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Fiction: Ten story beginnings to avoid 16-09-2002 - by williemeikle [NEW AUTHOR] Welcome this new UKA author   (531 words)
Articles<br>

In the same way that editors don't want to see an ending they've seen before, equally, there are some story beginnings that have been done to death. Here are ten you shouldn't use.




"It was a dark and stormy night."


The "weather report" gambit. Not only is it a lazy way to start a story, but this one was voted "Worst story opening of all time."



"I hadn't seen her in the bar before. She was pale, but interesting."

The "Vampire pick-up gambit" Or maybe they're a werewolf, or alien, or serial killer. Or maybe the narrator isn't what he or she seems. Either way, the story turns out the same, and the editor will have given up long before he got to the end.



"The man with the piercing eyes and pointed beard asked 'What you would give to have your heart's desire?"

The old "Pact with the Devil" gambit. Only try this if you really have sold your soul for fame and fortune - all other permutations have been played out years ago.



"I thought he was supposed to be in Vegas, so I was surprised to see ........."

Almost as old as pact with the Devil stories is the "I talked to a ghost" gambit. Cavemen probably told this story to each other around their campfires. And you think an editor hasn't heard it?



"I woke up in the dark, and all I could feel above me was velvet, and beneath that, wood."

The "buried alive" gambit. Those cavemen probably knew this one as well. A variation is the "Sixth Sense" gambit where the narrator is already dead. Do you think the editor didn't see the film?



"They gave me a really good going over, and I vowed there and then to have my revenge."

The "Clint Eastwood" gambit. Generally a sign that you're going to be explicitly violent. Even if the editor wants that kind of stuff, they'll want a better plot than this.



"I've always felt strange around the time of the full moon."

The "werewolf" gambit. Even Michael Jackson knows about the effects of the moon on certain people, and you know how cut off he is from reality?



"I got a strange feeling when I saw the sarcophagus arrive in the storeroom."

The "mummy" gambit. Even more old-hat since the recent blockbuster movies. Shambling piles of bandages just don't hack it in the 21st Century.



"The red-haired FBI agent turned to her partner and said...."

Editors watch television too you know. The only place to send these, and those concerning teenage vampire slayers, is to fan-fiction web sites. Even there you have to have an original plotline. Rehashes of episodes just won't make it.



"What would you do if I gave you three wishes?"

The "Leprechaun" gambit. And guess what - the protagonist gets screwed on the third wish. The editor will be asleep before you get to wish number two.



There's only so many good ideas floating around. Remember, if you've seen something like it before, then the editor will have too. Try to make sure your idea is an original one.That way you might get an editor to read past page one.



Then you've only got the middle and the ending to worry about, but that's two completely different articles.


Willie

www.willie.meikle.btinternet.co.uk








Critique/comments welcome
Average Score: 6  /  Votes: 6



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Comment posted by Skytrucker (2002-09-16 10:37:49 ) Send Skytrucker a Private Message

First class article Sir. That has toally effed up about 50% of my ideas!!


Comment posted by williemeikle (2002-09-16 10:48:56 ) Send williemeikle a Private Message

I don't always practice what I preach :)

I've used 4 of the 10 in stories that got published!


Author: [ delete ] this comment


Comment posted by geordietaf (2002-09-16 12:35:10 ) Send geordietaf a Private Message

Good stuff. Do you have piercing eyes and a pointed beard perchance?


Comment posted by harv (2002-09-16 13:10:01 ) Send harv a Private Message

You've given me some great ideas to start my stories - thanks!

(oops, misread the title ;-)

No - seriously good stuff (and owt for nowt).

I have to disagree with one point you make though:

"There's only so many good ideas floating around."

Firstly - I think good ideas are the product of hard work, imagination, freedom and a sense of self, rather than simply "floaters".

Secondly - I would like to think that the number of good ideas is actually infinite. Otherwise we'd run out soon enough.

Perhaps I'm reading too much into your article - though I always like to be positive:-)

Now....onto my story about three wishes...


Comment posted by williemeikle (2002-09-16 14:12:14 ) Send williemeikle a Private Message

Actually......Have a look at http://www.willie.meikle.btinternet.co.uk/me.gif (I've covered the eyes up to avoid any unpleasantness )


Author: [ delete ] this comment


Comment posted by Sooz (2002-09-16 16:11:21 ) Send Sooz a Private Message

Damn and blast and sod it! Guilty on most counts. I'm not sure I agree with you though Willie, yes we should always *try* to write something new, but hasn't it all been done before? Maybe all we can do is make our 'dark and stormy night' better than the last one we read. You missed one .. 'The sunlight shone through the crack in the curtains' Mind you I do have one opening line that I'm *pretty* sure has never been used before. "God n Chips, flurry n fleas, cuckoo." I really enjoyed the article though. Nice to see you back.


Comment posted by sirat (2002-11-02 23:15:59 ) Send sirat a Private Message

You cheated a bit by conflating what are popular plot themes with popular story openings. I have done a "pact with the Devil" story (on this site) and a "dead narrator" story and a revenge story. But I did not begin the stories with such obvious pointers to what was to come. My sci fi novel "SIRAT" has also been criticized on the grounds that one should not write another "intelligent computer" story. But you can't really rule out vast areas of human experience or even of human speculation and say "no more computer stories" or "no more space travel stories" or "no more murder mysteries" or "no more love triangle stories". Originality of theme is only one aspect of a story and not in my opinion a very important one. If somebody is able to take an old theme and write a great story about it that's fine with me, and, I think, with most editors too.


Comment posted by sirat (2002-11-03 08:49:10 ) Send sirat a Private Message

Jusat had a look. I wouldn't turn my back on that man to pee against a wall.


Comment posted by JeffDray (2002-12-02 07:45:16 ) Send JeffDray a Private Message

This begins to look like a challenge, I feel a sequence of ten short stories coming on, now let me see, --

It was a dark and stormy night when I first caught sight of her in the mirror over the bar... She said I'm a vampire and I can grant you three wishes..


that's four down - six to go. ;o)


Comment posted by sirat (2002-12-02 12:09:05 ) Send sirat a Private Message

Shame on you Jeff. You should know that vampires don't have reflections in mirrors.


Comment posted by JeffDray (2002-12-08 03:05:35 ) Send JeffDray a Private Message

Either:
a) In fiction you can distort myths to suit your Purpose.
or
b)
Damn you spotted this weeks' deliberate mistake


Comment posted by jamraven (2003-04-27 06:39:11 ) Send jamraven a Private Message

Why do so many stories start with: "the sun was shining" is this the perfect opening?

Maybe it just the books I have read.


Comment posted by flash (2003-04-27 07:18:45 fiexxy@bigfoot.com) Send flash a Private Message

I'm about to try a Devil's pact type story, i'll avoid the beginning mentioned here.


Comment posted by jay12 (2004-04-19 04:53:02 j_k_hazlehurst@hotmail.com) Send jay12 a Private Message

Ive just stumbled across this article after a random search of UKA. Its a very interesting read and something I had never considered before. Of course I have looked at trying original endings but Ive never thought about avoiding cliche beginnings.

James.


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