Hooks, Lines & Sinkers
BY SUE KENDRICK
Hands up if the title to this article made you
think that you'd strayed into a fishing feature?
Perhaps you didn't quite go that far, but
hopefully you were puzzled or curious enough to wonder what on earth
those three angling associated words have to do with writing. The answer
of course is nothing at all if you are thinking of metal barbs, yards of
tangled nylon and blobs of lead weights.
Think, however, of the good opening lines used to
begin most successful short stories, novels and articles then the "hook"
in our title takes on a whole new range of meanings and equates very
well with the world of creative writing.
What most beginners fail to understand when they
first begin writing, and this applies as much to articles as it does to
short stories and novels, is that when they submit their work to an
editor, competition judge or publisher there is only a brief moment to
impress which is why a lot of attention needs to be paid to that first
opening sentence.
Hooking your reader with a good beginning isn't a
guarantee to success, but it will serve to focus attention and make the
judge, publisher or editor take more notice of the rest of the article,
story etc. If nothing else, it presses an subconscious alert button in
the reader's mind that marks up the writer as a professional who knows
his or her craft.
This in turn builds expectation and again focuses
attention. As long as the rest of the piece lives up to its early
promise, you can be sure that your effort will at the very least receive
close inspection and hopefully much more!
So, just how do you come up with a good hook? It
would be nice if I could say that there was some magic formula available
but unfortunately I haven't found it even if it does exist! Still there
are several things that you can do to get things moving.
First of all don't sit staring at your screen
trying to think of a good opening line when you have a mind boiling with
ideas struggling to spread themselves over the page! All this will do is
make you tense up with frustration and dam your creativity.
Instead, start hitting the keys and slap those
ideas across the screen! Once you have the basic outline down then you
can start the editing process, including the opening sentence. If at
this stage you are still stuck, try leaving the work for a few days,
there's a good chance you'll come up with something when you're mind is
focused on something else and the first flush of enthusiasm has cleared
from your brain.
Analogy, such as I've used to the fishing world,
often provides a good hook. In the case of this article I used it in the
title but hooks are used just as often or more so in the opening
sentence. My actual opening "hook" made use of a question, which again
is a very good way to start, as questions by their very nature demand a
response from the reader, even if it is only to read to the end of the
sentence!
I took this a step further by demanding physical
action, "hands up", which of course is a ridiculous thing to expect a
reader to do when there is no way of knowing whether they have complied
or not! It is this stupidity that hopefully grabs attention and carries
on from where the title left off. PR writers are well aware of this
process and often misspell words to create a similar effect.
Quotations and deliberate misquotations also make
good hooks either from songs, proverbs or other literary works, but also
try putting together unusual combinations of words.
For instance, you wouldn't think that brussels
sprouts could possibly have any effect on good or evil and I'm sure they
haven't! One of my son's however has different ideas and his annual
grumble during our recent Christmas meal gave me a marvelous opening
line, or hook, for what will be a festive article taking a close look at
this, in my opinion, much maligned vegetable!
What was it? Oh yes, when faced with a heap of
those shiny green gems he muttered murderously, "If it wasn't for
brussels sprouts there'd be no evil in the world ..." now is that a hook
or what?
Which brings me on to another point. Hooks, I've
found seem to have a power in their own right and often serve as a
catalyst to the story or article itself which is why you should be on
the alert for when they occur.
The brussels sprout incident is a prime example.
Writing in any shape or form was the furthest thing from my mind, but
the startled looks and laughter from the rest of the family were enough
to confirm what I'd immediately thought, here was a hook begging for
exploitation and with a enough power of its own to begin generating
several lines of thought.
Being aware of hooks and the power they have on
the reader is something every writer has to get to grips with if they
want to achieve success so it is a good idea to train yourself to both
generate hooks and be on the alert for them by listening to what other
people say.
Having a small notebook handy makes a lot of
sense, but reading what other people have done before you will also pay
dividends. Try this quiz of opening lines to famous novels. It's not
easy, but don't worry about your score, the real benefit of the quiz is
seeing what worked for the author.
- The scent of slaughter, some believe, can
linger in a place for years.
- When Mr. Bilbo Baggins of Bag End announced
that he would shortly be celebrating his eleventy-first birthday ...
- In the beginning God created the heavens and
the earth ...
- Scarlett O'Hara was not beautiful, but men
seldom realized it when caught by her charm as the Tarleton twins
were.
- The stranger came early in February one wintry
day, through a biting wind and a driving snow ...
- "The marvelous thing is that it's painless," he
said. "That's how you know when it starts."
- Last night I dreamed of Mandalay ...
- A wide plain, where the broadening Floss
hurries on between its green banks to the sea, and the loving tide
rushing to meet it ...
- Mr. Jones, of the Manor Farm, had locked the
hen-house for the night, but was too drunk to remember to shut the
pop-holes.
- "Tom!"
Well, what did you think? Some were definitely
intriguing but others in my opinion left a lot to be desired which just
goes to show that the proof of the pudding is in the eat... er reading
so don't fall into the trap of thinking that the beginning is the be all
and end all!
Oh and before you ask, I haven't forgotten the
lines and sinkers either, call those plots and twist endings and to find
out more sign up for the WriteLink Short Story Writing Workshop, it's
free!
http://www.writebytes.co.uk
ANSWERS:
- The Loop by Nicholas Evans
- The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien
- The Bible
- Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell
- The Invisible Man by H.G. Wells
- The Snows of Kilimanjaro by Ernest
Hemingway
- Rebecca by Daphne De Maurier
- The Mill on the Floss by George Elliot
- Animal Farm by George Orwell
- The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark
Twain
Sue Kendrick is a freelance writer and
graphic designer living in the English Midlands. She writes regular news
items for her regional newspaper, has had many articles published in
special interest magazines and won prizes in several short story
contests. She is now the editor and publisher of
WriteLink, one of the UK's premier writing websites
and monthly newsletter.
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