- Joined
- Aug 18, 2010
- Messages
- 211
- Reaction score
- 23
Another of the endless questions I have regarding my tastes vs. other people's.
We are always hearing advice about how you should start your first chapter with an action scene in order to grab your audience. Personally, I dislike reading a novel which opens with an action sequence. It makes me feel like I have wandered in on the middle of a fight between two people I've never heard of. I feel lost. I don't know why the ruckus started and I don't know these individuals, so why should I care about them and their problems? I am most likely to put the book down and move on.
I feel the same way about walking into a movie I haven't seen before long after it has started. I spend much of my time being annoyed that I don't know what is going on or being distracted by trying to figure it out.
I like a little bit of background of some sort to give me a sense of who the main players are and reasons why I should give a damn about what happens to them. A smidgen of set up or foreshadowing is enough carry me forward in the story until I learn more about the people in it. Then, if the characters are engaging enough, I can wait for a while for the payoff to the set up and foreshadowing.
The movie industry seems to understand this to some degree. That's why most movies (unless they are sequels) usually start out with some background material and an attempt at character development before exposing the conflict. Why have we, as readers, become so impatient to let things develop and unfold? Explosions and gunfights are fun, but who cares when you aren't rooting for someone just because an author hasn't yet given you a reason to be invested in their characters?
Anyone else feel the same way?
We are always hearing advice about how you should start your first chapter with an action scene in order to grab your audience. Personally, I dislike reading a novel which opens with an action sequence. It makes me feel like I have wandered in on the middle of a fight between two people I've never heard of. I feel lost. I don't know why the ruckus started and I don't know these individuals, so why should I care about them and their problems? I am most likely to put the book down and move on.
I feel the same way about walking into a movie I haven't seen before long after it has started. I spend much of my time being annoyed that I don't know what is going on or being distracted by trying to figure it out.
I like a little bit of background of some sort to give me a sense of who the main players are and reasons why I should give a damn about what happens to them. A smidgen of set up or foreshadowing is enough carry me forward in the story until I learn more about the people in it. Then, if the characters are engaging enough, I can wait for a while for the payoff to the set up and foreshadowing.
The movie industry seems to understand this to some degree. That's why most movies (unless they are sequels) usually start out with some background material and an attempt at character development before exposing the conflict. Why have we, as readers, become so impatient to let things develop and unfold? Explosions and gunfights are fun, but who cares when you aren't rooting for someone just because an author hasn't yet given you a reason to be invested in their characters?
Anyone else feel the same way?