Hey, if you’re isolating like I am, get that trunk novel out and get to writing . . . and/or submitting the first chapter to the Flogometer to get free insights into how it’s working.
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.
Note: all the Flogometer posts are here.
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.
Before you rip into today’s submission, consider this checklist of first-page ingredients from my book, Mastering the Craft of Compelling Storytelling.
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 (PDF here)
- 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.
Cathy sends the first chapter for Old Roads. As usual, the rest of the narrative is after the break.
Theirs was a small world.
Not that the people of Tarn were aware of that. Few travelled outside their village and fewer still left Tarn, most of those only venturing into a neighbouring county. Why travel farther? The local merchants brought back anything you could possibly need from the twice yearly Wenn fair.
~*~
Outside, Brook rattled around the yard, while the birds sang sundown songs to the sky.
Inside the workshop, the only sounds were the rasp of the whetstone on my knife and an occasional crack from cooling charcoal. Dust motes drifted in the sunbeams that made it through the window. I tested the blade on my thumb. It hardly dragged against the skin, but a fine red line appeared.
Activity in the yard stilled. Except for the birds.
‘Jaywing?’
My parents only used my full name when I was out of favour.
Setting the knife aside, I slipped a silver ring onto each finger – I still had ten in those days. As I chose earrings from the silver I’d already cleaned, the inner door from the house opened and a greying head appeared.
This is nicely written and has a distinct voice that promises an enjoyable read. But what of tension? For me, there were no compelling story questions raised. The protagonist is fine and doesn’t anticipate any trouble on the horizon, nor is she dealing with a problem now. I read through the rest, and problems and story questions didn’t appear. I know most writing craft books advise including some of the world in a “normal” state before making things happen – but that can happen in a paragraph or two. In a sense, this is “throat-clearing.” I’d love to see the narrative where things go wrong for the protagonist. Start there. Your thoughts?
For what it’s worth.
Ray
Submitting to the Flogometer:
Email the following in an attachment (.doc, .docx, or .rtf preferred, no PDFs):
- your title
- your complete 1st chapter or prologue plus 1st chapter
- Please include in your email permission to post it on FtQ. Note: I’m adding a copyright notice for the writer at the end of the post. I’ll use just the first name unless I’m told I can use the full name.
- Also, please tell me if it’s okay to post the rest of the chapter so people can turn the page.
- And, optionally, include your permission to use it as an example in a book on writing craft if that's okay.
- If you’re in a hurry, I’ve done “private floggings,” $50 for a first chapter.
- If you rewrite while you wait for your turn, it’s okay with me to update the submission.
Were I you, I'd examine my first page in the light of the first-page checklist before submitting to the Flogometer.
Flogging the Quill © 2019 Ray Rhamey, excerpt © 2021 by Cathy.
My books. You can read sample chapters and learn more about the books here.
Writing Craft Mastering the Craft of Compelling Storytelling
Mystery (coming of age) The Summer Boy
Science Fiction Gundown Free ebooks.
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