Forum Transcripts

Beginnings: Where Do You Start and How?

Event start time:

Tue Jul 26 12:03:12 2005

Event end time:

Tue Jul 26 13:32:49 2005



Legend:
Questions from the Audience are presented in red.
Answers by the Speaker are in black.
The Moderator's comments are in blue.

mary rosenblum

Hello all!

mary rosenblum

I hope you had a good weekend and are enjoying this summer week.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me, Mary Rosenblum, LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer and today we're talking about beginnings. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the 'Ask a Question' button or the 'word bubble' next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular 'send' bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question to reach me.

mary rosenblum

I had a request from a website regular to talk about how to end stories...

mary rosenblum

for a Friday Forum, so I'm going to do a series here...

mary rosenblum

beginnings today, ends on Friday, and middles on next Tuesdays.

mary rosenblum

Then we'll have covered the entire story end to end. :-)

mary rosenblum

And, to be honest, most of my students and most of the novice writers I work with in workshops have trouble with beginnings...

mary rosenblum

mostly by beginning in the wrong place. :-)

mary rosenblum

I have to say that I had published several short stories in Asimov's Magazine before I finally began to write stories...

mary rosenblum

where I didn't go back during revision and chop off the first few pages!

wolf122

Good afternoon Mary. Question--my gopher readers state that my beginnings are too stiff and almost cinematic for the first page, but then flows fine afterwards. Any tips for the first three paragraphs?

mary rosenblum

Try just cutting them off, wolf.

mary rosenblum

You are probably doing what most novice short story writers attempt to do...

mary rosenblum

which is to use a novel start.

mary rosenblum

And to set the scene, introduce the characters before your plot begins.

mary rosenblum

That doesn't work well in short story form.

mary rosenblum

Readers really do have different expectations from short stories than they do from novels.

mary rosenblum

You are nearly always better off to begin with the plot if you can.

mary rosenblum

If you are writing a long short story... 7000 - 10,000 words, then you have a bit more leeway...

mary rosenblum

but for a story under 5000 words, I'd REALLY try to start with a plot element and fill in backstory as you go.

wolf122

So, cut those paragraphs and sprinkle them in as backstory?

mary rosenblum

Exactly wolf.

mary rosenblum

Readers are willing to take off at a gallop with you and fill in details as you go.

mary rosenblum

Beginnings SHOULD take you a lot of creative sweat.

mary rosenblum

They are important, not something to dash off and ignore.

mary rosenblum

Let's talk about a short story start first, and then I'll talk about novel starts.

mary rosenblum

The best way to decide where your story actually begins....and that may be something you do AFTER you finish the first draft...

mary rosenblum

look over your story. Where does the MC take the first irrevocable step toward the end of your plot? Where can he/she no longer turn aside?

mary rosenblum

That may be a page or more into your story!

mary rosenblum

Yeah, all the backstory as we tour the village and meet the family is nice...but essentially will bore readers right out of your story...

mary rosenblum

OR...if your action is compelling, mislead them about where your story goes.

mary rosenblum

Readers expect authors to give them important clues in the opening, so they are hyper vigilant about making guesses.

mary rosenblum

If they guess wrong, then you violate their expectations.

mary rosenblum

Find your first plot element...

mary rosenblum

this is the first thing that happens in your story that MUST happen in order to complete the story as you have planned.

mary rosenblum

Your MC, for example, might have a rousing fight with a dragon and nearly get killed, but it's not until he has ridden over the hill and into the next valley to find...

mary rosenblum

a magic artifact that the story begins.

mary rosenblum

Spending too much time with that dragon fight may well seriously mislead your readers.

mary rosenblum

You'd be better off to start with him leading his limping horse into the valley after the fight, to stumble over that magic.

mary rosenblum

Hurst to cut out that lovely dragon scene....but...

mary rosenblum

you do that. :-)

mary rosenblum

The story is more important than the scene.

mary rosenblum

Just save it and use it in another story.

mary rosenblum

OR....the other very common start...and maybe what you're doing wolf...

mary rosenblum

is to show the reader the world.

mary rosenblum

The author gives us a descriptive narrative about the place, the people, who they are, what is happening and THEN gets into the plot.

mary rosenblum

Not compelling. You're going to lose your browsing readers right there unless you snag them with something.

mary rosenblum

And the other common start is to begin with a really strong hook line. The MC plunges the daggar into the huge serpent's throat....

mary rosenblum

and then instantly falls into a long reverie about how she ended up on this quest, who she is, where she is going...

mary rosenblum

and a page later, she finally pulls that daggar out of the snake.

mary rosenblum

Noooot a good way to do it.

mary rosenblum

Makes readers giggle.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me, Mary Rosenblum, LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer and today we're talking about beginnings. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the 'Ask a Question' button or the 'word bubble' next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular 'send' bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question to reach me.

mary rosenblum

A hook is not really enough on its own.

mary rosenblum

It won't fix a slow, narrative start.

mary rosenblum

In short fiction, do your best to begin with the plot in motion.

mary rosenblum

And of course, if you're writing an alternative universe...SF, fantasy, or just an unusual real-world environment (Bangladesh, for example)...

mary rosenblum

you're going to have to really sweat in order to set the scene as that plot element unfolds.

mary rosenblum

That's what makes the beginning work. :-)

mary rosenblum

Work as in lots of effort on your part.

mary rosenblum

But realize....

mary rosenblum

readers do NOT have to know everything before the story starts.

mary rosenblum

That is a very common beginner mistake.

mary rosenblum

We HAVE to know only what makes THIS action comprehensible.

mary rosenblum

We don't have to know WHY yet.

mary rosenblum

Show us action, then begin to fill in backstory.

mary rosenblum

Where is this happening? Why is this happening? (and you can answer this fairly late in the scene), who is our MC...those questions.

jackie7777

Can my beginning be my ending and I work my way back?

mary rosenblum

Yes, you can do that jackie. I've seen some good examples of that...

mary rosenblum

but realize that it is hard to pull off.

mary rosenblum

I've seen it in some mystery, where we begin with the bad guy clearly about to kill the MC...

mary rosenblum

then return to the beginning of the story and finally end beyond that original beginning as the MC manages to defeat the bad guy.

mary rosenblum

BUT...

mary rosenblum

it's easy to totally remove any suspense when doing this type of construction.

mary rosenblum

So you have to have something else that compells the reader.

mary rosenblum

Most people stop reading if they flip ahead to read the end. :-)

mary rosenblum

So you have to counterbalance that with something that keeps the reader reading anyway.

mary rosenblum

It might be a very complex and intellectual plot puzzle....how did the MC figure it out?

mary rosenblum

People don't read Sherlock Holmes to find out if he survived...we all know he's going to...

mary rosenblum

but we read it to enjoy the details of how he solves the crime.

mary rosenblum

Remember...whatever you do has to serve the story first.

mary rosenblum

It's not enough to say 'Isn't this a cool new way to do it?"

mary rosenblum

It's only cool if the story is BETTER for being told this way rather than in a more traditional form.

mary rosenblum

And of course, you need to do way more in a novel opening.

mary rosenblum

You can certainly begin a novel like you do a short story...with an ongoing plot element.

mary rosenblum

I tend to do that, simply because I write so much short fiction.

tolkienlvr

Mary, I was a bit late today, so you may have already answered this. If not: Can you liks the ESSENTIAL story building blocks that should usually be included in any first chapter of a novel. Obviously the HOOK, but are there other "Always include this" things?

mary rosenblum

Yes, tolkien, there are some essentials to include in that first chapter.

mary rosenblum

Who matters here.

mary rosenblum

Where and when are we?

mary rosenblum

What is the problem?

mary rosenblum

What is going on around us?

mary rosenblum

You need to answer all those questions in a short story, too, of course...

mary rosenblum

but you can weave them into the first third of your story.

mary rosenblum

Generally, the first chapter of a novel answers these questions...

mary rosenblum

and in many novels, the first plot element doesn't occur until the end of the first chapter.

mary rosenblum

Now that does NOT mean you have license to bore your readers with fifteen pages of droning narrative...

mary rosenblum

about the history of your main character and her family!

mary rosenblum

Of go on and on at excruciating length about the flora, fauna, and ecology of your fantasy or SF world.

mary rosenblum

You definitly need that hook, remember?

mary rosenblum

You need to snag your browsers with a compelling character and interesting action in that first novel chapter.

lore alley

Mary, should you have this all figured out when you "begin" the story - I mean when you first have that initial spark of idea and sit down to start your first draft?

mary rosenblum

Not at this stage of your creative life, lore.

mary rosenblum

While I can look at a story as a whole...big or small...and figure out where I need to begin...

mary rosenblum

that comes from a lot of experience. I couldn't do that when I started out...not even after I was publishing.

mary rosenblum

Decide on your beginning after you have written the first draft.

mary rosenblum

Think of it this way...

mary rosenblum

if you're making a piece of clothing, better to cut the pattern out on the large size...

mary rosenblum

and trim it down if it's too big, rather than find out it's too small and you have no extra fabric.

mary rosenblum

When you have finished your draft, think about your story for awhile...

mary rosenblum

where does it actually get rolling? Where is that character propelled to your end?

mary rosenblum

At what point can he not turn back?

mary rosenblum

For those of you who end up coming in late to the Forums, don't forget that I post the transcripts afterward...

mary rosenblum

in Writing Craft: Forum Transcripts

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me, Mary Rosenblum, LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer and today we're talking about beginnings. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the 'Ask a Question' button or the 'word bubble' next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular 'send' bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question to reach me.

fiction_scribe

I was a little late as I had trouble finding the right room

fiction_scribe

maybe missed this ans, but word count for first chapter?

mary rosenblum

Ah, good question and I'm going to give you a very frustrating answer.

mary rosenblum

There IS no hard and fast rule about chapter length...at least not for adult and much YA fiction.

mary rosenblum

Generally, the younger your readers the shorter the chapters need to be...

mary rosenblum

but it's a matter of finding YOUR rhythms.

mary rosenblum

Generally, chapters end at scene breaks, although you can leave the reader hanging at a dramatic point.

mary rosenblum

If you naturally tend to write scenes that are about five pages long..

mary rosenblum

your chapters may be ten or fifteen pages in length...

mary rosenblum

if you write 15 page scenes, you may do fifteen page chapters and limit it to one scene...or do long, 30 page chapters.

mary rosenblum

Shorter chapters give readers a good place to break and make that peanut butter sandwich.

mary rosenblum

It's easier to pick up the story at the chapter...

mary rosenblum

since you of course will build in a nice transition there to remind the reader what is going on. :-)

gwanny

How do you feel about opening with dialogue, either in short or novel length?

mary rosenblum

A dialogue opening is generally a VERY strong opening, gwanny.

mary rosenblum

We are all eavesdroppers at heart and it's HARD to put the book aside in the middle of a conversation. We want to finish it.

mary rosenblum

BUT...

mary rosenblum

some of the most boring openings I know are when writers begin with a long...

mary rosenblum

dialogue and NO VISUALS.

mary rosenblum

Do not do this.

mary rosenblum

We really need to see the scene as well as hear voices echoing in our heads.

fiction_scribe

by page do you mean 8x11 double space (for clarification)

mary rosenblum

Yes...and btw, that translates pretty much one to one for most mass market paperbacks.

mary rosenblum

An example of visual and dialogue, gwanny?

mary rosenblum

"I can't get there tomorrow." Daren paced the length of the livingroom, the phone tucked against his shoulder. "Wednesday at the earliest."

mary rosenblum

"Tomorrow." The voice on the line was full of threat. Daren wiped his face, took a deep breath. "Look, I'll catch the red eye. It's the best I can do." He glared at the painting on the wall...

mary rosenblum

hating the soft pastel landscape. Damn hotel art. "If you don't like it, shoot me,"

mary rosenblum

"We just might do that." The line went dead.

mary rosenblum

We don't know a LOT about where we are, but we're in a hotel room and our POV is on the phone and under stress...

mary rosenblum

as we see from his sweating as well as hearing from his conversation.

mary rosenblum

If I had simply given you the coversation. :

mary rosenblum

"I can't get there tomorrow. Wednesday at the earliest."

mary rosenblum

"Tomorrow."

mary rosenblum

"Look I'll catch the red eye. It's the best I can do. If you don't like it, shoot me."

mary rosenblum

"We just might do that."

mary rosenblum

Compare the two starts.

mary rosenblum

The visuals make the scene real. Otherwise, we simply hear voices and we don't see a thing.

mary rosenblum

YOu can do a couple or three lines of stripped dialogue like this, but then I'd sure start adding some visuals.

mary rosenblum

We have all the dramatic tension of the conversation...threat and violence implied here will hook our attention...

mary rosenblum

but we also see where we are.

mary rosenblum

Now boring dialogue is not necessarily a good start!

mary rosenblum

You need to pique the readers' interest!

mary rosenblum

"Hello, how are you?" Emily sat down at the tea table.

mary rosenblum

"I'm fine." Anne poured, handed Emily a flowered cup. "Sugar?"

mary rosenblum

"Please. And cream, too, thank you."

mary rosenblum

"The scones are lovely today. Currant."

mary rosenblum

"Oh dear." Emily patted her waistline. "I really shouldn't."

mary rosenblum

"Oh, come on. We only meet for tea once a month."

mary rosenblum

"You're right. I suppose I will have one." She took one of the crusty scones. "And pass the clotted cream, too, please. I might as well be truely bad."

mary rosenblum

Okay, this is a dialogue...

mary rosenblum

but as a reader I've just about run out of patience here...unless something snags my interest pretty quick...

mary rosenblum

and implies a story to come, I may move on to the next book on the shelf.

mary rosenblum

ALL dialogue is not equal. :-)

mary rosenblum

Now if Emily breathlessly asks if Anne has heard the news...

mary rosenblum

I'll keep reading because I want to find out what the news is...

mary rosenblum

and this slow conversation suddenly promises a payoff at the end!

tlareeves

How about opening with a flashback, incl. dialogue and actio

mary rosenblum

TL, that is something that can work, but has a bunch of caveats attached. :-)

mary rosenblum

Why do you need the flashback? Why not start with THAT scene and then transition forward across boring time?

mary rosenblum

Now you may have good reasons to do this.

mary rosenblum

But DO have good reasons! :-)

mary rosenblum

The risks in opening with a flashback are that your reader...

mary rosenblum

does not yet have THIS story fixed in his/her mind yet.

mary rosenblum

When you take us back to the flashback when/where...we think of that when/where as THE story...

mary rosenblum

it's automatic.

mary rosenblum

So when you leap forward again after the flashback you DO jolt the reader...

mary rosenblum

and now we have to forget what we figured out about this story and start all over again at THIS where/when.

mary rosenblum

If you have a good reason to do it that way, then you simply accept the fact that the jolt will cost you reader pleasure and a few readers who'll quit there...

mary rosenblum

but probably not many.

mary rosenblum

But don't do it just to 'be cute'. You'll do more harm to your story than good.

mary rosenblum

Often, that flashback will be less of a jolt if it comes in later, after we have established ourselves in this story.

mary rosenblum

And lord help you if you flashback and your readers fall in love with a vivid character in that beginning flashback...

mary rosenblum

who isn't important in the main story.

mary rosenblum

Big disappointment.

fiction_scribe

how about mid. plot timeline opening every other chap flashb

mary rosenblum

Try typing /ask in front of your question, fiction, so that you don't have to use shorthand to get it all in the box. :-)

fiction_scribe

/ask how about middle of the plot timeline opening with ever

fiction_scribe

other chapter a flash back

mary rosenblum

Ah, thank you.

mary rosenblum

Well, I think what you'd be better off doing here is to use a parallel plot construction...

mary rosenblum

tell two converging stories simultaneously, converging on the climax.

mary rosenblum

Would that work?

mary rosenblum

One chapter is now, the next chapter is in the past...and they come together in the final scenes?

seigfried007

if you have an in-depth sci-fi world based on an alternate history of Earth with odd races and cities that don't exist here, do you have a glossary or do you just plop readers into your world and hope the confusion settles?

mary rosenblum

Neither, seig.

mary rosenblum

I do this all the time remember? :-)

mary rosenblum

And I'm good at it.

mary rosenblum

Yes, you DO plop the reader into the middle of the story...

mary rosenblum

but you are VERY careful not to let that reader flounder.

mary rosenblum

You create a scen3e.

mary rosenblum

scene...where the MC manages to reveal all the things the reader needs to know for that scene to make sense...

mary rosenblum

and no, you can't give your reader ALL the history/backstory of this world...

mary rosenblum

but you can certainly give him/her a lot of glimpses through actions/dialogue.

mary rosenblum

You'll have to show more details/backstory in other stories set in the same universe...

mary rosenblum

or in the novel. :-)

mary rosenblum

If you're doing a novel, of course you have tons of time to get those details of history and ecology and species to your readers..

mary rosenblum

as your plot begins to unfold.

mary rosenblum

SF and fantasy starts ARE hard because you have to decide what the reader MUST know in order for this scene to make sense and leave out all the other million and one details.

fiction_scribe

maybe - one is story of how murder happened, other is the solving

mary rosenblum

That could be quite cool, fiction, if you can make the timing work.

seigfried007

I have enough backstory for these characters/this world that i'd like to write a prequel.

mary rosenblum

That's a good thing, seig. :-) Tor liked the backstory for my latest novel so much that they want a series using this universe. Lots of details left out are just fine! :-)

seigfried007

my test readers wanted to know the races and their problems right off the bat, and i have no idea how to do some of these things without just writing a list of definitions

mary rosenblum

Sometimes you can't.

mary rosenblum

Just feed them the details fairly quickly as you get into the story.

mary rosenblum

You may have to reinvent your opening to give more details more quickly than your current plot line delivers.

gwanny

assuming that the beginning of the novel is the first third of the story, do you answer the 5 W's and the H? Cover it all in the begining?

mary rosenblum

You need to answer all these questions BEFORE your climax in a short story, gwanny.

mary rosenblum

By the time you get to the climax of the story, the reader needs to be able to concentrate on th story rather than on figuring out what is going on.

mary rosenblum

That's going to vary with the story.

mary rosenblum

In a novel, it's a more complex landscape...

mary rosenblum

and you have subplots that will surely expand your Who, what, where, when, and why issues.

mary rosenblum

So you are constantly enriching your story...but again...go into that climax with questions answered or you'll distract readers from the peak of your story,.

seigfried007

oh, off-topic, but what is the difference between complex and over-complicated with novels?

mary rosenblum

To over simplify a bit...complex is interesting and over-complicated is confusing. :-)

mary rosenblum

What's the difference between 'sweet' and 'too sweet'?

mary rosenblum

Realize that one person's complex is another person's 'over complicated'.

mary rosenblum

You cannot cannot cannot (one of those rare absolutes) please ALL readers.

mary rosenblum

Essentially, if it works for most people fine.

mary rosenblum

I have a very dear friend, another SF writer, who simply has a different take on fiction. I don't think he has EVER 'gotten' one of my stories. He simply misses what I'm doing. :-)

mary rosenblum

But you know what? I'm not writing for him!

mary rosenblum

I'm writing for the many many people who DO 'get' my stories. :-)

mary rosenblum

If you give your novel to say, five readers...

mary rosenblum

and all five of them come back with questions about your plot...they weren't sure what happened or why or when...

mary rosenblum

then you have created something thats confusing and you need to fix it.

mary rosenblum

If maybe one of them found it confusing but the rest had no trouble following it, don't worry about it.

mary rosenblum

Generally...even with practice...we are our own worst objective critics!

mary rosenblum

I depend a lot on my readers and my editor to find the weak points I missed.

mary rosenblum

We know our worlds FAR too well.

mary rosenblum

The main thing to work on with beginnings...

mary rosenblum

is that tendency to want to tell all that cool backstory to the reader...to introduce the story.

mary rosenblum

Fight it!

mary rosenblum

It's generally a very slow start and the reader really does NOT need it...

mary rosenblum

if you weave those details into that opening scene.

mary rosenblum

Readers are very happy to collect those pretty puzzle pieces and put the picture together for themselves.

mary rosenblum

This is the Tuesday Forum with me, Mary Rosenblum, LR Web Editor, fiction and nonfiction writer and today we're talking about beginnings. If you're new here, remember that you need to click on the 'Ask a Question' button or the 'word bubble' next to the red question mark at the top of the screen, or use the ask a question icon in order to ask a question. Your regular 'send' bar won't reach me! You can also type /ask in front of your question to reach me.

mary rosenblum

If you can, begin with the plot in motion for a short story...

mary rosenblum

You can take more time to set the world up in a novel, as long as you make that set-up compelling and not an encyclopedia entry!

speckledorf

Is there a right time to start with a "weather report"?

mary rosenblum

It was a dark and stormy night is SUCH a classic cliche that weather reports as an opening are VERY iffy...

mary rosenblum

although I suppose that 'Hurricane Elma came ashore at midnight' might not be bad. :-)

mary rosenblum

But even here...I suspect you could do better with a strong visual.

gwanny

what about for a non fiction article? How do you recommend one begins?

mary rosenblum

That depends entirely on the type of nonfiction piece you are writing, gwanny.

mary rosenblum

There are many types of nonfiction.

marina

Can I go back to the short story beginnings? (I'm wroking on assg. 2) Do I begin with the first plot elelment? With the first place that the MC can't "turn back"?

mary rosenblum

I would, marina.

mary rosenblum

Start with something happening...that plot element...

mary rosenblum

and weave in the details of who, when, where, why as it unfolds.

seigfried007

i think my problem is in part because i started off the action from a neurotic POV ;-)

mary rosenblum

Well, if it's in first person, yeah you're VERY limited. That's what makes first so problematic at times.

seigfried007

are other people allowed to post bits of work for critique?

mary rosenblum

Well, we're almost done here, today, but I'll do a writers workshop on 'beginnings' in the next couple of weeks...

mary rosenblum

and you can submit starts for that. How's that?

seigfried007

third person limited

mary rosenblum

IN third person you should be able to engineer enough explanatory events to give your readers a sense of what is going on.

mary rosenblum

Just don't try to answer all questions at once.

marina

I'm having trouble distinguishing between 1st plot element and the climax...maybe. Beginners' problems.

mary rosenblum

First plot element is where the character does something that leads directly to the plot.

mary rosenblum

For example...our MC might go to her job at the zoo, clean the lion cages, feed the monkeys...

mary rosenblum

but when she finds the dead keeper in the tiger pen...THAT is the first plot element.

mary rosenblum

The climax is when she is trapped in the deserted zoo late at night by the killer.

tolkienlvr

Mary, can you remind me what a "writers workshop" entails with LR?

mary rosenblum

Oh sure. I haven't done one for awhile, tolkien, so it's time. :-)

mary rosenblum

I invite people to either send by email or cut and paste here..examples they want critiqued...

mary rosenblum

say an opening paragraph...a scene...something like that.

mary rosenblum

I'ts kind of limited...the chat site can't handle entire chapters, for example...

mary rosenblum

but we've used it to look at examples of show, don't tell...beginnings...narrative distance and the like.

roe

what if you start with MC's observation of the weather. something like Marla hated storms, but a big one looked like a big one headed her way. The black sky and streaks of lightening sent shivers up her spine.

mary rosenblum

Oops...meant to edit out your extra 'big one'.

mary rosenblum

Got distracted, apologies.

mary rosenblum

You can do that. If it works for the start of the story that's fine..but if the main plot

mary rosenblum

deals with the storm and events that occur during it...

mary rosenblum

you might be much better off to begin with something crashing through the front window, or slamming against the closed storm shutters...

mary rosenblum

with Marla doing whatever as the wind shakes the house.

mary rosenblum

You're beginning here BEFORE the storm.

mary rosenblum

If the main plot takes place under the threat of the storm, this is maybe the right place.

mary rosenblum

If the main plot takes place during the storm, it's probably too early.

seigfried007

How long is a chapter supposed to be? most of mine are thirty-something.

mary rosenblum

Up to you for adult fiction, seig.

fiction_scribe

Going back to plot elements, what about starting with the first one on the first page

mary rosenblum

First paragraph is best, marina.

mary rosenblum

Sheila slammed the door and leaned against it, panting. This time, he had followed her all the way home.

seigfried007

where are we supposed to send stuff for the workshop?

mary rosenblum

Seig, I announce them in the website updates...the ones that give you the topic for the forums...and you can reply with your piece cut and pasted into the email.

mary rosenblum

Marina, that start is the first plot element and it opens the story...

mary rosenblum

in the next paragraph, I'd be sure to let the reader figure out who followed her home and where/when we are.

mary rosenblum

If you can start with drama like that it makes for a very strong start.

mary rosenblum

Who is going to quit reading now?

mary rosenblum

Well, this has been another fun, Oregon hour. :-)

mary rosenblum

On Friday, I'll be talking about endings...

mary rosenblum

which come from beginnings...or should...which is why a lot of folk have trouble with 'em. :-)

mary rosenblum

I'll post the transcripts in Writing Craft: Forum Transcripts.

 

Return to Forum Transcripts