Friday, March 22, 2019
First Paragraphs in Short Stories :: essays research papers
FIRST PARAGRAPHSFirst splits are wakeless to the story and need to hook the reader in. If the first paragraph doesnt grab you, then wherefore would you read further? The first paragraph is where you are introduced to the tone of the story and sets the stage by introducing the main address(s) and swelled information to entice us to continue reading.Three stories that have unbendable first paragraphs that draw us in and help us project the character and story are A Sick resound by Morley Callaghan, A Bird In The House by Margaret Laurence, and One evening by David Helwig.In the first paragraph of A Sick Call we are introduced to capture Macdowell, a huge, old priest who was a here and now deaf in one ear. We are also told that vigour seemed to shock or excite him, or make him really ireful. Thus, it appears that something later on in the story may test Father Macdowells fortitude and we are drawn to read on. When we do, we hear why his size and deafness are strategic. I n A Bird In The House, the first paragraph introduces us to Vanessa, the main character, and tells us that she has skipped an important abut. The time of year is also pinpointed by mentioning the Remembrance Day parade and the snowy wind. This makes us want to read on to discover why Vanessa missed the parade and what made it, and the time of year, so important to her family.Miss Machry, in One Evening, is described to us right away in the first paragraph. We get the sense of her character in the way she waved the old Japanese fan, because the fan was polished and it could only be preserved by the gentlest of handling. The fan is the tie-in to her mother and father and how she had come to this moment. Miss Machry is looking out the window and waiting on someone there was no sign of him yet.
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