Writers, send your prologue/first chapter to FtQ for a “flogging” critique. Email as an attachment.
Many of the folks who utilize BookBub are self-published, and because we hear over and over the need for self-published authors to have their work edited, it’s educational to take a hard look at their first pages. A poll follows concerning the need for an editor.
Donald Maass, literary agent and author of many books on writing, says, “Independent editor Ray Rhamey’s first-page checklist is an excellent yardstick for measuring what makes openings interesting.”
A First-page Checklist
It begins to engage the reader with the character
Something is wrong/goes wrong or challenges the character
The character desires something.
The character takes action. Can be internal or external action: thoughts, deeds, emotions. This does NOT include musing about whatever.
There’s enough of a setting to orient the reader as to where things are happening.
It happens in the NOW of the story.
Backstory? What backstory? We’re in the NOW of the story.
Set-up? What set-up? We’re in the NOW of the story.
The one thing it must do: raise a story question.
Next are the first 17 manuscript lines of Chapter 1 of Murder Under a Mystic Moon. A poll and the opening page of the first chapter follow. Should this author have hired an editor?
THE PHONE JARRED me out of my pre-caffeine stupor as I was eating breakfast. I’d woken to find the kids already up and halfway through their chores, hustling to make it down to the Chiqetaw Recreation Center before the swimming pool got too crowded. I grabbed the receiver on the third ring, trying to maneuver my tongue around a mouthful of jelly doughnut.
“’Lo?”
“O’Brien?” Jimbo Warren’s voice came booming over the line. A biker and self-proclaimed mountain man, Jimbo and I had started out as adversaries and ended up as friends. Not only had he helped me save my son from kidnappers, but he’d insisted on paying me back every penny that he’d cost me and my insurance company for throwing a brick through my living-room window. Now that we’d put the past to rest, we actually got along pretty good.
“I need your help,” he said. “My buddy Scar’s gone missing. I want you to find out if he’s dead.”
Dead? Did he say dead? I glanced at the clock. Yep, it was eight in the morning, all right. Jimbo didn’t sound like he was joking. Didn’t sound drunk, either, so that eliminated any practical jokes he might come up with after a long night at Reubens. I squinted at the phone. Maybe I’d missed something along the way. I’d barely started on my espresso; the caffeine hadn’t had time to hit my system yet and there was a good chance I was still running at half-speed.
This received 4.7 stars on Amazon. The BookBub blurb said this was by a New York Times bestselling author, and the voice and quality of the writing reflect that. We’re immediately introduced to not one but two sympathetic characters—Jimbo and O’Brien. The snippet of backstory is quick and contributes to both characterizations. Then the author pops a good, old-fashioned murder mystery story question or two. Was his friend murdered? Can she find out? What will happen next? This one is on my Kindle for a read. Your thoughts?
This November I’ll be teaching a workshop at a unique writer’s conference that I love—it’s put on by Writer Unboxed, a blog that has grown into a community of writers. I urge you to consider it. Escape to WUnderland in Salem, Massachusetts.
I taught a workshop at the first WU “UnCon” in 2014 and have never experienced a conference like it, before or since. It’s more like a gathering of an extended family than a random gathering of writers, a welcoming community with arms wide open and ready to embrace you. It doesn’t matter whether you’re a “regular” or new to the bunch, you’re in.
The focus is on craft, which is my favorite subject. In their words:
Part symposium. Part networking affair. Part workshop. Part retreat.
Unlike other conferences, our hybrid event will not focus on the business of writing; there will be no sessions on finding agents or writing query letters or building platforms. Instead, our focus will be on the things WU’ers crave most:
Drilled-down, interactive conversations and 90-minute workshops on relevant topics led by *13* trusted WU contributors, craft gurus and bestselling authors, including Brunonia Barry, Anne Greenwood Brown, David Corbett, Kathryn Craft, Keith Cronin, Barbara O’Neal, Margaret Dilloway, Donald Maass, Greer Macallister, Ray Rhamey, Therese Walsh, Heather Webb, and Cathy Yardley
A 4-hour capstone workshop with Donald Maass
Mind-stretching sessions to help you understand yourself better as a writer
Time to interact with peers and group leaders in and outside of sessions, because everyone knows that the best part of a conference happens when the conversation begins
A dedicated, quiet space for writing
But wait, there’s more . . . there will be a conference-wide writing contest, details to be announced; an evening “book therapy” session (bring your troubled plot points, characters, etc.); “bed-time stories” (share your five-minute excerpt in a casual evening setting); and more.
Having been-there done-that, I can testify that this conference is invigorating in all the write ways, and a lot of fun, too.
Submissions sought. Get fresh eyes on your opening page. Submission directions below.
The Flogometer challenge: can you craft a first page that compels me to turn to the next page? Caveat: Please keep in mind that this is entirely subjective.
What's a first page in publishingland? In a properly formatted novel manuscript (double-spaced, 1-inch margins, 12-point type, etc.) there should be about 16 or 17 lines on the first page. Directions for submissions are below—they include a request to post the rest of the chapter, but that’s optional.
Donald Maass,, literary agent and author of many books on writing, says, “Independent editor Ray Rhamey’s first-page checklist is an excellent yardstick for measuring what makes openings interesting.”
A First-page Checklist
It begins to engage the reader with the character
Something is wrong/goes wrong or challenges the character
The character desires something.
The character takes action. Can be internal or external action: thoughts, deeds, emotions. This does NOT include musing about whatever.
There’s enough of a setting to orient the reader as to where things are happening.
It happens in the NOW of the story.
Backstory? What backstory? We’re in the NOW of the story.
Set-up? What set-up? We’re in the NOW of the story.
The one thing it must do: raise a story question.
A reminder of what you’re after here. This blog is about crafting compelling openings. Not interesting, compelling. Why does it have to meet that hurdle? First, if your work is going to an agent, you’re competing with hundreds of submissions. You have to cut through that clutter and competition with powerful storytelling and strong writing. If it’s a reader browsing in a bookstore or online, the same goes—there are scores of published books competing with yours. Yeah, you need compelling.
Kristin sends the first chapter for The Devil Particle, a YA dystopian novel. The rest of the narrative is after the break.
The burnt-out lightbulb makes a satisfying “pop” as I crush it under my sneaker. I’d pick up the broken pieces but it’s noon, the street is empty, and no one’s watching. I hear humming. No time to run, I crouch in the middle of the street and cover my head.
The humming gets louder, buzzes over me, and moves on. It’s a mail-carrying drone and it’s headed for my house.
I sprint the last half block, my pack, filled with seed packets, orphanage paperwork, and a toolkit, bouncing against my sweaty back. I reach our yard and slow down, but the drone is gone. After checking the underside of our mailbox for pipe bombs and trigger wires, I open the box’s rusting door, making the hinges creak.
A thick spider scurries out of the mailbox, runs across my hand, and shimmies down the post where it sits and stares at me. I give it the finger then examine the box for other spiders and see what the drone dropped in the slot — a government envelope with a red-white-and-blue border.
I run my fingers run over the bumps of the official gold-embossed stamp that labels it High Priority. I’m in. I punch the stagnant air with my fist.
Then I notice Mrs. Jensen watching me from behind the bars of her townhouse’s cracked picture window. A drone delivery is rare; I’d be curious, too. I kiss the gold stamp and can’t help . . . (snip)
The writing is professional and the voice promises fun. We open with an immediate scene—something is happening, for sure. The introduction to this world is subtle and effective—for example, mail delivery by drone, checking for bombs under the mailbox, and a spider crawling out of it. Not like any mail situation in my world.
But I have issues with this as an opening page. The lightbulb, for one thing. I wondered if it played a part in the story, so I read ahead. It doesn’t. So why, I have to ask, were two lines of narrative on the vital first page spent on a detail that doesn’t matter. It doesn’t help define the world all that much since a broken light bult could easily happen in the ordinary world.
If you take out the lightbulb part, then the opening could drop you right in on the action. For example:
I’m a half block from home when I hear humming coming up fast behind me. No time to run, I crouch in the middle of the street and cover my head.
A mail-carrying drone buzzes over me, and it’s headed for my house.
Then things go right instead of wrong or challenging. While that’s okay if it leads to a problem, it’s not exactly a tension-producer on a first page. In other words, we’re not given much reason to wonder what happens next.
Unless, that is, you count one of my pet peeves, an information question posed by this sentence: “I’m in..” In what? If the reader doesn’t know, then this has no meaning. Whatever he/she is in is a reason for celebration but, with no context, the celebration doesn’t mean much either.
One other issue: how does the character know the content/verdict contained in a letter that he/she hasn’t opened? Later, a girl also gets a letter from the same source, but she is not “in.” I don’t know that she received a different kind of envelope, and that doesn’t seem terribly logical.
To me, there's a missed opportunity to create at least a little tension. For example, right after the description that the envelope is marked High Priority, internal monologue could include something such as:
My verdict is here. Am I in and my life takes off, or am I rejected and my life stalls out at seventeen?
Unlike a story question that makes you want to know what happens next, an information question withholds necessary information from the reader. I figure it’s meant as a tease, but I don’t think that works very well. Other than that, everything here is fine, the character is happy, he/she doesn’t have anything to deal with, no problems, no consequences for failure. No story.
There was one other thing: the gender of the character. Because the author is a woman, and because the majority of YA dystopian fiction stars girls, I had assumed that the character was female. Nope, male. When I found out later, I had to revise all that I had imagined and visualized up to that point. This could have been dealt with by losing the first two lines on the page to make room for something to the effect that the envelope is addressed to his name, Paul James Salvage.
The voice and the unique tidbits of the world might be enough to draw a reader on, but my suspicion is that if this was sent cold to a literary agent that they would be wondering where the story is and might well pass. I suggest you read the rest of the chapter for a sample of strong writing and a fresh new world. But, from my point of view, it’s mostly well-done setup. There is a twist regarding “I’m in,” but it doesn’t, in this chapter, cause a problem for the character. Everything stays just fine in his mind. The real story doesn’t start in the first chapter, IMO. However, the quality of what is here tells me that I would love to see that first page. For what it’s worth.
Still on the road, just received photos from the Chicago Writers Association Uncommon Conference, thought I'd share them with you. I highly rec0mmend these talented and dedicated folks.
Big part of the fun is talking with other writers.
Evidence of having fun.
I met Kristin Oakley, a board member, author, and excellent presenter.
And, of course, me haranguing my class with my immense wisdom (well, the last part, not exactly). And yes, I am sorta pink.
I hope to see you in a workshop one of these days.
Had a great first-page workshop at the CWA Uncommon Writers Conference yesterday. Even better, I enjoyed and learned from other workshops presented by strong and smart writers. CWA put on an excellent conference, and I hope to be invited back one of these days. For writers who want to expand their capabilities, this is a conference that can help you do that.
Now I'm off to visit grandkids in Bloomington for a couple of days. I may post from there, might not.
Writers, send your prologue/first chapter to FtQ for a “flogging” critique. Email as an attachment.
Many of the folks who utilize BookBub are self-published, and because we hear over and over the need for self-published authors to have their work edited, it’s educational to take a hard look at their first pages. A poll follows concerning the need for an editor.
Donald Maass, literary agent and author of many books on writing, says, “Independent editor Ray Rhamey’s first-page checklist is an excellent yardstick for measuring what makes openings interesting.”
A First-page Checklist
It begins to engage the reader with the character
Something is wrong/goes wrong or challenges the character
The character desires something.
The character takes action. Can be internal or external action: thoughts, deeds, emotions. This does NOT include musing about whatever.
There’s enough of a setting to orient the reader as to where things are happening.
It happens in the NOW of the story.
Backstory? What backstory? We’re in the NOW of the story.
Set-up? What set-up? We’re in the NOW of the story.
The one thing it must do: raise a story question.
Next are the first 17 manuscript lines of Chapter 1 of Retribution. A poll and the opening page of the first chapter follow. Should this author have hired an editor?
The birthday celebration had ended, and many restaurants and bars on Rush Street were emptying out. It was Sunday night, and Jesse was ready to hit the pillow. Monday would come early enough. Following dinner, drinks, and a few celebratory shots with his old college buddies, Jesse was ready to call it a night.
“Tonight was great, but let’s not wait for special occasions to get together again. You all know where I live, and Bandit would love to have more people around. He’s probably sick of seeing nothing but my ugly mug day after day.” Jesse exchanged back pats with his buddies and once more wished Steve a happy birthday. The men parted ways outside Gibsons and disappeared to their cars.
Thanks to the proximity of Jesse’s home—a redbrick mid-century modern walkout that was a reasonable eleven miles away via Lakeshore Drive—he knew he should land in bed by one o’clock. He pulled up his jacket collar and sank his hands into his pockets to ward off the early fall chill as he crossed the street, walked north a block, and turned right on East Cedar Street, where his car was parked. The gusts coming off Lake Michigan swirled around buildings, giving the “Windy City” effect Chicago was nicknamed for.
Jesse continued toward the lake. Halfway down the street, a man and woman stepped out of a high-rise condo with their small dog, likely giving it one more walk before bedtime. They (snip)
This received 4.5 stars on Amazon. I wonder why. It must really take off after the opening page, but I’ll never know that—actually, I did look a little further and found an amateurish glitch that killed my interest for sure. More on that in a moment.
So here we are, in the throes of an opening that is supposed to truly engage us, and we are showered with detail. How on earth can it matter at this point that his house is a “a redbrick mid-century modern walkout that was a reasonable eleven miles away via Lakeshore Drive?” It doesn’t. Nor does it come into play later. The whole beginning about birthdays, etc. has no relevance to what happens next.
What happens is that when he walks to his car he is attacked and kidnapped, thrown into the trunk of his car. Now THAT’S a good opening scenario—but it comes way too late. It’s also when the narrative trips over the author’s intrusion referred to earlier.
Our man, who we belatedly learn is a cop (why isn’t that established right away?) is hit with a stun gun and KNOCKED UNCONSCIOUS. I put that in caps because, after he’s knocked out, the narrative continues with what happens in violation of the basic rules of point of view—a character can’t know things that he could not normally know, do, etc. Yet here we get this:
The man ripped the keys from Jesse’s clenched hand, popped the trunk, then dragged him by the arms to the bumper. With a grunt, he lifted Jesse over the trunk’s opening and threw him inside. He dropped Jesse’s cell phone safely into his own pocket, slammed the trunk lid, and climbed in behind the wheel. Tires screeched as he peeled away from the curb and disappeared down Chicago’s side streets.
Then our guy wakes up in the trunk and the story proceeds. I’m sorry, but if the rest of the narrative is as clumsy as this opening page, I’m just not interested. Your thoughts?
Note:I’ll be on the road for the next week, partly to teach a first-page workshop at the Chicago Writer’s Association conference, and then visiting family in Illinois. I’ll post as well as schedule and travel allows.
Submissions sought. Get fresh eyes on your opening page. Submission directions below.
The Flogometer challenge: can you craft a first page that compels me to turn to the next page? Caveat: Please keep in mind that this is entirely subjective.
What's a first page in publishingland? In a properly formatted novel manuscript (double-spaced, 1-inch margins, 12-point type, etc.) there should be about 16 or 17 lines on the first page. Directions for submissions are below—they include a request to post the rest of the chapter, but that’s optional.
Donald Maass,, literary agent and author of many books on writing, says, “Independent editor Ray Rhamey’s first-page checklist is an excellent yardstick for measuring what makes openings interesting.”
A First-page Checklist
It begins to engage the reader with the character
Something is wrong/goes wrong or challenges the character
The character desires something.
The character takes action. Can be internal or external action: thoughts, deeds, emotions. This does NOT include musing about whatever.
There’s enough of a setting to orient the reader as to where things are happening.
It happens in the NOW of the story.
Backstory? What backstory? We’re in the NOW of the story.
Set-up? What set-up? We’re in the NOW of the story.
The one thing it must do: raise a story question.
A reminder of what you’re after here. This blog is about crafting compelling openings. Not interesting, compelling. Why does it have to meet that hurdle? First, if your work is going to an agent, you’re competing with hundreds of submissions. You have to cut through that clutter and competition with powerful storytelling and strong writing. If it’s a reader browsing in a bookstore or online, the same goes—there are scores of published books competing with yours. Yeah, you need compelling.
Kirsten sends the prologue and first chapter for LaVonda Robinette Takes a Life. The rest of the narrative is after the break.
Prologue
The first two murders weren’t deliberate. Not really. Neglecting to help until it was too late, well you couldn’t call that actual murder could you? The second one, well yes technically that was murder but it was accidental. Almost. She’d been a little bit drunk and upset, and she hadn’t realised what she was doing at the time. She was just fantasizing about killing him; she hadn’t meant to actually kill him. It was just bad luck. Or good luck, depending on how you looked at it.
This time was different. Because this time she was planning it. Cold-heartedly and calculatedly. She was going there armed with determination and deliberate intention, and she was going to stop that awful man from ever hurting anyone again.
Chapter 1
Three things happened on the morning of LaVonda Robinette’s 49th birthday that changed the course of the rest of her life. Although two of those things didn’t seem quite as important at the time, so if you had asked LaVonda what happened on her 49th birthday she would have said: Oh that was the day my husband told me he was leaving me.
To be fair he probably hadn’t meant to pick her actual birthday to leave her; in fact, he’d admitted as much. He’d been planning to break the news on Easter Friday (he’d emphasized the word Friday as if that made all the difference in the world) because if he had told her on Easter Friday, then she would have the whole long weekend to come to terms with the news before she had t
o go back to work. So that was considerate Dave. Thoughtful, almost.
But apparently Jemima, his new girlfriend, (yes the birthday surprises kept coming!) had thrown a bit of a spanner in the works when she booked the two of them a romantic get-away for the upcoming Easter weekend so he’d been forced to move the departure date up, so to speak.
LaVonda couldn’t speak. She simply couldn’t absorb what he was saying. From somewhere across the kitchen, she watched herself holding her coffee mug, standing at the bench opposite her husband of almost 25 years and she screamed silently at herself: He’s leaving you! He’s got another woman! You’re being dumped! Yet she still couldn’t seem to (snip)
The prologue was concise, brief, to the point, and intriguing. While it’s not a scene, which is what I usually recommend for a prologue, this works well because it raises lots of juicy story questions.
But, for me, the chapter's first page doesn’t achieve the same appeal. It’s much in the same style and voice of the prologue (I like the voice), but it’s all telling. While that worked for the prologue, for me this falls far short of immersing me in a character. To do that, IMO, you need a scene. One with action, dialogue, emotion. Put me in that kitchen with LaVonda (set the scene). Have her or her husband say or do something that kicks off the scene with the promise of conflict of some sort. Clearly there’s something going wrong for her here, but it isn’t shown. Show it, and show how she deals with it. The prologue teases a fun story, now it’s up to the narrative to deliver it in story form. Keep at it, Kirsten, this tale sounds promising. For what it’s worth.
A novel I edited some time back has now been published, and I want to urge you to check it out. It’s science fiction, and has many entertaining twists and turns. Plus a sardonic kind of protagonist that injects humor at the right places. I enjoyed the voice, the story, the world, and its characters a great deal, and I recommend it. It is free for Kindle Unlimited readers.
Here’s the Amazon blurb:
On rebel planet Elysium, a man is executed on live video streamed by religious extremists. Nothing terribly original so far for Elysium.
Only this time, the man doesn't die.
When security expert Asher Perez is sent to find him, it becomes clear that nobody in the rebel colony is who they seem, and that something dark is stirring in the shadows.
Something that has been watching humanity since the dawn of history.
Writers, send your prologue/first chapter to FtQ for a “flogging” critique. Email as an attachment.
Many of the folks who utilize BookBub are self-published, and because we hear over and over the need for self-published authors to have their work edited, it’s educational to take a hard look at their first pages. A poll follows concerning the need for an editor.
Donald Maass, literary agent and author of many books on writing, says, “Independent editor Ray Rhamey’s first-page checklist is an excellent yardstick for measuring what makes openings interesting.”
A First-page Checklist
It begins to engage the reader with the character
Something is wrong/goes wrong or challenges the character
The character desires something.
The character takes action. Can be internal or external action: thoughts, deeds, emotions. This does NOT include musing about whatever.
There’s enough of a setting to orient the reader as to where things are happening.
It happens in the NOW of the story.
Backstory? What backstory? We’re in the NOW of the story.
Set-up? What set-up? We’re in the NOW of the story.
The one thing it must do: raise a story question.
Next are the first 17 manuscript lines of Chapter 1 of The 28th Gate. A poll and the opening page of the first chapter follow. Should this author have hired an editor?
You’ve never seen a warlock, but it’s a gun you’d remember if you had. I’ve heard them compared to starship-grade particle cannons rather than typical firearms, despite the fact you can carry one with a single hand. Of course, that’s because the tech inside a ’lock dates from the Gate Age, the height of civilization before we lost it all.
Now, I know this seems like a strange place to start, but I’m sick of being asked to start at the beginning. That’s all I’ve been asked since I arrived here. You don’t really care about the beginning. You want to know how I got here.
But that doesn’t matter to me. Going back to help Katherine does.
So, if I’m gonna go through another round of telling this story, I’m giving you enough detail to make sure this is the last time. And that’s why this story starts with a gun.
Course, given how many of my jobs were as a freelance bodyguard or contract bounty hunter, you could say all my stories start with a gun. But those other guns were nothing like my warlock.
Imagine a quick flash, intense and accurate, but it passes so quickly you don’t have time to recognize it. Then, after the flash has faded, the real blast flares to life like the expansion of a dying star, following the trail of that initial flash in a blossoming fire trail. A moment later, the sound hits you. Compressed air from the shot creates a shockwave that makes your ears feel as if (snip)
This received 4.4 stars on Amazon. I suspect that if you’re a hardcore science fiction fan that this detailed bit of world-building, along with the strong voice, could compel you to turn the page. But if you’re looking for a compelling story question, I don’t see one buried somewhere in this anatomy of a fictional weapon.
There were a couple of “information questions,” the kind that irritate me and that should never be imposed on a reader. In this case, one piece of missing information is where “here” is. I don’t really want to know how he got here, as the story says, because I don’t have a clue as to what here is, or to what it means to this character or the story. What’s the reason for holding out? And then there was the notion that he’s telling this story again. Again from when? Why did he tell the story then, and to whom, and why retell it now? I’m afraid I’ll never find out the missing information because the use of information questions plus the lack of a story question stopped me from reading on. Be honest with your reader, let them know what’s going on with the character. Your thoughts?
Writers, send your prologue/first chapter to FtQ for a “flogging” critique. Email as an attachment.
Many of the folks who utilize BookBub are self-published, and because we hear over and over the need for self-published authors to have their work edited, it’s educational to take a hard look at their first pages. A poll follows concerning the need for an editor.
Donald Maass, literary agent and author of many books on writing, says, “Independent editor Ray Rhamey’s first-page checklist is an excellent yardstick for measuring what makes openings interesting.”
A First-page Checklist
It begins to engage the reader with the character
Something is wrong/goes wrong or challenges the character
The character desires something.
The character takes action. Can be internal or external action: thoughts, deeds, emotions. This does NOT include musing about whatever.
There’s enough of a setting to orient the reader as to where things are happening.
It happens in the NOW of the story.
Backstory? What backstory? We’re in the NOW of the story.
Set-up? What set-up? We’re in the NOW of the story.
The one thing it must do: raise a story question.
Next are the first 17 manuscript lines of Chapter 1 of The Last Necromancer. A poll and the opening page of the first chapter follow. Should this author have hired an editor?
The other prisoners eyed me as if I were a piece of tender meat. I was someone new to distract them from their boredom, and small enough that I couldn't stop one—let alone four—from doing what they wanted. It was only a matter of who would be the first to enjoy me.
"He's mine." The prisoner's tongue darted out through his tangled beard and licked what I supposed were lips, hidden beneath all that wiry black hair. "Come here, boy."
I shuffled away from him but instead of the brick wall of the cell, I smacked into a soft body. "Looks like he wants me, Dobby. Don't ye, lad?" Large hands clamped around my arms, and thick fingers dug into my flesh through my jacket and shirt. The man spun me round and I gaped up at the brute grinning toothlessly at me. My heart rose and dove, rose and dove, and cold sweat trickled down my spine. He was massive. He wore no jacket or waistcoat, only a shirt stained with blood, sweat and grime. The top buttons had popped open, most likely from the strain of containing his enormous chest, and a thatch of gray hair sprouted through the gap and crept up to his neck rolls. Hot, foul breath assaulted my nostrils.
I tried to turn my face away but he grasped my jaw. The wrenching motion caused my hair to slide off my forehead and eyes, revealing more of my face than I had in a long time. A new fear spread through me, as sickening as the man I faced. Only two prisoners seemed interested in a boy, but if they realized I was a girl, the others would likely want me too.
This received 4.2 stars on Amazon. This author really has the hang of injecting “something wrong” into this character’s life. The opening is a terrific example of creating jeopardy for someone, and this is particularly scary, IMO. It’s concisely done so that the real hook—she’s a girl—is on the first page. We don’t even want to imagine what could happen next – but, for me, I sure had to turn the page to find out. As an editor, I think I’d trim and simplify a little here and there—for example:
The wrenching motion caused mMy hair to slide off my forehead and eyes, revealing more . . .