by Earl Staggs
I’m working on the opening chapter of a sequel to my novel
MEMORY OF A MURDER. When I began, I
thought it would be easy. After all, I
knew the main character, Adam Kingston, quite well. He first saw life in a short story and everyone
who read that story liked him so much I decided to put him in a novel. When you consider the initial writing plus the
rewriting, getting MEMORY OF A MURDER into publishable shape consumed about three years of my life. Yes, Adam and I spent a lot of time together and since
I already had the plot of the sequel worked out in my mind, the opening chapter
would be a breeze.
Then I began thinking about all I wanted to do in the first
chapter.
I have to introduce Adam, of course, so readers can visualize
him as soon as possible. How old he is, whether he’s tall, short, thin, fat,
that sort of thing.
Then, I need to explain that Adam is a private investigator
with a unique twist. He has a psychic
gift. When he visits a crime scene or
touches an object related to a crime, short, swift images flash in his mind.
Sometimes these images contain clues which help him solve a case. Sometimes they only leave him confused because
he has no idea what they mean. That’s
how it is with real-life psychics. It’s not an exact science.
And, no, he does not see or talk to dead people. A medium does that, not a psychic.
Anyway, in the first chapter, I wanted to explain Adam’s
gift and how it works without doing it as an info dump.
Next, some characters from the first book will appear in the
first chapter of the sequel. I want to
introduce them and describe them and tell readers about their relationship with
Adam. Naturally, I don’t want to do that in one big boring narrative clump. I also don’t want to repeat it exactly as I did it in the
first book. People who read the first
book might remember and think I’m cheating.
Brenda McCort is a recurring character, for example. She’s a homicide detective Adam met in the
first book. They’ve been dating for
about a year now. There’s a subplot
about their relationship I want to introduce in the first chapter.
There’s also setting.
Adam lives in Ocean City,
a family resort town on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. His place is on the sixth floor, overlooking
the Boardwalk, the beach and the Atlantic Ocean. That’s where Adam happens to be when the
story begins, so I need to describe all that in the first chapter.
Naturally, I need to include something about the main plot
of the story. Not much, of course, but
enough to let the reader know Adam is going to get involved in something interesting very soon. If I do it right, readers will want to continue
reading. Yes, we call that a “hook.”
I think that covers all the important points I want to put in the first chapter. I want to write all
that in such a way that readers will be intrigued and drawn into the story and
not even realize I’ve pumped so much into it.
I don’t want readers to suspect I’ve stuffed an elephant in a sock.
Easy peazy piece of cake, right? Maybe if I fold the trunk and pin the ears
back. . .
Someone is leaving a trail of bodies from Baltimore to Ocean City, and only Adan Kingston can stop him.
"A
stunning book, beautifully plotted, and its characters jump off the page with
life. There’ no putting this book down."
"The story is
smart, laden with suspenseful twists, and capably laid out. . .an extremely
credible novel."
MEMORY OF A MURDER available online at Amazon and B&N
Read Chapter 1 at http://earlwstaggs.wordpress.com
9 comments:
It isn't easy, but when you write a series, you go through that same process with every new book.
I agree with Marilyn - it has to be done with every book, it has to be done differently in every book and it has to be done so the reader doesn't feel he is being force-fed information. No easy task. That's one reason I don't write series!
Great post, Earl, as always.
Susan, aka Janis
Susan is right. With a series, you don't want to be repetitive and yet readers forget or you get new readers as well. So you do need to find ways to get the info from past books into the new one. And you're right, it isn't easy!
With your talent, I'm sure you're up to the challenge,Earl!
Morgan Mandel
I'm not sure you have to do all that in the very first chapter, Earl. Maybe decide what's most important.
I'm going through that now, Earl, with the third book in my series. I had no idea how difficult it would be to dole out important backstory to new readers without boring returning fans. And throw in a dead body to boot! When you figure it out, let me know!
The old info dump -v- readers' need-to-know, huh?
Thanks, everyone, for your thoughts
I knew when I started it would not be easy but sometimes venting (whining?) makes a tough task a little easier. I appreciate even more now what writers like Sue Grafton, Janet Evanovich, Marilyn Meredith and others are faced with in their long running series.
It's definitely a challenge and I'm anxious to see how it comes out.
you don't want to give them so much of the backstory they don't think they need to read it to catch up either.
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