Fiction Workshop – First Line, First Paragraph, First Page

Fiction Workshop – First Line, First Paragraph, First Page

How strong is the opening of your story?

Bring the first page of your story, novel, or WIP and find out!

Writing Workshop Details

DATE: Monday, May 25th, 2026 (ZOOM)
TIME: 11:00 AM ET
GENRE: Open genre
FACILITATOR: Christa Wojciechowski
NUMBER OF SEATS: 8 (first come, first serve)
COST:
Free for Members
$22 for non-members
REGISTER
Members register by notifying via email. REGISTER NOW.
Non-members pay and REGISTER HERE.
Become a member.

Where the story began…

Earlier this year, I was at Authorcon VI in Williamsburg and fortunate enough to share a table with one of my dearest friends and most admired writers of all time, Joseph Sale. Near the end of the convention, I decided to make my rounds and pick up a few books from authors unknown to me. As I returned to the table with haul, I showed Joseph my choices.

“I hope they’re good,” I said.

“Easy to tell,” Joseph said. “Did they pass the first line test?”

“What’s that?”

“I can tell if a book is going to be for me by reading the first line.”

I stood there a bit dumbfounded. So simple, and yet, I had not thought to open the books and read a few lines before buying.

So I looked at the first lines of the novels I’d purchased. Luckily, they were pretty good.

But what if they hadn’t been? What if I had spent money on them, opened them up, and immediately wanted to put them down?

And, then I thought … what if someone put my novels through the first line test?

My books happened to be stacked in front of me on display. I picked up each one and read the first lines.

For the most part, I was underwhelmed. They weren’t bad, but would they compel a person to read the whole book from just one sentence?

I wasn’t going to lie to myself—the answer was no. If I were a stranger, and read the first lines from a list books, mine would not be the must-reads out of the bunch.

That being said, I had written those books before I had ever taken a writing class. I didn’t think strategically about the first page. I didn’t understand why agents and publishers only wanted a few pages, or a few chapters. How could they tell if a story was any good without reading the whole thing?

Then in 2023, I had the amazing experience of working for Gamut, a speculative fiction magazine. As part of the editing staff, I learned from the other side of the game how crucial a good opening was.

I had to read 150 short stories per month, every month. If the first line wasn’t great, I would give the first paragraph a chance. If the first paragraph didn’t get me, I might read the whole page. If at the end of page one, the main character is still waking up and eating breakfast, it was a no go.

This is what I learned from my colleagues—if I started reading a story and didn’t feel like continuing, it meant our magazine subscribers wouldn’t either, and that would be the end of the publication.

A good opening doesn’t necessarily have to start off with an explosive scene, but it does have to have a hook. It can be a deftly crafted one-liner, but it also can be an extremely engaging character, a concept I haven’t encountered before, a dilemma that I can relate to. Even a slow burn can build enough tension and suspense to make a story impossible to put down. A seemingly benign beginning with just the right amount of foreshadowing will tip us off that something unsavory is about to go down. 

As an editor, there were times I read through stories with sluggish beginnings because of a hint that it might become something greater. And often, lackluster openers ended up being a great story. But that doesn’t matter if no one finishes it.

Many readers won’t wait to see if a book gets better. Agents and publishers simply can’t afford to invest the time and money. If an author fails to get the story off the ground effectively, it will more than likely have to be rejected.

You don’t have to let this happen to your stories.

The First Line, First Paragraph, First Page Workshop

In the 1st Line, 1st Paragraph, 1st Page Workshop, each student will bring the first page of one story, novel, or work-in-progress to be shared and critiqued by the group. We will analyze the first line, then open up to the first paragraph, and expand into the first page to see where we are hooked as readers and what it is that makes us want to turn the page. We will discuss the context of the whole story to see what might improve the appeal of its beginning.

So look through your stories (can be published or unpublished). Let’s see where the reader takes the bait.

Writing Workshop Details

DATE: Monday, May 25th, 2026

TIME: 11:00 AM ET

GENRE: Open genre

FACILITATOR: Christa Wojciechowski

NUMBER OF SEATS: 8 (first come, first serve)

COST:

REGISTER

Members register by notifying via email. REGISTER NOW.

Non-members pay and REGISTER HERE.

Become a member.

What’s your best opening line?

What’s your best opening line?

All writers want to open their story with a killer first line. What makes a great opening line? It’s not easy to define.

Some say the best first lines must encapsulate the entire theme of the story. Other say it must establish the character, time, place, and even dilemma. Others just drop us right into the action, woo us with lyricism, or make an impact with some shocking truth.

I hadn’t given much thought to my first lines. Then I attended the Virtual Writers Circle Retreat with Mollie McClure. There her guest, Jaqueline Mitchard, talked about crafting a compelling first line. I wondered, how do my first lines stack up?

I made a list of all my opening lines and discovered that only one out of ten made an impact. This was because I didn’t actively craft my opening line.

I was curious if the members of the Writers Mastermind paid close attention to their first lines and challenged them to pick out the best first lines they had ever written. I also asked them to share their favorite first lines of all time.

Here is the result of that experiment. You can see that some hint at theme, others foreshadow, while others start in the middle of a scene. Some opening lines are simply poetic and beautiful, or give us a clue to the plot or character.

Members’ Best Opening Lines


There is no night when you’re staring straight at the sun.

Josh Gardner



He awoke in a cold sweat, pulse racing, senses hyper alert – his body prepared for fight or flight.

Brenda Wilkins



The night had turned out to be the worst night in Artheena’s entire life.

Bia Bella Baker



Laughter soars to the sky.

Clennell Anthony



The coma was supposedly too deep for thought or dreams, but there was no darkness deep enough to submerge him.

Joseph Sale, Gods of the Black Gate



“I’m not me,” Kat told herself. “I’m not afraid of anything or anyone.”

Mollie McClure, Talking to the Moon



It wasn’t the end of the world, but divorce felt like it.

Dan Soule, The Ash



My mothering was a thin wall with nothing to hold it up.

David Powell



Each night, with my desk flush with the floor to ceiling glass of my high-rise apartment, I gaze at the lights beyond Orchard Road, waiting for them to twinkle out a story in some secret optic code, but when I wake up in the morning, breath like jet fuel, eyes gritty against their lids, I look at my Word doc and only see the plaintive blinking cursor.

Christa Wojciechowski


Favorite Opening Lines from Other Authors


Submitted by Dan Soule

“All this happened, more or less.”

Slaughterhouse-five by Kurt Vonnegut



“It is a truth universally acknowledged that a man with a fortune is in want of a wife.”

Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen



“Marley was dead, to begin with.”

Christmas carol by Charles Dickens

“When a day that you happen to know is Wednesday starts off by sounding like Sunday, there’s something seriously wrong somewhere. “

Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham


Submitted by Joseph Sale

“In the eyes of the eternal Buddha, all things could be seen.”

Black Heart by Eric Van Lustbader 


Submitted by David Powell

“The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a dead channel.”

Neuromancer by William Gibson


Submitted by Christa Wojciechowski

“Sometimes, when I’m staring down a room of Japanese stewardesses-in-training, looking across a sea of shiny black coifs, a chorus line of stockinged legs, knees together, toes to the side, when I’m chanting ‘Sir, you are endangering yourself and other passengers!,’ I think I should have let my brother stab me.”

Lost Girls and Love Hotels by Catherine Hanrahan

*****

What is your best opening line?

What is your favorite opening line of all time?

Please reply with your picks!

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