British Comedy Guide

Novel introduction

Apologies for this. Am trying to fix the reformatting that's gone on here. It won't allow indents so it's standard Internet and not novel format.

Testing a rewrite of the opening to a novel. It's thankfully short. It's about an undercover journalist, obsessed with law and order, that loses everything he values after a raid on an animal research centre ends in tragedy.

Does it grab and entice? I've revised the opening section here, to reflect the changes made below.

PART 1 - 1999
The radio's counting down to Auld Lang Syne but it's hard to get excited with a shotgun pressing into the back of my head.

I'm facing a wall; been facing it for the last hour as the clock, above, ticks relentlessly. The gunman shifts his weight and the gun barrel scrapes the vertebrae at the base of my neck. He's prepared to scatter my brain across the laboratory and yet he mumbles an apology.

An image flickers through my mind, half-formed and unsettling. The walls of the research lab have crumbled and we stand isolated; a speck of light in a dark featureless plain. Above us, a single eye – red and primordial – watches.

The gunman pumps his shotgun with a loud clack and the vision is forgotten. I want my last thoughts to be about my wife and kids but the radio interrupts.

"Five, four, three, two, one. Happy new –"

Click!

-------

"Want a story?" Speed, my editor, threw an A4 file across his desk without waiting for my reply. "Animal rights mob want to expose conditions at the Bradfield research centre."

I picked up the file and scanned its contents with raised eyebrows.

While I read, he closed his office door, isolating the two of us from the hubbub of the open-plan press room. When Speed shut his door, everybody knew serious shit was going down. Some of my colleagues glanced up but his steadfast glare through the dividing glass persuaded them that their work-at-hand was more pressing.

Speed sat down, opposite me. "And before you say anything, yes, I know it's technically against the law."

"Technically? Your grasp of the law –"

He cut across my objection. "My grasp of the law is unimportant, Michael. What matters is my ability to put food on the table of my employees and their dependants." He put emphasis on the last word. He enjoyed reminding us of his pervasive importance in our lives, even away from the workplace.

He met my brief silence with his own, thin lips pressed tightly shut, and a blank stare that offered both approval and threat. I chose approval. I always did.

"Who's their contact at Bradfield's?" I asked.

"They haven't got one… yet."

"Then how do they plan on getting in?"

"We're putting our own guy in with the security firm."

"We?"

"Yes, I'm putting you inside."

"Shouldn't that be the role of the animal rights people?"

"Funny, they said that too."

"But?"

"I'm fed up with all their amateur videos."

I knew what Speed meant. I'd seen plenty of fuzzy colour- leached film taken during raids on laboratories and factory farms: the jerky camerawork inducing motion-sickness in its audience and vague gloomy images, as inconclusive as Loch Ness Monster footage.

Speed continued. "I told them if they want us involved, they do it our way. We get good quality reportage; they get the evidence to shut down the facility."

"But you campaigned to bring Bradfield to town."

"Your point being?"

"I'm confused. Where do you stand? For or against?"

"I stand for wherever there's a good story."

"So when do I –?"

"The interview with the security contractor is tomorrow, ten thirty."

"Wow, so I get a lie-in."

His grin deflated my optimism. "No. At nine, you're getting a crew-cut."
END

Does it read well? Any lines that seem unnatural?
Cheers.

Hi SLagA

It reads well. And I like the Noir style first person narrative. The authorial voice does seem to be getting in the way of the action for me sometimes though. Remember you are trying to put images in people's heads with a novel as with a screenplay - so give them some more to work with. In the opening bit for example - 'I don't know which I dread the most: the radio as it counts down to Auld Lang Syne or the shotgun, pressing into the back of my head' - You are introducing your character in a moment of extreme peril but you dilute it with the business about Auld Lang Syne. Because I don't believe it. If it was something along the lines for once - I wouldn't have minded having to listen to Auld Langs Syne but it was likely it wasnt't going to happen because I had a shotgun pressed into the back of my head - but obviously better written - it is believeable because not matter how much people hate scottish people singing they would prefer it to having the head shot with a shotgun. Likewise with unformed image etc, you don't describe it so the reader can't imagine it. I would just cut to the chase with things to up the jeopardy and tension. 'The unseen gunman reminds me of his presence. ' I would cut this for example as it seems to be calm analysis which neutralises the tension and mystery you have created.

Likewise with the next bit.

I am crap at feedback so I have just edited - as I would were it me writing it -which it isn't so feel free to tell me to FO - for pace mainly.

Impertinent of me so hopefully you will forgive the cheek of it.

:)

Marc

--

"Want a story?" Speed, my editor, threw an A4 file across his desk at me. "Animal rights mob want to expose conditions at the Bradfield research centre."

I picked up the file and scanned it while he closed the office door.

"And before you say anything, yes, I know it's technically against the law."

"Technically..."

"My grasp of the law is unimportant, Michael" He cut across my objection. "What matters is our ability to put food on the table of our dependants, wouldn't you agree?" He asked pointedly, meeting my brief silence with his own. Thin lips pressed tightly shut, and a blank stare that offered both approval and threat. I chose approval. I always did.

"Who's their contact at Bradfield's?"

"They haven't got one… yet."

"Then how do they plan on getting in?"

"We're putting our own guy in with the security firm this time."

"We?"

"You. I'm putting you inside."

"Shouldn't that be the role of the animal rights people?"

"I'm fed up with all their amateur videos."

I knew what Speed meant. Fuzzy colour- leached film taken during raids on laboratories and factory farms: jerky camerawork inducing motion-sickness and vague gloomy images, as inconclusive as Loch Ness Monster footage.

"I told them if they want us involved." Speed continued. " Then they do it our way. We get good quality reportage; they get the evidence to shut down Bradfield."

I was a little puzzled. "You campaigned to bring Bradfield to town. Are you against it now?"

"What I'm for... is a good story. End of. The interview with the security contractor is tomorrow, ten thirty."

"Great.' I smiled sarcastically. 'So I get a lie-in?"

"No. What you get is a hair cut. Nine O'clock sharp."

Cheers Marc, that's excellent, not impertinent. Will amend after the footy. Was worried about the opening as it's a change in style and focus from my earlier novels.

:)

Actually I was given a book yesterday 'The Art of Fiction' By David Lodge. It looks like a good read, the first chapter which is the only one I have read thus far is called The beginning, and talks about the beginning to Novels. It's well worth a read. The beginning to a novel is of course crucially important - and the first sentence! Hook them from the off seems to be the idea.

Quote: Marc P @ April 5 2009, 5:30 PM BST

Actually I was given a book yesterday 'The Art of Fiction' By David Lodge. It looks like a good read, the first chapter which is the only one I have read thus far is called The beginning, and talks about the beginning to Novels. It's well worth a read. The beginning to a novel is of course crucially important - and the first sentence! Hook them from the off seems to be the idea.

I started to read that but it didn't grab me.

Hi Slag A,
I like what I see so far - it's very intriguing and has plenty of legs.

As I stare at the wall in front of me, an image flickers in my mind – half-formed, unsettling – but it's forgotten when the gunman cocks his weapon. I want my last thoughts to be about my wife and kids.

How about giving us a hint of what this half formed image is -it would be satisfying for the reader if it were a strong motif.

Also, why would it be SO undesirable for the narrator/protagonist to get a crew cut?

I look forward to more..

Quote: Fred Peters @ April 5 2009, 8:55 PM BST

Hi Slag A,
I like what I see so far - it's very intriguing and has plenty of legs.

As I stare at the wall in front of me, an image flickers in my mind – half-formed, unsettling – but it's forgotten when the gunman cocks his weapon. I want my last thoughts to be about my wife and kids.

How about giving us a hint of what this half formed image is -it would be satisfying for the reader if it were a strong motif.

Also, why would it be SO undesirable for the narrator/protagonist to get a crew cut?

I look forward to more..

The protagonist in the film version is to be played by Britney.

Oh and another little point SlagA I forgot to mention, it's a shotgun - you don't cock a shotgun! :)

Quote: Marc P @ April 5 2009, 10:13 PM BST

I forgot to mention, you don't cock a shotgun! :)

Damn, I could have sworn I'd seen shotguns with pull back hammers. I'll change the word to 'pump', as that action (apparently) loads the cartridge and cocks the hammer.
:)

Quote: Fred Peters @ April 5 2009, 8:55 PM BST

Hi How about giving us a hint of what this half formed image is -it would be satisfying for the reader if it were a strong motif.

Also, why would it be SO undesirable for the narrator/protagonist to get a crew cut?

Cheers. The half-formed image is the first of a series of 'visions' - becoming increasingly menacing, realistic, and dark - that impact on the protagonist's fate as the story progresses.

The crew-cut is explained in the following section. The plot will strip everything he values in his life, starting with the small (his fine head of hair) progressing to the big (his family). The crew-cut is to help him fit in at the security firm interview. So that he looks the 'part'.

Here's a rewrite of the opening to amend the opening line, amplify the vision and perhaps build up the tension at the end.

------------------
The radio's counting down to Auld Lang Syne but it's hard to get excited with a shotgun pressing into the back of my head.

I'm facing a wall; been facing it for the last hour as the clock, above, ticks relentlessly away. The gunman shifts his weight and the gun barrel scrapes the vertebrae at the base of my neck. He's prepared to scatter my brain across the laboratory and yet he mumbles an apology.

As we wait, an image flickers through my mind, half-formed and unsettling. The walls of the research lab have crumbled and we stand isolated; a speck of light in a dark featureless plain. Above us, a single eye – red and primordial – watches.

The gunman pumps his shotgun with a loud clack and the vision is forgotten. I want my last thoughts to be about my wife and kids but the radio interrupts.

"Five, four, three, two, one. Happy new –"

Click!
------------

Yes very good Mister S!

I'd tweak a couple of words - lose the away from relentlessly away. Also unseen, unseen by whom? It implies an audience. If the narrator has never seen him because he has a hood over his head, maybe explain that, again it ups the jeopardy. Also lose the comma after laboratory and put an and in instead, it keeps the pace better, makes it less considered analysis. For the same reason I would lose the 'as we wait'. What he is doing isn't really waiting, it seems too neutral and impassive a word.

Nit picking, nit picking :)

Good stuff!

I think it's brill

Hi Slag,

Novelist too, is there no end to you talents!

I liked the opening. Very like a film I thought,

I think it might be stronger if it was darker. He's close to being killed so no cocky remarks about the radio, just total fear. You have to suck the audience right in to the scene. It needs more detail, more textures, what did it smell like, could he see anything, what did the floor feel like? How long had he been there?

The cut to what goes before maybe needs to be explicit, I'm not sure about this as it was obvious to me. Perhaps there is enough there.

Just a few thoughts. Good tho...keep going.

John
Purple Comedy http://standupcomedy.podomatic.com/

Hi Slag,

If you're trying to build up tension and perhaps unnerve the reader, it might be wise to rewrite the line "The gunman pumps his weapon..."

Had me laughing out loud.

Cheers for the comments. It's a finished book and a screenplay but I'm fiddling with the opening, to make sure it bangs in and hopefully hooks. There is a hidden reason why the narrator is a little cocky about the opening dilemma but maybe I should remove it for the sake of clarity?

Don, the 'weapon pumping' line made me raise an eyebrow too, but I want to avoid the use of gun to close to gunman - another more elegant solution I need. :)

Quote: SlagA @ April 6 2009, 6:58 PM BST

Cheers for the comments. It's a finished book and a screenplay but I'm fiddling with the opening, to make sure it bangs in and hopefully hooks. There is a hidden reason why the narrator is a little cocky about the opening dilemma but maybe I should remove it for the sake of clarity?

Don, the 'weapon pumping' line made me raise an eyebrow too, but I want to avoid the use of gun to close to gunman - another more elegant solution I need. :)

Slag, it's probably the word "pumps" that needs changing. Also, the word "clack" doesn't really feel menacing enough in this situation.

If you're looking for somewhere to give the novel a try-out you could do worse than www.writerswrule.com
It's where I've been hanging out the past few weeks after Authonomy - the Harper Collins funded peer-review site went pear-shaped.
It's a new start-up, so it's not over-run with writers [100 novels up at the moment, compared to nearly 4000 on Authonomy!]
Decent people who give good crit.
You could even get to read my effort!
Good luck with it.

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