I was reading a piece of writing advice the other day about five clichés that
ruin openings. I agreed with four of them, but either I don’t understand the
fifth cliché the author was describing, or it’s simple wrong advice. The gist
was, “don’t begin with the weather because no one gives a crap about the
weather.”
First,
I’m not sure that weather can actually be a cliché in the way “it was all a
dream” is. I mean, weather is only a cliché in the sense that it’s always
there. It’s reality rather than cliché. Second, maybe it’s because I grew up on
a farm but I do indeed give a crap about the weather. In fact, almost everyone
does and that would explain why it’s one of the major topics of conversation.
Third, unless your story takes place fully inside a place with complete
environmental controls and no windows, such as a spaceship, weather will be a
part of a realistic story. Fifth, quite a few of my favorite opening sequences in literature incorporate weather.
Give a listen:
“In
the late summer of that year we lived in a house in a village that looked
across the river and the plain to the mountains. In the bed of the river there
were pebbles and boulders, dry and white in the sun, and the water was clear
and swiftly moving and blue in the channels. Troops went by the house and down
the road and the dust they raised powdered the leaves of the trees. The trunks
of the trees too were dusty and the leaves fell early that year and we saw the
troops marching along the road and the dust rising and leaves, stirred by the
breeze, falling and the soldiers marching and afterward the road bare and white
except for the leaves.” Hemingway—A Farewell
to Arms.
“October
Country . . . that country where it is always turning late in the year. That
country where the hills are fog and the rivers are mist; where noons go
quickly, dusks and twilights linger, and mid-nights stay. That country composed
in the main of cellars, sub-cellars, coal-bins, closets, attics, and pantries
faced away from the sun. That country whose people are autumn people, thinking
only autumn thoughts. Whose people passing at night on the empty walks sound
like rain. . . .” Ray Bradbury—The
October Country.
Or:
“Heat beat down on my shoulders, my face cloth. My armor dragged at the riding
sores underneath. Little sparkles danced behind my eyelids, and the strain in
my joints were cramping to knots in my muscles. It had been a long ride. A
grating call made my shoulders twitch. The carrion crows, who glided after us
day after day, were waiting.” Heather Gladney—Teot’s War.
I
stopped with these three in order to keep this post to a manageable length.
There are many other examples I could give. Now, if the opening were ‘only’ a lengthy
description of the weather, I would want the writer to move on. But, what I
need from a story is to be immediately, or at least very quickly, “grounded.” I
want to know “who” and “where.” If the story is taking place outside, a huge
part of “where” is likely to involve weather.
As
a reader, the surest way for a writer to lose me is to open with talking heads
in a vacuum. Now there is truly something I don’t give a crap about. I’d rather
it were all a dream.
23 comments:
I love descriptions of weather. I disagree compltely.
I've not shied away from weather if it's called for, opening, middle or the end. The weather is part of setting a scene.
Patti, and I agree with you.
eric1313, absolutely. Critical to it
I like the weather for setting mood. Cliche as that is. ;)
I too give a crap about the weather because it determines that days pain levels when I wake up. It is life, a major part of life for some folks at some time or another and is the only descriptor that can be used to show the reality of their situation.
Good point. Weather is always present unless you're always indoors. And then it could be weather that traps you there. Outside of starting with 'It was a dark and stormy night,' I don't see how it could be cliche.
Yes, the scene must be set, Charles. Thanks
David J., some genres, like pulp fiction types, really demand it. Weather becomes almost a character, and certainly a source of conflict for the protag.
Mark, and thus it can't be a true cliche, anymore than breathing air can be.
Alex, I imagine if one droned on and one about it and it did nothing else for the story. hard to see exactly what the writer meant.
Cloudia, the most critical thing.
I think the idea of a weather opening comes from the old saw "It was a dark and stormy night." the opening sentence of Paul Clifford by English novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton in his 1830 novel. It's "considered the archetypal example of a florid, melodramatic style of fiction writing". (I got that quote from Wikipedia).
Personally, the weather, along with the landscape, are important in the setting of the story, and without some mention of them I feel lost.
I meant to say idea of a weather opening AS A CLICHE
Charles, I'm with you on beginning a story or novel with the "weather" as long as it is short and doesn't read like a Met report. My short story, a pastiche of the Wild West, begins with the weather, all of three lines.
I agree with you.
I too, like to use weather. I think it's an asset to use sparingly and wisely :) It may fine~tune the mood and/or the scene.
Richard, I bet you're right. In fact, they quoted the "dark and stormy night" in the article I read. And that is certainly a very vague opening.
Prashant, yes, it definitely needs to be succinct
Szelsofa, very good for fine tuning
Like you, I like weather openings, but I might need to give up, "It was a dark and stormy night."
I agree with you... and I bet anything you've written in the past few days (on soggy paper) is dealing with the weather. I hope you're safe from the floods.
I think that a skilled author can describe weather in such a way that reader can actually feel the rain on their skin :)
Snowbrush, that one is probably done
Sage, we are safe but all this rain made me think about how important the weather is to us.
Optimistic, I agree. and I love that
The weather is a valid subject as long as it is not separate from the story.
Oscar, agreed.
I agree. I actually think there is no such thing as a cliche. Everything depends on story and the way it's written. Everything else is somebody else's definition of writing... and frankly... I don't care. When an author writes a story, nothing can come between the author and the story, especially not a stranger's opinion. :)
Weather is a frequent topic of conversation for me as well. It always has been. Nice examples you show us here!
Hey Charles, agree 100%. Weather does indeed help set the story and "speaks volumes." Talking heads could work, also, depending on context and content -- such as speaking about the weather!
"The monsoon will sweep us away if we don't flee immediately!"
"You can go, knave, but I shall remain behind and brave the floods!"
haha
Charles-a bit of weather is needed for me to totally imagine a scene.
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