Does Your First Line Have a Bang?

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Image by Pexels from Pixabay

In a post on Writers in the Storm, Ellen Buikema says opening lines are a lot of work, but the right one will hook your reader.

A great first line will have three elements, she says:

  • Character. Great first lines introduce an interesting character.
  • Voice. “Think about the first line as a close up to the action,” Buikema writes. “If you’re stuck for a first line, fast forward five minutes into the story and write the first sentence from that perspective.”
  • Tone. “The tone of the first line gives the reader a sense of genre and the age group for which the book is meant,” Buikema adds.

Some editorial suggestions for first lines include:

  • Don’t have too many things happening in the sentence.
  • Instead of focusing on looking inside a refrigerator concentrate on what’s in it and why.
  • Be personal, specific.
  • Start with a bang, beginning with a compelling first line.