Thrice Hooked
Hooks seem to be on everyone's mind lately. Musetracks just posted some great advice about them.
So I've been thinking about my favorite show. House.
Why is this show so addictive?
Then I realized it employs three separate hooks.
The moral/philosophical/theological question that a character struggles with at the beginning of every show.
The physical mystery of what is wrong with the patient, including the race against time to save him/her.
And finally, the emotional drama of each character's life. This hook is for long time viewers, while the other two can get a newbie interested.
THREE Hooks! And at the end, they all tie in together somehow.
How many hooks do you use in your stories? Have you ever found the hook morphing into something else by the middle of your story?
So I've been thinking about my favorite show. House.
Why is this show so addictive?
Then I realized it employs three separate hooks.
The moral/philosophical/theological question that a character struggles with at the beginning of every show.
The physical mystery of what is wrong with the patient, including the race against time to save him/her.
And finally, the emotional drama of each character's life. This hook is for long time viewers, while the other two can get a newbie interested.
THREE Hooks! And at the end, they all tie in together somehow.
How many hooks do you use in your stories? Have you ever found the hook morphing into something else by the middle of your story?
Comments
I write short stories most often so I always try for a really good opening paragraph to hook my reader.
I've. Never. Watched. House.
I know. I must be living in a box or something. LOL
I write smaller books, so I usually just have the main hook of the story and then little baby hooks at the end of each chapter. :)
I've heard the same.
Terri, isn't it cool? They usually have those spiritual threads tie in with the physical problem, which I just think is genius.
Jennifer,
Are you trying to give me a heart attack? LOL You should check out an episode online, just to see if it's interesting. :-)
Hi Kristen,
I love ending on hooks and as an avid reader, it definitely works. When an author knows how to end the chapter just right, well, it's not really ended, right? LOL I'll bet you do a great job!
If I think about this in terms of plot, I can identify multiple hooks in my writing. But I should look deeper. Good stuff to be thinking on!
I need to look deeper too. As of right now, I'm not sure what the hooks are in my wip, besides one.
And yes, they always seem to morph into something else as I'm writing. I don't know how many times this project has turned in a different direction than what was originally planned.
:-) Wait until revisions...
Mostly I write short stories and I always try for a big hook from the first sentence. I try to keep that hook around my reader until the end!
The Story and Muse are in charge. Once we established that I was only here to type things down, the relationship has gone much smoother. ;)
House is awesome. If you do watch one, let me know what you think.
:-)
Yeah, I did see that! I missed it though, just caught it afterwards. That seems like such a neat blog.
Sigh. Yet another thing to master.
I totally agree about hook placement. Just heard of the first sentence as a hook too.
LOL about the Muse!
Lynnette Labelle
http://lynnettelabelle.blogspot.com
That's very interesting! Is it a contemporary or historical?