In January I decided to blog about every book I finished. This commitment made me aware of how many books I begin but never finish. I really wasn’t aware of it.
Many things entice readers to want to read a book. A friend might talk incessantly about a story, or a book cover might catch our attention, or the blurb on a back cover might create an interest.
But when a reader delves into chapter one, something has to happen so the reader continues to read, and that is what this post is about.
First of all, the first chapter needs to deliver on promises a ”blurb” might have made. I don’t care what happens in chapter two, the writer MUST deliver on promises they make in the blurb. If the writer promised a mystery, don’t start off with a romance. If the writer promised a romance, don’t begin the story with a dead body.
Secondly, only write what is necessary to move the story along. If a murder takes place, make sure it is not “blood for blood’s sake” but blood that is necessary in the plot. If the main character’s grandparents are relevant to the plot then, by all mean, mention them. But there is no reason to tell us everything about a character’s past. That is snoozeville. Readers only want details that are relevant.
Thirdly, it’s the characters we invest time in and learn to love (or hate). But we don’t need to know everything about their past, and every time they change clothes we don’t need to hear every detail about their clothing, and we don’t need to know what they ate for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
There are many characters in novels but the writer only needs to name or describe the important ones. The doorman might be named Henry Smithers and he might be obese with warts on the end of his nose but, if the only thing he does is open the door in one scene, then just call him the doorman. Don’t give him a name and make him so colorful that he distracts from the story or main characters.
When I begin reading a novel I want to lose myself in the story. But, time is precious, and I’m not going to spend time reading something that doesn’t deliver and, I’m definitely not going to write a review about something I didn’t read.
This is why my reviews are usually positive. If I read the book, it’s because I liked it.
If I don’t read a book, it’s because I didn’t like it. And those are the reviews I don’t write.


