadian horror writer I know said something very intriguing recently: he
was looking forward to the day when he was well known, so that he wouldn't
have to start off with
a grabby first sentence. He wanted to be able to
begin subtly, with the reader trusting that the story would be worth his or
her time just on the strength of the author's name.
But even the lions of literature still go for the snappy start. Consider
this opening line from Robertson Davies's Murther & Walking Spirits:
"I was never so amazed in my life as when the Sniffer drew his concealed
weapon from its case and struck me to the ground, stone dead."
In a short story, you really do have to hook the audience with the very
first sentence. With a novel, you probably have the luxury of using an
entire paragraph to snare the reader. But no matter which one you're
writing, there are only four major ways to start your tale.
First, there's evocative description. In some ways, this is the hardest,
because nothing is happening. And yet, if you do it well, the reader
will not be able to resist continuing: "The sky above the port was the
color of television, tuned to a dead channel" (William Gibson's
Neuromancer); "Halifax Harbor at night is a beautiful sight, and June
often finds the MacDonald Bridge lined with lovers and other appreciators.
But in Halifax even June can turn on one with icy claws" (Spider Robinson's
Mindkiller). Note what these two examples have in common: beautiful
use of the language. If you are going to start off with static
description, then you must dazzle with your imagery or poetry.
A second approach is to start by introducing an intriguing character: "Mrs.
Sloan had only three fingers on her left hand, but when she drummed them
against the countertop, the tiny polished bones at the end of the fourth and
fifth stumps clattered like fingernails" ("The Sloan Men" by David Nickle,
in Northern Frights 2, edited by Don Hutchison); "My name is
Robinette Broadhead, in spite of which I am male" (Gateway by
Frederik Pohl). The reader immediately wants to know more about Mrs. Sloan
and Robinette, and so forges ahead.
The third and trickiest approach is to start off with a news clipping,
or journal entry, or something else that isn't actually the main narrative
of the story. It can be done effectively: the horror novels Carrie
by Stephen King and The Night Stalker by Jeff Rice begin just this
way. Be careful of this technique: you might think that by using such a
device to tell the reader that the following story is significant,
you'll be forgiven for an otherwise slow start. But Carrie
immediately goes into its famous gym-class shower scene, and The Night
Stalker launches right into the first of the vampire murders. Really,
this kind of beginning just postpones the inevitable you'll have to
follow up your news clipping, or whatever, with one of the other three classic
narrative-hook techniques.
The fourth, and most versatile way, is to start off in the middle of the
action. Sometimes a single sentence is all it takes: "Because he thought
that he would have problems taking the child over the border into Canada, he
drove south, skirting the cities whenever they came and taking the anonymous
freeways which were like a separate country" (Peter Straub's Ghost
Story). All the explanation can come later for a hook, all you need
to know is that someone is on the run. Immediately, you began asking
questions: Who is running? What's he running from? Is it his child, or
has he kidnapped one? And suddenly you're reading along, wanting to know
the answers.
Another example: "The Dracon's three-fingered hands flexed. In the thing's
yellow eyes I could read the desire to either have those fingers around a
weapon or my throat" (Barry B. Longyear's Hugo-winning novella "Enemy
Mine"). We want to dig in and find out what a Dracon is and how the
narrator ended up in a life-or-death confrontation with it.
A variation on starting in the middle is leading off with dialog: "Eddie
wants to see you." / "What's he want?" Nita asked. "Another blowjob?"
(Charles de Lint's "In this Soul of a Woman," from Love in Vein
edited by Poppy Z. Brite). People love overhearing other people's
fascinating conversations, and you can snare them easily as long as your
characters are saying interesting things.
But if you're going to start somewhere other than the natural beginning of
the tale, you have to choose carefully. I often take an exciting scene from
near the end, move it to the beginning, and then tell most of the rest of
the tale as a flashback leading up to that scene. An extreme example is my
novel The Terminal Experiment, which
starts out with a female police
detective dying in hospital. The scene in which she is fatally wounded
doesn't occur until ninety percent of the way through the book.
Whatever you choose, give it a lot of thought. Most people I know try to
write the beginnings of their stories first. Although that seems sensible,
I suggest you wait until you've got everything else finished then work
out the best possible start. It really is the most important element of
your story because it's the part that determines whether the rest gets
read at all.
According to Maclean's: Canada's Weekly Newsmagazine,
"By any reckoning Robert J. Sawyer
is among the most successful Canadian authors ever." He has sold 23 novels
to major U.S. publishers and received 53 national and international awards
for his fiction, including the World Science Fiction Society's
Hugo Award and the
Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America's
Nebula Award for Best Novel of the Year,
as well as the Crime Writers of Canada's
Arthur Ellis Award for
Best Short Story of the Year. The ABC TV series
FlashForward
was based on his novel of the same name.
Rob has taught creative writing at the
University of Toronto, Ryerson University, Humber College, and the
Banff Centre, and he's been writer-in-residence at the Toronto,
Richmond Hill, and Kitchener Public Libraries and at the
Canadian Light Source, Canada's national synchrotron. He's a
frequent keynote speaker at writers' conferences.
For more on Rob and his work, see his website at
sfwriter.com, which contains 800
documents and over one million words of material.
More Good Reading
"On Writing" column index
Letter to Beginning Writers
Rob's essay on effective opening lines
Manuscript format checklist
Index to the opening chapters of Robert J. Sawyer's novels
My Very Occasional Newsletter
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