Hatrack River Writers Workshop   
my profile login | search | faq | forum home

  next oldest topic   next newest topic
» Hatrack River Writers Workshop » Forums » Open Discussions About Writing » Beginnings

   
Author Topic: Beginnings
C@R3Y
Member
Member # 9669

 - posted      Profile for C@R3Y   Email C@R3Y         Edit/Delete Post 
I know we touched up on the topic, "Endings" in an earlier thread, so what do some of you do for beginnings?

I personally don't have a problem with beginnings, at least not when beginning a story for a rough draft... But I'm looking to explore different avenues, to see what others are doing, are up to when they begin a story.

How do YOU start a story? How do you know when you have a good beginning? On that note, what actually MAKES a good beginning? I like to hear what others have to say on that, because it helps me, as well, become a better writer. =]

Posts: 193 | Registered: Oct 2011  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
babooher
Member
Member # 8617

 - posted      Profile for babooher   Email babooher         Edit/Delete Post 
I would like to first say that I'm not being prescriptive.

Normally, if a story is bubbling around and my gray matter, I won't start until I have at least a decent working title and a good first line. I know some people hate hooks, but I like to start with something good. I also need a good protagonist's name and then I check (for my fantasy or sci-fi stuff) to see if any terms I might be using that I think are unique have anything already done. So, for a story I'm getting ready to right now, I looked up the term crayken to see if I could quickly find it.

As to what makes a good beginning, I think if a suggestion or promise can be made fast enough, then it is a good beginning. If the promise is there, then I think the rules can generally be ignored. For example, ever seen the opening of Predators (the last Predator movie)? It is a waking up scene...and completely awesome and full of the promise of mystery and action. Presenting the promise (not necessarily the same as the main conflict) in a timely manner (which can vary by work, author, and reader) is what (to me) makes a good beginning.

[ March 21, 2012, 12:20 PM: Message edited by: babooher ]

Posts: 823 | Registered: May 2009  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
MartinV
Member
Member # 5512

 - posted      Profile for MartinV   Email MartinV         Edit/Delete Post 
Beginnings are not as easy for me as endings. Usually I have many of them while I have a single ending ready. So I will try several of them, see what works for me, then listen to those that read my story and see what they think. They might persuade me to change or not.
Posts: 1271 | Registered: May 2007  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
extrinsic
Member
Member # 8019

 - posted      Profile for extrinsic   Email extrinsic         Edit/Delete Post 
A beginning of a drama starts with introducing, by whatever artful deployment, a main dramatic complication: a high magnitude want and opposition impeding achievement of that want. There is a First Cause that reveals an unbefore realized want that interrupts a routine. Is it a bear at the door? Meaning immediate danger at the door: a bug-eyed monster invasion. Is it a realization the love interst is slipping away? Is it discovering a dead body?

And thus leading to an ending where the main dramatic complication's outcome is unequivocally, irrevocably finalized: success or failure, personal growth or decline, salvation or condemnation.

Posts: 6037 | Registered: Jun 2008  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
enigmaticuser
Member
Member # 9398

 - posted      Profile for enigmaticuser   Email enigmaticuser         Edit/Delete Post 
For me I start a story where it seems to begin, and then later in critiques get told again and again that I started in the wrong place =)

Beginnings are hard because people have different expectations. I really don't mind a slow buildup as long as there is a cloud on the horizon of some awesome storm.

Posts: 336 | Registered: Jan 2011  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
LDWriter2
Member
Member # 9148

 - posted      Profile for LDWriter2   Email LDWriter2         Edit/Delete Post 
Again it depends on the story. Sometimes I start in the middle of the action, sometimes I introduce the MC first. In one story I just started the MC stares across a large bar at the man who killed his wife.

In another a man stares at rainbows and wonders how he got to this strange land six days previously. Soon he meets the person who is responsible for him being there.

In two others the MC is in the middle of a space battle.

In another the MC sees something that leads him to think about the end of the world coming in half a day,

In yet another the MC is sitting on a curb dripping cow's blood.

I'm not sure if I like any type of opening above any other even though I do use action a lot. Sometimes I have to think and think or work at that first couple of lines but other times I know them before I start writing.

Posts: 5289 | Registered: Jun 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
MartinV
Member
Member # 5512

 - posted      Profile for MartinV   Email MartinV         Edit/Delete Post 
I'm used of reading old novels (plenty of them at hand), which means I'm used of slow openings (though LOTR's beginning is too slow even for me). Whenever I try reading something new, chances are it will be far too action-packed.

I believe that a story opening should be about connecting the reader with the main character and do it as quickly as possible since that emotional bond is the main reason the reader will keep reading. This doesn't mean blood&gore action but it definitely means an activity which reveals the protagonist's character.

Posts: 1271 | Registered: May 2007  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Robert Nowall
Member
Member # 2764

 - posted      Profile for Robert Nowall   Email Robert Nowall         Edit/Delete Post 
Usually I have something in mind, but when I write (or outline) the story, I find I have multiple points at which I can start.

John Campbell once told Isaac Asimov to start his stories as late in the story as possible---something that seemed so good I've tried to keep it in mind when I write. I once carved off eight-some chapters, probably about thirty thousand words, of a novel I was working on, 'cause I found a better place to start.

(Not that the novel was any good, really...come to think of it, I've still got it on disk somewhere...maybe I should put it on my website with my other busted stuff...)

Posts: 8809 | Registered: Aug 2005  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
LDWriter2
Member
Member # 9148

 - posted      Profile for LDWriter2   Email LDWriter2         Edit/Delete Post 
Speaking of beginnings. I said I usually do certain types but the one I am trying to d now is not coming.

I usually picture the opening scene in my head as I think of the story. Then I try to write what I saw. This time I'm having all kinds of problems. I may have finally solved it today but I just can't figure out how to say what I saw. I wrote and deleted maybe eight to ten openings. Except for the first sentence. I'm keeping that.

Posts: 5289 | Registered: Jun 2010  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
   

   Close Topic   Feature Topic   Move Topic   Delete Topic next oldest topic   next newest topic
 - Printer-friendly view of this topic
Hop To:


Contact Us | Hatrack River Home Page

Copyright © 2008 Hatrack River Enterprises Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.


Powered by Infopop Corporation
UBB.classic™ 6.7.2