Writer's Digest

THE FIRST HUNDRED WORDS ARE THE HARDEST

This article is printed here in its original form, as it was first published in 1921. —Ed.

If you’re familiar with the current “gag,” “The first hundred years are the hardest,” this being a certain humorist’s ironic “crack” at married life, you’ll know what inspired the above title. But, in all seriousness, for the beginner in fiction writing, the first hundred words or so—they may represent the first paragraph, or the first two or three paragraphs—undoubtedly are the hardest, or, at any rate, decidedly the most important in the entire story.

“Rats!” remarks the “wise”—and slangy—beginner. He has read his O. Henry and all the other successful authors, and he knows much better than that. He is thinking of the 101 smashing, dramatic endings in stories he has enjoyed, and he is absolutely convinced that a bang-up, hit-’em-between-the-eyes “final curtain” is far and away the most important thing in any story, but especially in a short story.

Well, live and learn, profit by experience, collect the rejection slips until you are able to see the light, and know the value of carefully planned, “punchful”

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Writer's Digest

Writer's Digest2 min read
Characterizing Through Relationships
Today is her forty-fifth birthday. She finds it hard to believe. Once she’d been young and she’d thought forty-five would come slow and impossible. She’d thought forty-five would be another world. But it came fast and it’s not what she thought it wou
Writer's Digest6 min read
Septet as Memoir
An old poet friend commemorated his 60th birthday by publishing a chapbook of sestets. I liked the idea, so in 2018, when I started my 70th year on this planet, I decided to write a collection of septets. I took my friend’s idea a couple steps furthe
Writer's Digest6 min read
Escalate Conflict to Keep Readers Turning Pages
Every great story depends on conflict to propel it forward. Conflict is found in your book’s overarching concept—the big idea—expressed in a way that highlights the tug-of-war between opposing forces. The more profound the conflict, the more compelli

Related