Hi Hira.David,I think you need to give me some additional compelling reasons to read beyond the first 13 (or 15 or so I think in your case) apart from the “voice” of your writing style. There’s bits of nice writing (…cold and sharp, with warmth pressed in to make it human…”) which could do with some sharpening (“So it happened that” is redundant) as well as the potential for character depth.
What’s missing for me in this opening is a sense of something at stake. In a literary short story, the stakes can often be more abstract or conceptual than in the more basic ends of the genre market, but something personally important to the protagonist being at stake is something that will get me to read on. What is important to Jimmy and why do I want to read more about him?
When there’s nothing at stake in a 1st 13, I often suspect that the story hasn’t started at the right place. Here, I know very little about the POV protagonist apart from the fact that he’s very young. I know a bit more about his mother; without context, she appears a bit stupid (purposely giving a young child something small enough to choke on?) and she likes blue.
I found Jimmy’s mother waiting for his first word and giving him a seashell rather implausible. Given you’ve tagged your story literary fiction, there’s no indication that the time of the first word is as predictable as you’ve shown it to be (i.e. Jimmy’s mother patiently waits…she expects it to happen, so that she can give him the shell).
I also struggled to accept that Jimmy would draw such a powerful inference between language and the action of being given a seashell. Without the capacity for complex thought at that age, the idea of Jimmy being able to form a conceptual link between language and the physical sensation of the seashell is unlikely. I could live with Jimmy hearing language and feeling those sensations, but to think of language, in and of itself, as a physical object seems unlikely.
For a piece that has to survive on its distinct voice, the opening lacks a bit of resonance and flair. In this kind of pieces I’d expect very sharp imagery and very clear writing. There’s hints of both, but I think there needs to be more precision to let the voice of your work shine. For example, the sentence starting with “Laying it aside to attend to her son…” is a monster and uses a lot more words than necessary to get the (fairly minor) point across.
Regards,
Nick