Continuing on with first things first . . .
Yesterday’s first lines weren’t spectacular by any stretch of the imagination. However, in order to judge them I think it’s only fair to keep the genre in mind. If I’m headed into a thriller, a mystery, a suspense, or a legal novel, I expect a little “pop” in the first line. Contemporary romance? Not so much.
Are we really so fickle in our reading that if we open a novel and don’t get jazzed with the first line, we put the book back on the shelf? I understand the objective is to entice the reader as quickly as possible and to make those first words come alive on the initial few pages, but surely authors get more than a surface judgment of the first lines in their novels.
I’m a notoriously patient reader, but I know many people are not. Whether it’s due to their schedules or their impatience, if they aren’t sold on a book by the end of the first chapter, they’re done. That’s a huge challenge for a writer of sagas. Not that sagas are even popular with some readers, but, believe it or not, there’s a large number of readers who prefer long stories to the average 300-350 page novels with short trim sizes we see on most of the shelves today.
So what is it you really want from that novel you just bought? Does it ever have anything to do with getting your money’s worth? How long will you stay with it before abandoning it?
Lord, you’ve made room for the variety of writers in your kingdom. When we write to please you, we write from our hearts with what you’ve put there. Thank you for that. In the Name of Jesus, Amen.
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