I pulled this post out from the archives (and updated it somewhat) after the question I received from T.S. Bazelli about beginning a story. (T.S., this is about first sentences, not first scenes, but I hope it will address some of your concerns).
How important is the first sentence of your story?
I've seen  whole discussions about this on the writing forums I frequent.  Some  folks will tell you that the first sentence of your story is the most  important one of the entire piece, and if you don't get it right you  might as well just give up.  This doesn't seem a practical approach to  my mind, because I don't like any advice that tells me to give up!
I'd like to call the first sentence "a great opportunity."
It's  an opportunity to hook your reader, to impress them, to intrigue them  and make them curious.  But it's not everything.  Imagine the  disappointment of reading a terrific first sentence and then discovering  that the rest of the paragraph is ho-hum.  So don't put all your energy  just into sentence one; save some for the continuation.  I don't think a  "just fine" first sentence will be enough to make someone reject your  story.  On the other hand, if you don't have some great stuff in the  first paragraph, you may well lose a very impatient editor.   They're  zooming, because they have a lot of manuscripts to get through.
So how do I approach a first sentence?
Because  I'm a very chronological writer, I need to have a first sentence for a  scene before I can start writing it.  Sometimes I'll wander around for  several days trying out different first sentences in my head until I can  find the way in.  Ideally, I want any first sentence I write to do  three things:
1.  Make people curious
2.  Demonstrate the psychology of the main character
3.  Introduce the main conflict in some form (even obliquely)
I  put "make people curious" first, because that's what gets a reader to  read your second sentence with gusto, rather than with diminishing  momentum.  That's your hook.  If it makes people curious about the main  conflict or main character or the core of the story, so much the better.
I  put "demonstrate the psychology of the main character" second because  it's something that is very important to me - but I usually write either  in first person or in tight third person point of view, and the  psychology of the main character is therefore highly relevant.  Not to  mention the fact that if the main character is an alien, showing  something of his/her psychology may help to make the reader curious (see  #1 above).
I put "Introduce the main conflict" third because  it's something that's really good to do, but can't always be done  directly in the first sentence.  Even if I don't manage to get it in  there, though, I usually try to tap into some part of the main conflict  (or the spirit thereof) before the end of the first paragraph.  This  kind of information does a lot to make the reader curious, but also  provides an orientation to give them a sense of where the story might be  going - not the plot, but the point, the reason I'm writing this story and they should keep reading it.
Just  because I spend days trying to think of a first sentence doesn't mean  that the first one I think of - my "entry" to the scene - will end up  being my first sentence when I'm through.  I often make changes to  beginnings, sometimes even trying over and over until I find just the  right thing.
Just so I'm not talking about air, I'll give some concrete examples below.
"Stealing eggs is a lot harder than stealing the whole chicken."
- Janice Hardy, The Shifter
I  love this sentence.  The first thing I think of when I read it is,  "Why?"  There's our curiosity, right there.  It also reveals the  psychology of the narrator, because it suggests this person is willing  to try to get only the eggs rather than taking the whole chicken - or  why would she be mentioning how hard it is?  And while this sentence  doesn't introduce the main conflict, it does demonstrate a moral sense  that is finely tuned between what's right and what's necessary - which  is what lies at the core of this character's involvement in the main  conflict of the story.
"Lest anyone should suppose that I am a  cuckoo's child, got on the wrong side of a blanket by lusty peasant  stock and sold into indenture in a shortfallen season, I may say that I  am House-born and reared in the Night Court proper, for all the good it  did me."
- Jacqueline Carey, Kushiel's Dart
I have an extended analysis of this sentence in an earlier post, here.   But speaking in terms of the three items above, I can say this:  it  makes me curious, by letting me know the main character is in trouble  ("for all the good it did me"), and by giving an amazing amount of  information about the psychology of the main character (class attitude,  social position, etc.).  The entire book maintains the same intense  focus on the character of Phèdre - she is the magnetic core of the  story, so the sentence is certainly consistent with what follows.
"I hereby declare the end of Dana Turner."
- Juliette Wade, Through This Gate
Here's  one I wrote myself, so I'll say off the bat that I've tried to have  this sentence do all three things I mentioned.  I thought I'd share some  of the process behind this one, though - I came up with it pretty early  in the writing process, maybe even as early as the first draft.   However, for a long time I didn't know how to follow it.  I worked and  reworked the scene that followed this sentence, and even considered  changing it, but in the end decided it was the right first sentence for  my book, so the rest of the scene had better fit with it, and that was  that.  I worked until I managed to get it to fit.
Finally I thought I'd share a revision example.  Here was the sentence that was my "entry" to the story, "At Cross Purposes":
"Piloting  the shuttle between maintenance sites is my reward, the guys tell me -  to make up for the five years it took Terrafirm, Inc. to grant my  security clearance."
I wrote it, and it got me in, but I wasn't  happy with it.  Yes, you might be curious about why she didn't get her  security clearance for so long, and yes, the sentence does show her  attitude, but it doesn't really give you any hints as to where the story  is going.  Maybe something to do with security clearances?  Certainly  security clearances are relevant, but they aren't the point of the  story.  So I went back in and rewrote it - didn't edit it, but  got rid of it and started in a completely different way.  The  physical details of location etc. for the opening scene  remained the same, but the second draft of the opening sentence was:
"Kelly's on the comm and she's playing with my mind, trying to tell me she sees a cloud."
Psychology/attitude,  check.  Curiosity, well, it has to do with why someone who sees a cloud  would be suspected of playing with anyone's mind.  It wasn't really good enough, though, and didn't stand up for beta readers because of the problems I discussed in my last post - it tried to hop into the main conflict to early, without giving readers sufficient grounding (where is this person? What is she doing?). So I hopped back a bit, and the first sentence of the final draft was this:
"One more sector done; we shuck off our helmets with a groan and strap into the shuttle, guys in back and me in the pilot's seat."
This one tells us she's in the middle of an exhausting activity, she's a pilot, and she's about to take off in a shuttle - all of which are critical forms of grounding for what happens next. The hook/curiosity factor is a bit less, but we should at least wonder what she's up to in her work, and her work is directly related to where the story goes overall.
So at the end  of this whole discussion I hope I've given you something to think  about, and something to aim for - but I also hope that I've been clear  about the difference between an entry sentence (first sentence for the  first draft), and a first sentence (first sentence for the final draft).   It's always cool and exciting when you can find a first sentence that  really hooks a reader.  Just don't be afraid to take as many drafts as  you need in order to get there.
I had one first sentence bing me upside the head, then finally got three to follow it, but heaven help me following up those!
ReplyDelete"It is said that the gods are dead."
Usually, I start with the dialogue (and it's got to do all those things you listed above). This is in truth the only first line that grabbed me by the throat. Now, if I could just turn it into a proper scene, I think I'd be happy.
Megs, I know how you feel. Some zingy lines have an automatic link forward into more material, and others are a dead stop (like one of mine above). Either you want that kind of break before the reader moves on (which I did in the above case) or you don't, in which case you change the sentence!
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