IN MY BEGINNING IS MY END_ WEP The End Is The Beginning entry


 https://writeeditpublishnow.blogspot.com.au/2017/12/wep-ff-december-challenge-end-is.html



What might have been and what has been, Point to one end, which is always present.
- T S Eliot

  
Stephen King can spend months or even years on his opening line.

Listen to what he told me at Meilori's:

"There are all sorts of theories and ideas about what constitutes a good opening line. 

It's a tricky thing, and tough to talk about because I don't think conceptually while I work on a first draft --

 I just write. To get scientific about it is a little like trying to catch moonbeams in a jar.


But there's one thing I'm sure about:    An opening line should invite the reader to begin the story. 

It should say: 

Listen. Come in here. You want to know about this."


 With really good books, a powerful sense of voice is established in the first line. 


Yet, it is not just whim that has the title of this post on first lines be a quote from T S Elliot's East Coker

I have "In my beginning is my end" start THE RIVAL and end it as well.

All through THE RIVAL that line is a foreshadowing of the ending, 

lending what I hope is depth to the climax and to all the action that leads relentlessly to the death of a major character.


Award-winning mystery author, Craig Johnson, is a master of beginnings mirroring the ending.

"My hero, Walt Longmire, is a sadder-but-wiser sheriff. 

My favorite musketeer was Athos, the heartbroken one.”


 It was building his house in Wyoming that gave him the discipline to finish his first novel, he believes. “I kind of think of it as the blue-collar school of literature,” Mr. Johnson says.   “Never have I met a ditch digger who said,    ‘I’m just not feeling the ditch today, the ditch muse is not with me, I have to put my shovel down now.’ ”  Johnson tells of Longmire’s adventures from the sheriff’s perspective.  In the novel, KINDNESS GOES UNPUNISHEDCraig starts out with Walt reading to a first grade class from the Brother's Grimm tale of Sleeping Beauty   that he read to his daughter when she was the age of his listeners. The off-the-wall questions by the first graders will have you smiling and chuckling out loud at Walt's squirming discomfort.  
He accompanies his Cheyenne best friend, Henry Standing Bear, to Philadelphia,  and then a very personal act of violence pulls him into a string of murders that he will solve or die trying. 
The novel ends with Walt again reading the tale of Sleeping Beauty out loud but now to only one person.   And the ending will tear your heart out.  If your eyes do not fill with tears, you have a heart of stone. 

The ending of your novel should birth your opening line and shape all the chapters which follow.  Only upon reaching the ending should your reader see the symmetry and breathe out low. 
I hope this helps in some small way.

 
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Published on December 19, 2017 22:00
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