In addition to flogging submissions by writer readers, I’m flogging books that cost 99¢, although interesting free books may still get a look. The challenge is not that you would pay 99¢ on the basis of a single page, but if you would go to Amazon in order to turn the page a read more with the idea in mind that you might buy it.
Writers, send your prologue/first chapter to FtQ for a “flogging” critique. Email as an attachment. In your email, include your name, permission to use the first page, and, if it’s okay, permission to post the rest of the prologue/chapter.
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.
When you evaluate today’s opening page, consider how well it uses elements from the 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
- 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.
Here are the first 17 lines of the opening pages for Perimeter, a thriller. A poll follows the opening page below. If you don’t want to turn the page, then I’m thinking that this author should have hired an editor.
TO: Bradley Hinshaw, Deputy Director - CIA
SUBJ: NARA Query Response – Broken Arrow
A search of the Central Records System has not found any evidence of Broken Arrow incidents over the Mediterranean within the last sixty years. However, there was a match to your search parameters in the National Archives. I’ve attached a scan of an unclassified memo from the JCAE.
Sincerely,
Kaitlyn Shaw Archives Technician (3A)
Joint Committee on Atomic Energy
Washington 25, D.C.
March 28, 1956
Honorable Carl Walske
Assistant to the Secretary (Atomic Energy)
Department of Defense
Washington, D.C.
Dear Dr. Walske:
I am forwarding three copies of the transcript of the executive session before the Joint (snip)
You can read more here. This earned 4.4 stars on Amazon. Seems to me that unless you know what “Broken Arrow” means, all this use of narrative for addresses and titles and memo text isn’t going to grab your attention. I think summary would work much better and get us to story quicker. Here’s the good stuff that came at the top of page two;
. . . an Air Force B-47 went missing somewhere over or near the Mediterranean Sea.
It has been confirmed that the aforementioned aircraft was loaded at MacDill AFB, Florida, with two Mark 15 nuclear capsules.
Now there’s something to keep you moving. Your thoughts?
Writing Craft Mastering the Craft of Compelling Storytelling
Mystery (coming of age) The Summer Boy
Science Fiction Gundown Free ebooks.