Thursday, July 24, 2008

Booking Through Thursday - Beginnings


Suggested by: Nithin

Here’s another idea about memorable first lines from books.

What are your favourite first sentences from books? Is there a book that you liked specially because of its first sentence? Or a book, perhaps that you didn’t like but still remember simply because of the first line?


Although I know that first lines are important, I don't work to remember them. Of course, I remember, "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times." by Charles Dickens, but that doesn't count because I don't know if I remember it from having read the book or from hearing it quoted over and over.

Some books are slow going at the beginning; not all grab me from the get-go. There are times that I push through to the third or fourth chapters before I begin to like what I'm reading. By the time I'm halfway through, I can tell if the book is terrific, fluffy, or one I wish I hadn't begun. These are fiction books I'm writing about; nonfiction is in another catagory: I don't remember any first lines being quoted from a nonfiction. Do you?

How do you feel about this question of beginnings?


17 comments:

  1. I don't think I've ever read Tale of Two Cities, but I know that first line, too, simply from it being quoted all the time.

    I remember a few first lines, but mostly those are books I've read recently.

    I don't know that non-fiction first lines really matter. You're either reading the book for school (work, whatever), in which case you won't ditch the book because it's for a grade, or you're reading it because you're interested in the subject matter and don't need a hook. :-)

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  2. I feel the same way. And I do remember the Charles Dickens line...but I think it is because I have heard it so many times.

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  3. I love a good opening line but as you say I don't think I remember any from non-fiction.

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  4. I too remember The Tale of Two Cities. I've read it a couple of times. That is one LONG sentence.

    I can usually tell with the first few pages of a book if I'm going to like it. If it doesn't grab me by the first couple of chapters I move along to something else.

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  5. I don't remember non-fiction beginning lines either.

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  6. Interesting point about the first lines of non-fiction books. I've read a lot of memorable non-fiction over the years, but not one of them had an opening that I remember. Probably says something about the way my brain is wired.

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  7. I agree there are times when I have to get through a couple of chapters and then i enjoy the book. Usually that goes for anything written by a British author.

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  8. I always had a problem reading Dicken's although I love to see movies about them

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  9. My biggest problem with Dickens, it was forced on me. I was one of those students that had to read Tale of Two Cities. At the time, I thought it was boring and way too long. The only thing I remember about the book was the first line.

    I re-read it a few years and enjoyed it, although I still think it's too long. The first sentence does set the mood of the book... Long... lol

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  10. You know, I can't think of a single non-fiction first sentence. Good observation there.

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  11. Ha! I don't remember any great opening line of a non-fiction. Anyway, I rarely read them nowadays.

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  12. All this talk about Tale of Two Cities is really making me want to read it again. It's been a long, long time.

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  13. Both "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times." and "Late night I dreamt I went to Manderley again." are forever etched in my memory but I've honestly never read either book.
    Funny the way pop culture references effects us.

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  14. I've done that before, read halfway through and then have to decide whether to finish the other half since I've already invested the time to read the first half.

    http://smariek.blogspot.com/2008/07/booking-through-thursday.html

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  15. Some non-fiction books do hook me right away with the first line and first paragraph but I can't recall them later on. I was only able to recall the single one which was my very favorite.

    I thought this was a very interesting question :)

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  16. No, I don't remember any non-fiction first lines either.

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