First Lines

One of the hardest and most fun things a writer has to do is decide what the first line will be in the book they’re writing. Sometimes that line appears fast, out of “nowhere.” Sometimes a line pops up and dies right in front of the writer and needs to be buried immediately before it starts to stink up the page.

I think all of the below are good first lines. They drew me in, in a way appropriate to what turned out to be coming in the rest of the book. I enjoyed all these books, too.

It was terribly hot that summer Mr. Robertson left town, and for a long while the river seemed dead. (Amy and Isabelle by Elizabeth Strout)

Already by her twentieth birthday, my grandmother was an excellent midwife, in great demand. (Charms for the Easy Life by Kaye Gibbons)

Even before he got up he knew he was on his way. (Postcards by Annie Proulx)

Only three people were left under the red and white awning of the grease joint: Grady, me, and the fry cook. (Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen)

Anyone in the neighborhood could tell you how Michael and Pauline first met. (The Amateur Marriage by Anne Tyler)

All he could see, in every direction, was water. (Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand)

The first line in my family legacy/memoir, The Cleveland Rutters, came fairly quickly to me. I wrote it before I really had a clear idea how the stories would unfold, but it lived through all sorts of attacks and stood firm:

Except on the mantel, according to Dad, everything in Nana and Bubba’s home was chipped.

Take a look at some of your own favorite books and check the first lines in them. I’ll bet they foreshadow well. Feel free to share them here. I’d love to read them!

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A Grandmother’s Gift

My grandmother Mazie (Nana, to me) read the Boston Herald newspaper every day, without fail. She bragged on being a good speller and having a talent for writing, which was, in fact, evidenced by a couple of articles she wrote for her high school magazine. She did not, however, read books – I don’t recall ever seeing her read a novel or a booklength work of nonfiction.

The one book I remember her buying, she purchased for its potential increasing value. Too bad what she bought was a second printing, which has meant “no big deal” in the biz, but she never knew this. I love the book—Richard Meryman’s Andrew Wyeth, a stunning collection of prints of his paintings and sketches. So, even though Nana would have been upset to learn her investment didn’t increase in value, now years later, she left me a great treasure.

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It’s Not Like Selling Beer

My head was nodding vigorously in agreement when I first read the following quotation in a Shelf Awareness e-newsletter. It’s an excerpted portion of an interview with author Margaret Atwood. After the quotation, click on the link provided if you want to read the whole interview.

“When people say publishing is a business–actually it’s not quite a business. It’s part gambling and part arts and crafts, with a business component. It’s not like any other business, and that’s why when standard businessmen go into publishing and think, ‘Right, I’m going to clean this up, rationalize it and make it work like a real business,’ two years later you find they’re bald because they’ve torn out all their hair. And then you say to them, ‘It’s not like selling beer. It’s not like selling a case of this and a case of that and doing a campaign that works for all of the beer.’ You’re selling one book–not even one author any more. Those days are gone, when you sold, let’s say, ‘Graham Greene’ almost like a brand. You’re selling one book, and each copy of that book has to be bought by one reader and each reading of that book is by one unique individual. It’s very specific.”–Margaret Atwood in an interview with the Globe & Mail, by Rosalind Porter, first printed March 16, 2011, updated March 17, 2011.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/time-to-lead/no-e-books-without-authors-atwood-reminds-us/article1943785/page1/

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Kicked Out

So, I was having breakfast Tuesday morning with a small group that included a longtime friend – who wishes to be called by her Indian pseudonym – Calm Water. The chatter turned to this blog, which she has enjoyed, and she referred to one of the earlier entries when she said, “I read Sarah’s Key.”

“You did? Did you like it?” I asked.

“I did like it, even though it … [I’m leaving some words out] ending.”

I reacted immediately. “Why did you tell me that? I don’t want to know that.”

Calm Water laughed and said, “I always tell the endings. I’ve been kicked out of book clubs because of it!”

Say what!? I was flabbergasted, but equally entertained by this unusual approach to book discussions. Given the number of positive comments about the book, I’m still going to read it. I’m just glad Calm Water didn’t talk to me before I read Unbroken, which has its own version of a surprise ending.

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Writers Who Are Poets

I’m not a poet, but sometimes I wish I were. Poets have written some of the bestselling memoirs. Consider Maya Angelou’s I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings and Mary Karr’s The Liars’ Club. I’m sure there are others I’m not thinking of just now. (If you have a personal favorite poet–memoir writer, please Comment.) I enjoyed Angelou’s memoir better than Karr’s, but both “hit a nerve” with millions of readers.

Poets “get” words and the emotions they reflect or incite better than anybody. Below is a fun link that was reposted by Bookstore1Sarasota. (If the link no longer works, you’re looking for an article called “One Word” on the Poetry Society of America’s website, currently in the category Crossroads.) I admit I didn’t follow all the “Read article” links but just enjoyed the lead-in statements about the poets’ favorite words. Essays are from the anthology One Word, edited by Molly McQuade. https://www.poetrysociety.org/psa/poetry/crossroads/one_word/

Shelf Awareness newsletter yesterday pointed to this neat show of respect by one writer (Twain) for one poet (Whitman). Said Shelf Awareness: “Best literary birthday letter ever. In 1889, Mark Twain wrote a congratulatory message to Walt Whitman on the occasion of the poet’s 70th birthday. Letters of Note presented this eloquent missive, which was “not just a birthday wish, but a stunning 4-page love letter to human endeavor, as seen during Whitman’s lifetime.” Here’s the link to the letter (sorry, haven’t learned to “embed” yet, so still showing lengthy link info): http://www.lettersofnote.com/2011/04/what-great-births-you-have-witnessed.html

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BookCrossing[dot]com

In my daily look at some of the places in the Blogroll (in right-hand column), I was reminded of the existence of www.BookCrossing.com, now also in the Blogroll. I wish I had remembered about this neat idea, now in Beta version online, when my husband and I were recently downsizing. We donated hundreds of books, and it would have been cool to select a few of those and release them into the BookCrossing sphere.

Here’s the main idea, quoted from their website: “Grab a book of yours that you’re willing to share with others. It can be one you’ve loved, or one you never really want to read again. Got a second copy of the same book for your birthday? BookCross it! Does a favorite aunt [MR’s note: Gee, I wish they’d been a bit less ageist/sexist and said a favorite relative…] keep sending you books that she likes but you don’t? BookCross them! Just Label, Share & Follow!”

Visit the site and you’ll get a good idea quickly. If you have a minute, Comment here if you have used BookCrossing in the past and what happened.

Happy countdown week (to tax returns due)… we’re still rushing!

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Time Management

For a good portion of my career in publishing (and I know this is the same for many of you), I had to operate in a put-the-fires-out style of time management. My job depended on being able to switch gears quickly and to delegate whenever possible in order to keep myself available on an as-needed basis. Frequent meetings with other people were critical for staying up to speed on progress all around.

Now I’ve entered a new career as a writer. In this career, time management means keeping the concerns of other people on a back burner somewhere without them thinking I’ve forgotten all about them. I’m having trouble directing my attention inward instead of outward. It’s more than a shift in gears. It’s a whole new mode of transportation.

Have any of you changed careers and found you had to master “a new mode of transportation”? How long did it take you to move through that shift? Would love to see Comments on this.

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Books Do Their Job

My personal reading preferences include memoirs, suspense fiction, literary fiction, and only a little nonfiction. I read to learn about other people or to be entertained; only rarely do I read for pleasure in order to be “educated.” I have always had enough of the latter in my schooling and in my former career in textbook publishing. Still, now and then, I grab a book that is going to educate me in some way.

A few months ago I read Laura Hillenbrand’s new book, Unbroken. It describes in minute, thoroughly researched detail one man’s (Louis Zamperini’s) horrific experiences during World War II—from fighting off sharks to withstanding torture, both mental and physical, in a Japanese POW camp. I didn’t know how harrowing this reading experience was going to be, or I might not have elected to go through it. All I knew was that I was going to learn about someone else’s life, which intrigues me in and of itself.

I had given the book to my younger brother, Jon, for his birthday in December, not really knowing yet what I was giving him. He had once recommended a memoir to me called A Fortunate Life by A. B. Facey (not Robert Vaughn’s book by same title), an extremely good read about a man’s youth and young manhood in turn-of-the-century Australia. It included the WWI Battle at Gallipoli. I returned the favor by giving Jon Unbroken.

Jon’s report back to me was favorable. So, when I started reading the book, I wasn’t really prepared for the depth of pain it would transmit. Hillenbrand did a good job of letting her readers know that Louis Zamperini wasn’t prepared for the depth of pain he would experience during the war. She created an excellent reading experience, transporting the reader to another place and time. The fact that I kept wishing the book would end even as I continued reading is testimony to Hillenbrand’s talent as a writer. If a biographical account is supposed to give you a feel for someone else’s life experience, her book did its job.

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Celebrating Books from Printer

Some of you have seen this video, but at least as many have not. I created it early March, when my own copies of The Cleveland Rutters arrived at our place. Given my level of excitement, I’m surprised the camera wasn’t shaking more. Forgive, but I’d be remiss not to include it as a blogged item. It also tells you something additional about me in a visual clue at the end.

Click on this link (turn your sound on):
Cleveland Rutters arrive

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Cousin’s Wife’s First Read

In my March 30 entry “Late to Reading,” I neglected to name the book that became my cousin’s wife’s entree to the reading world. It was the historical novel Sarah’s Key by Tatiana de Rosnay. I still need to read it myself, but it seems to be a popular read with book clubs. If you have read it, let me know (Comment) what you thought, okay?

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