OMG, what's gonna happen next? |
The task of
engineering exciting excerpts is actually easy for a writer. You've already
written it. Now you just have to find
it. An excerpt is typically 500 words, and for a short story about 200-250
words. The advice I have is general—pick an excerpt from the first third of
your book. Told you it was easy! Although very rarely does that mean that you
need to copy and paste the first five hundred words of your story and call it a
day. For a short story? Yes—that's exactly what you do. But not a novel.
Why, you ask? Well, that's inherent in the differences between
long and short fiction. A successful short story begins with a strong hook. In
order to sell a short story, you have to pull the reader in from the very first
sentence. With a novel, the creation of the story comes along with a more
deliberate pace. With a novel, you want to select a scene that sets up the
story and above all makes the reader want to read MORE.
In other words—a
cliff hanger.
Say you're writing
a young adult romance novel. A good choice for any YA romance novel excerpt is
a scene between the heroine and the hero. A first meeting, perhaps. A confrontation.
The moment when the heroine first realizes that there's something different
about this guy.
Say you're writing
a middle grade fantasy novel. Pick a scene that jump starts the action. A
fight. The moment when the hero realizes that he or she has a purpose to fulfill.
The moment when everything changes.
Once you've
decided on a scene, the real skill comes into play. You need to pick the moment
of that scene where the reader absolutely has to know what happens next. And if
the reader wants to know, what does he or she have to do? Buy the book. Which
is, of course, the point.
So that's the kind
of scene you want to choose for your excerpt.
And here's another little hint, too—if you DON'T have a moment like this
in your book, then you have some work to do. Every good story should have a
moment like this—several in fact. That's how you want to end a chapter, a POV
section. That's a real cliffhanger—the excerpt, the paragraph, the SENTENCE
that forces the reader to turn the page. The moment that the reader thinks, "Well,
one more chapter won't hurt. I'll just read a little while longer." That
moment is the holy grail for every story in existence. This is how writers
should approach every excerpt they choose.
And one last
thing—wait to pick your excerpt until an editor has gone through it with you
and cleaned it up. The absolute worst thing that can happen here is for
spelling and grammar errors to make it through to publication. Your excerpt,
like your blurb
is part of your sales strategy. You can't sell a car if the engine doesn't
work, right? Well, technique—grammar,
spelling, structure—is the writer's engine.
It doesn't matter how great your story is, it's not going to run unless
those techniques are there and sharp.
If you’re an author,
how do you go about choosing excerpts? If you’re a reader, what makes you
purchase a book based on its excerpt? Would love to hear your comments! Cheers
and thank you for reading my post!
Great points here. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteYou're most welcome, Darlene! Cheers!
DeleteGreat post! Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteAny time, Lisa! Cheers!
DeleteGreat info! I’m always questioning which excerpt to use, so this is a great help! In the last, I’ve asked my PR expert or chosen a scene aligned with the topic of whatever event I’m attending.
ReplyDeleteSo happy this article helped you, Barbara! All the best in choosing your future excerpts. Cheers!
Delete