The Most Important Sentence: How to Write a Killer Opening
I remember being taught, in English class in school, that a good story should grab the reader’s attention right from the first page. In those first few
hundred words you should introduce characters, create interest and mystery and raise questions in the reader’s mind – questions that they will want to find out the answers to.
But, how much better is it to do these things with the very first sentence? Write your opening sentence like it is a gunshot – blam! - and you’ll have your reader’s attention immediately. Make it powerful enough and as the smoke of the gun clears the reader will read on with the shot still ringing in their ears. They are hooked before they even know it. I’m not saying that something explosive or exciting should happen right in the first sentence, but it should have some sort of effect on a reader. You want their attention, and you want it now.
A good first line should be as good as your favourite film quote. Something that even when taken out of context has power – the power to make someone laugh or think or gasp or grimace. The best opening lines, when read in the bookstore, can make or break the sale of a book arguably even more than its blurb. I may not judge a book by its cover, but I often judge it on the first sentence.
So, how can we write brilliant opening lines? First off, grab a couple of your favourite books from your own shelves and read their first sentences. You may not have really thought about these sentences in isolation like this, but read them carefully and think about what makes them so effective. You will probably find that the best ones…
- Are short and snappy
- Immediately set the tone of the story
- Quickly raise questions that you want answered
- Hit you right between the eyes, often by being surprising or shocking
Keep it simple.
As you will see, one of the most important things for writing a great opening sentence is to keep it short and simple. This is good advice for all writing; there are many posts on blogs out there advocating the use of short sentences and clear writing, but for the first sentence it is especially important. (One exception to this rule is a personal favourite, the opening sentence to Bret Easton Ellis’s American Psycho, which runs way over 100 words and comprises an entire paragraph!) But, in the main, short and simple is the way to go…
“This is what happened.”
The Mist - Stephen King

It doesn’t get much simpler than this. This, the opening sentence to The Mist, is straight out of the Hemingway school of writing. In just four bold words, King manages to get the reader to ask the ultimate question – “WHAT has happened?” Immediately you just have to know, you must find out. He doesn’t even need to hint at the horrors to come, but you just know something bad has happened. Okay, alright… because we know what Stephen King is like we can probably guess that some horrific stuff is going to happen, but that doesn’t stop this from being a good example of how brave, simple writing can hook a reader right from the very start.
Introduce character.
Another great way that opening sentences can grab the reader is by including a character. Don’t wait to introduce your characters, especially if they are out of the ordinary.
“The Iron Man came to the top of the cliff.”
The Iron Man - Ted Hughes
This is the opening to Hughes’ The Iron Man, the children’s story on which the fantastic film The Iron Giant is based. By introducing a character in the opening sentence (it doesn’t even have to be your main character, they could be dead come page two…) you can really suck the reader into the story, away from their reality. Give your character an interesting name or profession and the reader will be putty in your hands immediately. Something like (and I’m making this one up as I write…) – “The clown looked back at the enormous footprints he had left in the snow.” Now, tell me, who wouldn’t want to read on to find out what a clown, in full costume, is doing walking about in deep snow?! A goofy example, but I hope it illustrates my point.
Be shocking.
“We were somewhere around Barstow on the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold.”
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas - Hunter S. Thompson

Leave it to Hunter to know how to hit the reader right between the eyes. I love this opening sentence (also used as the opening line of the film version – delivered brilliantly by Johnny Depp) as it is a great example of how being shocking can work wonders. Thompson introduces drugs (copious amounts, as we soon find out) at the very beginning of his novel, and you instantly know you’re in for a wild, crazy ride.
Set the Tone.
“Mother died today. Or maybe yesterday, I don’t know.”
The Stranger - Albert Camus
Okay, so this is the first two sentences. The first (again, like that from The Mist, it’s very short) is absolutely brilliant, but I think the second sentence really makes it. We are instantly confronted with the death of this man’s mother, but we are shocked and intrigued by his apparent lack of remorse or grief. The distant, apathetic tone of the entire story (and of its main character and narrator) is set in the reader’s mind within these first few words. In fact, these sentences are probably the quickest and most-thorough character exposition I have ever read in a story.
Finally, for my own favourite opening sentence ever, back to Mr King.
“The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed.”
The Dark Tower: The Gunslinger
So many questions from one simple sentence! Not one but two characters are introduced within the first twelve words of the story, and we are even given an idea of the relationship between them – the very deliberate use of the word “fled” shows that the second man here is being chased. The air of mystery and intrigue generated from these words is amazing, something to do with the isolated setting and the fact that neither of these characters are given proper names.
As we can see from these examples, the opening sentence of your writing is very important and is something to be given some serious thought and work. Getting it right is arguably more important even than your title. So be shocking, be bold, be brave, be clear. Write a killer opening sentence and your reader will have no other option but to keep reading. There should be blood in that first line, and some sweat and tears too. Or at least the smell of them. The reader will have no choice but to follow the scent.
Please share your favourite opening sentences (and why you like them!) in the comments section below.
Christopher Jackson, self-confessed Grammar Nazi and notebook snob, has been writing short stories since getting his Master’s Degree in Creative Writing. He can be found on Twitter, his blog, and on his new writing challenge page. He’ll be your friend as long as you know the difference between there, their and they’re.



One of my favouite books has this at the start of the prologue: ‘ ‘So that’s settled then, we bury her alive in the iron bridle.That’ll keep her tongue still.’ ‘
Company of Liars by Karen Maitland. Fantastic!
I have always thought the first sentence in The Dark Tower was the best, it’s really refreshing seeing someone else who agrees. There seems to be a lot of buzz about opening sentences and titles lately (but that may just happen to be what I’ve been reading a lot about). The first sentence should give a quick sketch of a few lines in the readers’ mind, not try to paint a whole picture. The first line of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings is an example of what I consider to be ‘information cramming’:
“When Mr Bilbo Baggins of Bag End announced that he would shortly be celebrating his eleventy-first birthday with a party of special magni- ficence, there was much talk and excitement in Hobbiton.”
It could be trimmed down without losing any information, and it really doesn’t leave me with many questions (other than “What’s eleventy-fir… oh. Now I see.”) that need to be answered. Stay concise!
Awesome to see someone else loves that Dark Tower sentence! It really blew me away when I first read it, can’t remember ever feeling like that after reading just one sentence of a novel before.
Great point about the opening to Lord of the Rings. Interesting, then, that the first line of The Hobbit is the complete opposite – short, simple and bold. “In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit.”
Pride and Prejudice, of course!
“It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.”
I know I’ll think of others as soon as I post this … ;)
From Michael Connelly’s The Brass Verdict: “Everybody lies. Cops lie. Lawyers lie. Witnesses lie. Victims lie.”
Marquez is a master of first sentences that hook the reader.
Love in the Time of Chlorea
“It was inevitable: the scent of bitter almonds always reminded him of the fate of unrequited love.”
100 Years of Solitude
“Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendía was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took him to discover ice.”
“This gun is not a gun.” Single & Single – John le Carre. This master storyteller never fails to deliver.
That first sentence is your second chance to hook reader (right after your title). In some applications like the Google RSS Reader, this sentence will be shown along with the title. I spend as much time on the lead as the title.
“Nobody noticed him.”
Faye Kellerman’s, Serpent’s Tooth.
Very much grabbed me and made me want to read more. Thanks for some excellent advice and sharing those great opening lines.
Thanks Cassandra, glad you found my post helpful! These are just some of my favourite opening lines, but I have so many! Every time I pick up a book, even one I’m not going to read, I can’t help but have a peak at the first line :)
Neil Gaiman’s ‘Coraline’. Great opening: ‘Coraline discovered the door a little while after they moved into the house’.
What door? Tell me more Mr. Gaiman!
And I was hooked.
“The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed.”
The Dark Tower: The Gunslinger
What up Chris! Definitely my favorite all time opening line too. It’s awesome to see other Dark Tower fans. We’re Ka Tet !
Dark Tower FTW, seriously :)
I have many favorite first lines, but the one that has stuck with me the longest is “By the time that you read this, I hope to be dead.” Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult. I love her work.
I write short fiction and the first sentence I’ve gotten the most compliments on came from Snow Quiet – “My name is Nova because I was born in the back of one.”
Thanks for this terrific post!
I like that first line of yours Deanna! I can really get a sense of the character, even without the rest of the story. Of course, my thoughts of the character might be wrong, but that I have any sense of them at all from the first line is fantastic, and is one of the points I tried to get across. Glad you liked the post!
Thanks so much Christopher! I was quite surprised by this story myself – it went in a direction I never imagined. You can read it on my fiction blog, The Other Side of Deanna, if you like: http://theothersideofdeanna.wordpress.com/2009/10/16/snow-quiet/
Thanks for taking the time to read and comment on Snow Quiet Christopher!
The Paradise War by Stephen Lawhead happened to be sitting on my desk when I read this excellent post :) and so I picked it up and looked inside. Lo and behold: “It all began with the aurochs.”
Brilliant sentence! Really glad you liked the post Elisabeth, thanks for reading.
Oh my gosh, just remembered this one from Dickens and felt like a Very Erudite Person: “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.”
The first one I thought of but thought it was too obvious.
” I may not judge a book by its cover, but I often judge it on the first sentence.” Great line.
Thanks for the writing tips. I stumbled this post by the way.
“He’ll be your friend as long as you know the difference between there, their and they’re.”
Hahahaha! The best one-line bio I’ve ever read!
p.s. I, too, am sick of seeing these three mixed up and/or used interchangeably. Almost as bad as “definately.”
Clive Barker’s Mr. B Gone- “Burn this book”
Orwell’s 1984 “It was a bright cold day… the clocks were striking thirteen”
From early childhood the totally unforgettable – ‘Where’s papa going with that axe?’
Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White
I only just realised how good this really is when I flicked through Charlotte’s Web a few weeks ago.
Phenomenal opening sentence! Darkness right from the first words.
Thanks for commenting Janet :)