The Hook

I sometimes use this technique. It works well, I think, because TV script formulas have conditioned us to assume that the first couple of "he did it" set-ups are false leads. I think readers stay engaged with this way of arcing a story because their brains keep spinning on how it's going to fall into the formula of "he didn't really do it."

It's a good concept, but can only be used by someone with real ability. I've seen it tried by writers who really don't possess the talent and the story just falls flat.
 
A couple of books I have read of late feature a "Prologue" and the hook is demonstrably therein. Skip it and start at Ch 1 and you've lost the plot !
 
A couple of books I have read of late feature a "Prologue" and the hook is demonstrably therein. Skip it and start at Ch 1 and you've lost the plot !

An author once told me prologues are a lazy way out. Instead of developing plot, you give the plot away in the first page.
 
Prologues are employed to do all sorts of things, not just to hint at the story's hook. But even that is a legitimate use. Those who see any writing technique as "all" or "every" or "always to be avoided" are being tempted to write pablum.
 
I'm reading the collected short stories of Chester Himes, beginning with the crap he scribbled while a convict in the early 30s. The early stuff aint stories, theyre whining bout the por ol black man's burden of racism.

But a few years later he stops whining and forms a style that characterizes his most popular writing of the 50s. I noticed, too, that he started using hooks in the late 30s.

It seems like hooks come along once the writer has a philosophy of life.
 
I'm reading the collected short stories of Chester Himes, beginning with the crap he scribbled while a convict in the early 30s. The early stuff aint stories, theyre whining bout the por ol black man's burden of racism.

But a few years later he stops whining and forms a style that characterizes his most popular writing of the 50s. I noticed, too, that he started using hooks in the late 30s.

It seems like hooks come along once the writer has a philosophy of life.

I believe I see your point. Now I have to go back and read all the early work of my favorite authors. Sigh. That's a lot of reading. No time like the present to start.
 
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