by Julie
So Many Fish in the Sea—
A little experiment with hooks and
lines
In my last blog entry, I wrote about being married to
writing. Today I’m all about dating. It seems I am past-due for a round of speed-dating.
I just have to line up some “potentials” and spend a few
minutes with each in hopes that love connections can be made without the hassle
of hours wasted with some guy who stares
at his reflection in the window behind me through dinner or who plants a surprise! kiss on me at the
end of a long night with a mouth full of Oreo shake. I mean, I can just imagine the horror of such things.
So I lined up some potential suitors and spent a little time
with each, wanting to see what makes me long for more…pages.
Design © Kazmierz Szmauz: Bookman |
What did I learn from my dates?
I flirted with 16 books, no two alike--at all. And I liked them
ALL. Seriously, I tried applying numbers
that read like gymnastics scores, but I seem to be a nine giver. A character
that endears, questions I MUST have answered, and those
inexplicable moments of “Ooh, that’s nice” were all keys to a bit of literary
love at first sight.
As I read Gary D. Schmidt’s Okay For Now, I hit the line “It was the most terrifying picture I
had ever seen. The most beautiful,” and I
knew I’d have to find out if the main character’s ability to see beauty in a
brutal world would be enough to save him. And Sarah Ockler’s Twenty Boy Summer had me with its little
one paragraph first chapter that conveyed in a voicey way that the main
character had survived, changed and sad, while others hadn’t. Okay, I cheated and read
the next chapter and was rewarded with a first kiss (a good one) and a
heartbreak (a bad one).
Cindy Pon’s Silver Phoenix sucked me in with forbidden love, a wrenching goodbye
between a mother and newborn, life and death in the balance. I don’t think I
breathed. In contrast, Jerry Spinelli’s Stargirl
wasn’t wrought with life or death
questions, but I was just as drawn in by the promise of a main character with a
thing for porcupine ties and the image of a new girl playing the ukulele in the
middle of a school cafeteria—“Stone cold silence all around. Then came the
sound of a single person clapping. I looked. It was the lunch-line cashier.” It was such a real and familiar world, and I must know more about this girl. Frank Cottrell Boyce’s Cosmic isn’t my world at all, but when the main character explains
how in primary school he was told, “You should know better, big lad like you,”
he reacts “Why, by the way? Why should a big lad know better just because
he’s big? King Kong’s a big lad. Would he
know the way to the bathroom the first day at school? When no one had told him?
No, I don’t think he would.” Right there on page five, I "got" and cared about the character
and whether he'd get out of his wild predicament.
Gorgeous language and wit, like that in Richard Peck’s A Long Way from Chicago entranced me
straight away in a kind of light-hearted way, and Jandy Nelson did so in a more heavy-hearted way when in The Sky is Everywhere her narrator describes
grief: “It’s as if someone vacuumed up the horizon while we were looking the
other way." Yeah. I'm in.
I'd have thought I'd be kind of over speed-dating by the time I got to the last book in the line-up, but Libba Bray had me chucking and gasping through the aftermath of a
plane crash. Let me
make you dinner at my place, Beauty Queens. Make room for DuPrau’s The City of Ember
because I’ve got to know what’s in the box and for Westerfeld’s Uglies, because with a first line like “The
early summer sky was the color of cat vomit,” I'm intrigued.
Sure, I gave some books sevens and eights, or “LIKE
at first sight” scores. But I saw enough potential that I suspect I’ll be a goner
in another chapter or two. Granted, my sample is biased because I am, after all,
the one who purchased these books, even if they sat waiting for attention a
bit. Still—it was a treat to find so much to love. If only real dating had been so rewarding.
I’d hoped to come out with definitive insight into what
about a chapter makes me weak in the knees, but I came out with the realization
that there are very different ways to make me care enough to sign on for a long-term book
relationship. It's surprising the variety of characters and situations I became
absorbed in—no “my one and only” in sight.
Somehow that realization is comforting to me as a writer. If I can make a
character come alive or create a
compelling question or offer moments
of surprise or delight, my chapter might just get to second base with a reader.
Well, I’ve got some second dates with some books I can’t wait to
get serious with now, but would sure love to hear what first chapters have really
spoken to you as a reader. What was it that hooked you?
BTW, Libba Bray had me chuckling, not chucking. :) Must be all the fishing metaphors.
ReplyDeleteYou just never know with Libba Bray. ;)
ReplyDeleteThe last book I read was Laugh With The Moon, and it did a great job of hooking me in the first chapter. I think it was a combination of the setting (Africa) and the girl not speaking to her father (tension) that did it. It's a lovely book. And this is a lovely post! Hugs Juliebear!
That's a great point about setting, Amy! I'm adding Laugh with the Moon to my TBR pile. :).
DeleteThis is so much fun, Julie! You've inspired me to tackle the pile of "suitors" languishing by the side of my bed...Wow. That sounded way better in my head.
ReplyDeleteSounds good to me! :) Thanks, KCH! It's hard to get to books when so many great things just show up in my Dropbox!
DeleteI love learning from first sentences. Thanks for this post.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Linda! I wish I'd made it more analytical, but it was fun. :). Hope to see you soon!
DeleteThis is great, Julie. I smiled all the way through while reading, comparing books to dates. Very clever! I'm reading Ellen Hopkin's Collateral right now. I've never read a book in verse like this one, and I find it very powerful. I take it to bed with me every night! Wonderful post, Julie :)
ReplyDeleteOoh, nice! :) I need to read that! And some more Ellen J chapters!
ReplyDelete