
Writing Excuses Writing Excuses 7.49: Beginnings Revisited
7 snips
Dec 3, 2012 They dig into what elements a beginning must include and how openings can signal genre and tone. They debate prologues and when to skip them. They show techniques for pairing setting with character, avoiding purely dialogue starts, and creating motion or questions that pull readers in.
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Set Tone Immediately
- Establish tone early so readers know what kind of story they're reading.
- Promise the book's emotional and genre direction from the start to avoid misleading agents or readers.
Prologues As Promises
- A prologue can promise elements (like magic) that the main opening delays.
- Overused prologues become a cliché, so use them only when the story truly demands it.
Ground The Setting Fast
- Establish setting early so readers aren't disoriented about where and when the story takes place.
- Use vivid sensory details or character perspective to ground the scene quickly.














