What belongs on page one
When an agent reads a first page, they are not reading for a story. They are reading for signals. Does this writer know how to hold the sentence. Does this writer know whose book this is. Does the first page promise a specific kind of experience. Understanding what page one actually has to do makes it much easier to write one that works.
The four signals of a functioning first page
- Voice. The first page has to sound like someone. A flat, generic prose style on page one is the commonest reason an agent stops reading. Voice does not mean quirky or loud — it means consistent, present, and specific. A writer with a quiet, controlled voice can win page one with a single precise observation.
- Point of view. By the bottom of page one, the reader should know whose head they're in, whether they're in that head closely or at a distance, and in what tense. POV drift on the opening page is a killer — a sentence or two in distant third, then a paragraph in close third, then a jarring head-hop. Clarity first. (See choosing point of view.)
- Specificity. A first page that is abstract — a character, an emotion, a setting gestured at rather than described — tells an agent the book is going to be vague. One concrete, specific detail does more work than a paragraph of atmosphere. A cracked mug. A specific smell. The exact sound of a specific doorbell.
- Forward motion. Not action in the sense of car chases. Forward motion in the sense of "something is becoming unstable." A functioning first page puts a reader on the edge of a situation the character has not yet resolved. That situation can be small — an unanswered text message, a visitor at the door at a strange hour — but the reader should feel the surface of the water being broken.
What page one does not have to do
Many writers over-engineer page one because they think it has to do everything. It doesn't. Page one does not have to:
- Explain the world. Worldbuilding exposition on page one is a common failure mode, especially in fantasy and SF. Readers are willing to live in confusion for ten pages if the voice is working. Trust them.
- Introduce every important character. One named character is enough. Sometimes zero, if the narrating voice is strong enough to carry the page alone.
- Dramatize the inciting incident. The inciting incident often lands later in the first chapter or even into chapter two. A prologue is not required.
- Summarize the book's themes. Themes emerge; they are not declared.
- Have a cold open that reveals a mystery. Some first pages do this well, but it is not a requirement and it is an overused technique.
Common failure modes
Recurring openings that agents report closing on:
- Alarm-clock openings. A character waking up, noticing the day, beginning their routine. Almost never necessary. The reader can pick up the routine three paragraphs later.
- Weather openings. A paragraph about the weather that doesn't do character work. Exception: weather that is doing character work — the protagonist's relationship to that specific cold, that specific rain, revealing something about who she is.
- Backstory dumps. "Anna had always been the kind of person who ..." — three paragraphs establishing who Anna is before anything happens. Resist. The reader will learn who Anna is by watching her.
- Dialogue in a vacuum. Opening with a line of dialogue from an unidentified speaker to an unidentified listener. Disorienting without being intriguing.
- Prologues that prologue. A prologue is a separate question from page one — the whole "prologue vs. no prologue" debate is overblown — but a prologue that does not clearly earn its place ends up being a first page the reader has to get through to reach the real first page.
- Dream openings. A vivid scene that turns out to be a dream on page two. Readers feel tricked. Don't.
How to audit your own first page
A useful self-review procedure, done at least a week after writing:
- Print it out. Or read it in a completely different font. Distance reveals problems.
- Read only the first 250 words. Stop at roughly one manuscript page. Ask: if this were the only thing I'd seen, would I keep reading? Be honest.
- Circle every concrete noun. If there are fewer than a dozen, the page is too abstract.
- Underline every "was" and "had been." Not to eliminate them, but to see their concentration. High density signals flashback or setup prose that could be compressed.
- Find the sentence that would make someone stop. If you can't find one, the page doesn't have enough forward motion.
- Read the page aloud. Stumble points are rhythm problems; most of them will turn out to be sentences that need cutting.
When the first page changes the book
Writers sometimes discover, in revision, that the real first page is actually page fourteen or the start of chapter two. This is worth taking seriously. If page one is doing setup and page fourteen is where the voice finally lands, page fourteen might be the true first page and pages one through thirteen are drafting scaffolding you can now remove. Trust that.
A good first page is not written cold on a Tuesday. It is almost always rewritten many times, often after the book is finished, when you finally know which voice the book actually has.