Play to Your Strengths

Be Up-Front
Agent Pete often says that writers should play to their strength and put it front and centre in the opening of their novel. It sounds so obvious but this hadnāt occurred to me before I heard him say it. Are you good at dialogue? Open with a conversation. Do you excel at action? Start with a bang. Emotion, setting description, characterisationā¦whatever youāre great at, get it in early. Hook the reader from line one. Make them desperate to read on. Isnāt that what we all want?
Examples
Characterisation
āCall me Ishmael,ā Herman Melville writes in the opening of Moby Dick and we know weāre in for a passage of super first-person characterisation.
Likewise, Scoutās way of introducing Jem in Harper Leeās To Kill A Mocking Bird tells us much about both characters: āWhen he was nearly thirteen, my brother Jem got his arm badly broken at the elbow,ā she begins, going on to reveal much about her brother from her description of his lack of self-consciousness regarding his subsequent asymmetry and her thoughts about the events which led up to the incident.
“If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you’ll probably want to know is where I was born, and what my lousy childhood was like, and how my parents were occupied and all before they had me, and all that David Copperfield kind of crap, but I don’t feel like going into it, if you want to know the truth.ā J.D. Salingerās introduction to Holden Caulfield is memorable because while claiming not to want to describe who he is, his attitude reveals that very thing!
January: An Exceptionally Bad Start. Sunday 1 January. 129 lbs (but post-Christmas), alcohol units 14 (but effectively covers 2 days as 4 hours of party was on New Year), cigarettes 22, calories 5424⦠Helen Fieldingās intro to Bridget Jones. Says it all, really.
Setting
āIt was the best of times, it was the worst of times,ā Dickens states in the beginning of A Tale of Two Cities, and we know that the scene is about to be set.
ā124 was spiteful. Full of a babyās venom. The women of the house knew it and so did the children.ā Toni Morrison evokes a sense of both place and atmosphere in this striking opening.
āLast night I dreamed I went to Mandalay again.ā Daphne Du Maurier breaks the ādonāt open with a dreamā rule but hey, it works!
And Just Plain Fantastic
I think that what I like about these openings is the element of the unexpected:
āThe story so far: in the beginning, the universe was created. This has made a lot of people very angry and been widely regarded as a bad moveā ā The Restaurant at the End of the Universe (Douglas Adams)
āIt was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteenā ā Nineteen Eighty-Four (George Orwell)
āAs Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from uneasy dreams he found himself transformed in his bed into a gigantic insectā ā Metamorphosis (Franz Kafka)
āI write this sitting in the kitchen sinkā ā I Capture the Castle (Dodie Smith)
Wow. Just wow.
Experience
Iāll admit, I donāt think about my openings much when I first sit down to write. They tend to arrive fully formed in my brain. Only later do I go back and try to analyse what makes them work (or not). In The Strange Imagination of Pippa Clayton, Iāve broken the cardinal rule of ādonāt start with a character looking in the mirrorā (an early attempt at characterisation). In Daisy Roberts is Dead, I start with action ā a car crash. In Sanity begins with dialogue ā something that I enjoy writing (perhaps a strength of mine, but who am I to judge? Just because I enjoy writing it doesnāt mean Iām any good at it!). All Inclusive starts with three women observing each other on a plane (again, characterisation, but perhaps more subtle than our introduction to Pippa ā therefore better?). My favourite opening is probably the one I wrote for Catfish:
āMy name is Catarina Fish. Cat Fish.
I ate some once.
A wild one, not farmed.
Didnāt like it.
It tasted, well, fishy.
And muddy.
Like the bottom-dweller it was.
Spending its life feeding off the dark and murky river bed.
A scavenger, feasting low on the food chain.
Bottom-dweller also means low-life.
Catfish also means identity thief.
Huh.ā
Final Thoughts
How do you open your novels? What is/are your strength/s?
Do you have a favourite opening from a published novel? What is it? And what makes it so compelling?
On The Honest Authorsā podcast, Gillian McAllister once mentioned that she was asked, āDo you really think that?ā about something controversial sheād written in one of her novels….
Bear With Me! Okay, this is probably a weird analogy but this is how my (bird-brained!) mind works. So, in terms of the title question, Iāve thought long…
If you want to be traditionally published, the chances are that youāll need a literary agent. Their job is to sell your book to a publishing house and…
What Do We Mean by āPaceā And Why Is It Important? We often hear that books are fast-paced, slow burn or āsaggy in the middleā. In a nutshell,…
If you read my Christmas Snippets post, you’ll be aware that I suffered a psychotic episode in 2019. This was followed by a long period of anxiety and…
Port and Lemon and Dirty Jokes My nan was the type of woman who couldnāt walk to the shop without stopping at least three times along the way…
When I was eight years old, I auditioned for a part in my schoolās Christmas play, Christmas is Cancelled! Despite being a shy child, I loved singing and…
The Long and Short of It I enjoy writing short stories, which is a complete one-eighty compared to how I used to feel. I used to wonder how…
The Good Thereās so much to love about writing ā the excitement of that initial spark of an idea; the stimulation of the challenge to make it work;…
Giving Feedback The title of this post is a sentence thatās often used at the end of a fellow writerās feedback in the Lab, and I think itās…
Iām Fine Whenever I meet someone new, I try to learn their language. I donāt mean French or German; I mean things like what they convey without actually…
Well, it sort of is⦠Iāve been fascinated by dystopian fiction for many years ā any story which explores a dramatic change in the way of life for…
Out of the Mouths of Babes This post was inspired by a comment made by my eleven-year-old son. It was prompted by his question regarding what Iād hypothetically…