Monday, July 5, 2010

Starting A Novel

Today, I read a post on one of the forums I frequent (I will not reveal the forum out of slight embarrassment) asking how to begin a fantasy novel. I thought about it for all of two seconds before coming up with a few good, solid pieces of advice for beginning a novel, and I thought they were worth typing up and sharing. Here we go.

Rae's Advice For Starting A Fantasy Novel:

1. You don't have to start writing at the beginning

Although I started The Second Sister and The Witch's Daughter at the beginning, all of my other novels began somewhere in the middle. I wrote the scene that had captured my imagination and filled in the rest later. It is much easier to write that way. This is good advice for the entire novel-writing process. Do NOT force yourself to go through from beginning to end, or you'll get stuck. Write the fun bits and do a little filling in every day.


2. Start scenes late and end them early

For any scene, but especially for beginning scenes, it is helpful to introduce the reader to what is happening after the action has already started and leave before the conflict is resolved. This will help build suspense and cut out some of the boring bits that don't do much besides pad your word count.


3. The three (and a half) ways to start a novel, a chapter, or a scene

a) Dialogue
Beginning a scene with dialogue puts you right in the action and introduces characters, their thoughts, and their speech patterns immediately. I highly recommend it.

b) An action
Beginning with an action is similar to starting with dialogue. It introduces a character and their thoughts (at least some of them) immediately, without any fluff. The reader will want to know what happens next.

c) Description of a character/landscape/ect
This is the hardest but the most common way to begin a novel. You need to be very careful when you begin a story with a description instead of an action (verbal or physical). Describing the landscape or location should only take a few sentences AT MOST, and after a few punchy, vivid descriptive adjectives or adverbs, you want to move right to the dialogue or action. You can take a little longer with characters, especially if they are doing something while you describe them, but you still want to get to the interesting stuff fast.


4. There is plenty of time for backstory

If your fantasy world (or sci fi world, or modern day world...) has lots of backstory, don't worry. There will be PLENTY of time for you to add that in later. Feed the reader little pieces until they get a clear picture, don't shove it all into the first chapter and definitely don't add a prologue. As I've mentioned before, just because some great Sci-fi writers do it doesn't mean it's a good idea... trust me.


5. Don't copy the greats (because some of them are boooh-riiiing)

Just because someone writes a great fantasy novel doesn't mean that they wrote a great beginning as well. Tolkein comes to mind. I despite Tolkein's writing, but his world and characters and conflict are just SO damn good that no one cares about his clunky word choices. Write a beginning that interests you, don't go imitating great novels that might not have the best start, no matter how amazing the rest of the novel might be. If you have to imitate someone, you're better off with the novel with a bang at the beginning and no substance later on. You can go back to copying and idolizing the masters once you've gotten past the first chapter.

5 comments:

Lauren said...

I'm also not a fan of Tolkien. Clunky is an excellent word to describe him. I'm going to keep these tips in mind. You weren't reading my blog were you?

Amanda said...

So true. Excellent tips, by the way. Unfortunately I've already begun my novel (wait, what's the 'unfortunately' doing in there?). I had just finished revising my first chapter when I stumbled upon this post. Originally my novel started with four lines of description/thoughts; now it jumps straight into dialogue. And it's pretty funny dialogue, too.

I think copying Tolkien is pretty much suicide. He's one of those people whose writing I find too slow, or just not to my taste -- and there aren't many of those, to tell the truth. Personally Tolkien isn't my thing, and Tolkien-esque epics I would find very, very hard to pull off.

I especially like tip #4. When I was a kid (back when I was 8, I mean -- I guess for some people I still count as a kid), backstory was what killed the first fantasy story I ever wrote.

And just plain crappy writing, but whatever.

Brenda Agaro said...

Thank you so much for writing this! Seriously, you've just saved my life! I was arguing with my myself earlier today (actually...it was more like a conversation - in my head - with a character. Yeah, I'm weird. XD ) about how to begin the first of a series. When I read the first tip, I decided to just let it rip, since I have discarded the prologue idea, and write the scene that's more vivid for me.

I strongly agree with number four. One thing that is a turn off for most readers of the fantasy genre is having the first chapter be an infodump/backstory dump. Weaving the info through dialogue, necessary details, etc. is a way to avoid it.

So, yeah, thank you for this! :D

Knightmare said...

I've often been conflicted about how to start novels. I've often been told to write them straight through. The problem is there's always 'that' scene in my head that the story damn near revolves around.

I always want to skip ahead to write it, and get worried that there will be gasps in logic and stuff if I do skip ahead. Since I'm currently editing a novel, I think it's okay to skip around and work on the parts I actually want to rather than going straight through.

Your blog is really helpful, thanks for writing it.

Anonymous said...

I've been really struggling trying to get an opening: everything else is sorted. I would like to know if this is an OK starting:

'The Darkness came out to play as the sun finally vanished, fading like a dying fire. Shady evergreens clustered along the cobbled path. Kiremez led his companions through the dark. Any human would be fumbling like a blind beggar, but to him, the faint moonlight sifting through the trees was like sunshine.

This is my first novel and the only reason I have actually started it was due to this blog. Thank You!! LOL :P

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