HOW FORSYTH STARTS HIS NOVELS “EXPLOSIVELY”

in #books7 years ago

It is of as much importance that a writer should know where and how to begin telling his story, then slowly ripple outwards, as he should to plot a fairly digestible tale with all the correct spices of the language to pillar his voice’s standing. Maybe more.

I read a lot of books, mostly fiction. And I’ve seen how authors strive hard to make the first words of their novels in a way as to have it as a preamble to keep readers in the edge of their seats for the rest of the book. It goes not any different for me, whenever I select a book, I don’t read the plot in the back cover because I strongly believe it ruins the story; rather, I go for the first paragraph. Of course, most of you do the same. That goes without saying.

Some of the authors I’ve read have never once failed to clutch me by my senses and not let me go till I have read the last word. Of them all, Frederick Forsyth, a British author, titled “The Master Story-teller”, makes sure in each of his books that the readers get hooked in his very first paragraph.

I haven’t seen an author so far who has had as interesting a life as that of Forsyth’s. He had been a journalist, an RAF pilot and a spy. After that, he turned into a full-time writer. His books are known for well-researched plots. His first novel, “The Day of the Jackal”, became an international best-seller, and won him the Edgar Allan Poe award for the best novel.
The following is a list I have compiled that I think are the best beginnings of the novels by Frederick Forsyth I have so far read. Of course, some of you may find my opinions highly conflicting with yours, because it is only a matter of how highly you allow yourself to be influenced by an author, one more than the other, when most of the writers do it good — just as Forsyth does it for me. And of course, I don’t dare place them in an order, for one might still find it incongruous to go by my order, when one can always make it better.

THE FIST OF GOD

“The man with ten minutes to live was laughing.”

THE AFGHAN

“If the young Talib bodyguard had known that making the cell phone call would kill him, he would not have done it. But he did not know, so he did and it did.”

ICON

“It was the summer when the price of a small loaf of bread topped a million roubles.
It was the summer of the third consecutive year of wheat crop failures and the second of hyper-inflation.
It was the summer when in the back alleys of the faraway provincial towns the first Russians began dying of malnutrition.
It was the summer when the president collapsed in his limousine too far from help to be saved, and an old office cleaner stole a document.
After that, nothing would ever be the same.
It was the summer of 1999.”

THE KILL LIST

“If he had been asked, Jerry Dermott could have put hand on heart and sworn that he had never knowingly hurt anyone in his life and did not deserve to die. But that did not save him.”

THE COBRA

“The teenage boy was dying alone. No one knew and only one would have cared. He lay, skeletal from a life ruined by drugs, on a stinking palliasse in the corner of a filthy room in an abandoned block. The slum was in one of the failed housing schemes called ‘a project’ in Anacostia, a part of Washington D.C. of which the city is not proud and which tourists never visit.
If the boy had known his death was going to start a war he would neither have understood nor cared. That is what drug abuse does to a young mind. It destroys it.”

THE ODESSA FILE

“Everyone seems to remember with great clarity what they were doing on November 22nd, 1963, at the precise moment they heard President Kennedy was dead. He was hit at 12.22 in the afternoon, Dallas time, and the announcement that he was dead came at half past one in the same time zone. It was 2.30 in New York, 7.30 in the evening in London and 8.30 on a chilly, sleet-swept night in Hamburg.”

THE DAY OF THE JACKAL

“It is cold at 6.40 in the morning of a March day in Paris, and seems even colder when a man is about to be executed by the firing squad. At that hour on March 11, 1963, in the main courtyard of the Fort d’Ivry a French Air Force colonel stood before a stake driven into the chilly gravel as his hands were bound behind the post, and stared with slowly diminishing disbelief at the squad of soldiers facing him twenty meters away.

You can always add to this, guys!

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