Hook your reader!

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1. Surprise Us

Surprise gets our attention by defying our expectations. We’re wired to immediately start figuring out what’s actually going on, the better to gauge whether we’re about to get whacked or kissed.

That’s exactly how a story grabs the brain’s attention: by instantly letting us know that all is not as it seems – yes, beginning with the opening sentence.

The reader’s first question is: “What’s this story about?” What they’re really asking is: “What problem does the protagonist have to solve, and what will she have to overcome to do it?” This is what’s known as the story problem, and it defines the protagonist’s story-long quest.

Think of the story problem as the yardstick that allows readers to anticipate what will happen next. A story without a yardstick is just a bunch of random events – and how boring is that?

2. Make Us Feel It

Science has proved that the brain uses emotion, rather than reason, to gauge what matters to us and what doesn’t. Our feelings – not some “objective” logic — drive every choice we make. So it’s not surprising that when it comes to story, if we’re not feeling, we’re not reading.

In a compelling story the reader slips into the protagonist’s skin and becomes sensate – feeling what she feels, wanting what she wants, fearing what she fears.

This means that the protagonist must react to everything that happens, so we understand how she’s making sense of it. This is where the real story lies — it’s often reflected in the difference between what a character says (Yes, Reginald, of course I’ll marry you) and what she’s really thinking (as long as you promise you’ll never touch me).

3. Let Us In On The Protagonist’s Goal

Everyone has an agenda – you, me, and every protagonist worth their salt. We’re wired to be goal driven, and that’s a good thing. As cognitive scientist Steven Pinker so astutely says, “Without a goal everything is meaningless.”

Which is why we immediately need to know the protagonist’s agenda. In other words: What does he want? Even more important, why does he want it? And finally, what internal issue must he overcome to get it?

Why is this so important? Because everything that happens in the story gets its meaning and emotional weight based on whether it moves him closer to his goal, or further from it. If we don’t know what his goal is, we have no idea what anything adds up to, so the story idles in neutral.

4. Only Tell Us What We Need to Know

Over 11,000,000 pieces of information dive-bomb our five senses every second. Lest we be overwhelmed, our brain sifts through them at warp speed, separating what we need to know from what we can safely ignore. Thus, 99.9 percent of all incoming data is blithely discarded.

The same is true of a story. Your reader is wired to assume that everything you tell them is there on a need-to-know basis. That means if you introduce things we don’t need to know, we’ll read meaning into it anyway. And it will inherently be the wrong meaning, since there isn’t a “right” one. You can see where this is going. The most useful skill a writer can develop is the ability to kill their darlings, with gusto, if possible.

5. Give Us Specifics

We don’t think in the abstract; we think in concrete images. If we can’t see it we can’t feel it, and so it has no impact on us. For instance, when you think of “love” you don’t envision a concept, you envision images that, for you, evoke the concept of love. Each of us probably sees a very different, specific image (fantasies of Johnny Depp notwithstanding).

In short, we access the universal only through the very specific. Which is why, as I’m overly fond of saying, the story is in the specifics. Yet writers often write in vague generalities without even knowing it.

Like what, you ask? Take a simple sentence like: Freddy had a hard day at work. It’s a fine sentence, except we have no idea what Freddy considers a hard day, what actually happened, or even what his job is. After all, a hard day as a barista in Boise is very different from a hard day as a bullfighter in Barcelona. Be specific. Use the eyes-wide-shut test. If you shut your eyes, can you see it? If not, then neither can the reader.

6. Give Us Conflict

We don’t like conflict — in real life that is. Ever since kindergarten our goal has been to “work well with others.” So it’s no surprise that conflict can make us uncomfortable. As a result, writers are often way too nice to their protagonist. Instead of plunking him into a really thorny situation, they tiptoe up to it, and then deftly rescue him in the nick of time. Resist this urge.

It’s conflict that readers come for, so they can vicariously experience what they’ve been scrupulously avoiding in real life. They want to know what it would cost – emotionally – to take those risks. And, ultimately, what they might gain.

So be mean to your protagonist, make him face whatever demons are holding him back. It’s not just for his own good, it’s for the reader’s as well.

7. It Must Make Sense to Us

The brain analyzes everything in terms of cause and effect – indeed, we assume that causality is the cement of the universe. So when a story doesn’t follow a clear cause-and-effect trajectory, the brain doesn’t know what to make of it. This can actually result in a feeling of physical distress, not to mention the overwhelming desire to throw the book out the window.

The good news is, when it comes to keeping your story on track, it boils down to the mantra if, then, therefore. If I call in sick one more time (action), then I’ll get fired (reaction), therefore, I better get out of this cozy bed (decision).

Action, reaction, decision—it’s what drives a story forward. From beginning to end, a story must follow a clear cause-and-effect trajectory, so we see the consequence of each action. This tells us what things are adding up to, allowing us to eagerly anticipate what might happen next. Hello dopamine, hello reader!

Amir.H.Ghazi

41 thoughts on “Hook your reader!”

  1. I have found that our collective attention spans are very very short. I asked people all around. I did little experiments. I have even written couple of paragraphs on what I found. I want to do more but one of the results was that, in the beginning of your story if you put something to with darkness and death that you will get a lot more vies. If your title is boring you will not get any views. If your title has something about sex and farting, yes farting you get get more views than you think. Unfortunately, that’s our society today. Most people on social media put their priorities in things like sex and Star Wars. This study of mine was random and I didn’t choose any specific group. the groups the responded to the titles with sex and things like that in the title were mostly teenagers (or so it seemed) so My stories i really want to target people of my own age or people with similar interest. If I ever want to sell a book, I think it would be weird to write the word sex in the title. that’s not me.
    Anyway, I went of topic maybe.
    John

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  2. Since i write erotic romance, i start the story with some sort of problem or yearning, go through events to reach love, then end happily-ever-after. I am VERY guilty of not stressing my protagonist too much. Only twice have brought up serious problems (physical attack, highly emotional and public humiliation) and i absolutely hated it. I wrote it but hated it. Just putting in my two cents.

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  3. Thanks Amir for more wonderful advice! I’m actually currently working on a story and these tips are really helping. I’ve always had a problem with feeling like I can’t get into a story or feel what I’m reading, so I think the advice you gave on making the reader feel what you’re talking about is important. With the last book I read (Nathaniel by John Saul and the one previous, The Unwanted by John Saul) I could really feel what the characters were thinking. It makes the story seem more real and it helps us get lost in it! That’s so important. Thank you!

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  4. I like this post. I once tried to write a post apocalyptic story where the earth has a really bad day. Anyway, I let a friend of mine proof read it and edit it. When he emailed the work back to me, it had more red ink corrections than what I had written. I have up on that story.

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  5. Hello!

    I have just discovered your blog, and I really enjoyed this post! There are some really useful tips here, thanks for sharing! I hope you don’t mind – I have shared this on my website/blog with a link back to your site. Please let me know if you’d prefer if I took this down.

    Link to post: http://embiddulph.com/2016/02/09/reblog-hook-your-reader-by-amir-h-ghazi/

    Looking forward to reading your future posts and writing tips!

    Emma

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