Well, it's possible to fail to captivate impatient, casual readers. My advice:Hellow people. My first chapter is 3.3k words long, and I'm concerned it doesn't work because the "hook" is pretty much at the end.
What rules of thumb do you followfor opening chapters?
Well, it's possible to fail to captivate impatient, casual readers. My advice:
- Choose a central conflict in the chapter that piques the reader's interest.
- Narrate briefly in a short chapter (1000–1500 words).
- Don't dwell on the atmosphere; just 2–3 sentences are enough to build the atmosphere. Get straight to the conflict.
- Introduce your protagonist with action, not description.
- Provide a plot twist that shakes the reader's emotions.
- End your chapter with a cliffhanger at a time of peak tension, not at the conclusion.
yea, and no. Those who like to read will like it, as long as it doesn't slog, or lag on with pointless paragraphs that serve no purpose..
It depends on the audience you are aiming for.
and before you say "I want everyone," let me stop you there. If you're writing for other people. Don't. you can be excited that people are reading what you're writing, but don't make that your motivation.
1.5-2.5k words is the sweet spot but that doesn't mean yours is too long at 3.3k. If you truly worry it's too long, cut it in half. chapter 1 and chapter 2. there's no sense in stressing about it. If you think it, and feel it, just take care of it, and move on, don't let it sit as is. Otherwise, if you don't see the numbers you want to see, you'll be stressing that maybe that was the reason.
My opinion. Don't worry about it. If the hook is at the end, then leave it as is.
-Unless you can read it, and find another hook in the middle somewhere that you didn't realize was also there. then cut it there for the two chapters' midpoint. you know?
Thank you all for answering. This helps.I don't see the risk. Generally, you want your first chapter to be a bit longer and, as you said, contain a hook to draw in the reader. 3.3k sounds like a perfect length to me; you are doing fine, chill. Do not create dopamine-filled, high-energy junk food because you might attract more readers, but the wrong kind of readers, that you can't keep. Stay faithful to your story and you'll be fine.