Saturday, February 15, 2014

Discussing the 'Information Dump'

When I first embarked on the journey to becoming a honest to goodness writer I had a big learning curve in discovering the difference between good narrative and an information dump. We all know the importance of having a strong first page, and hooking the reader from the get go. The following article by Chameleon Author on her blog The Write Place gives (in my humble opinion) a wonderful perspective on why the information dump, most especially on the first page of your novel, should be avoided at all cost. 


Page 1 - No Place to Take a Dump...

   Most commonly referred to as an "info dump", that is. You have three chances to get a 
reader to snatch up your book. The first comes when they see your cover. That will be 
the most immediate draw, and even the title won't be as persuasive as how enticing your
cover is. The second comes when they read your blurb. A lot  hinges on how well this is 
written, but the deal breaker comes as they take that little "Look Inside" Amazon provides.
   If the first thing they see are two huge paragraphs of block text, you've already made 
them weary, and the danger is that some will, at best, skim the text to see what on earth 
you're going on about. IF they turn the page and see more of the same, you've lost at least 
half your potential buyers, right there. For those that trudge through it, you had better hope
that 3rd page doesn't contain even one more block of text. Three pages is simply too long 
to wait for the action to get going.
   You can just about get away with this a little further into the book, after you have the reader 
hooked. Hooked readers are much more forgiving than ones wanting to be hooked. Master
storytellers are the ones that have found the balance of just enough back story, at just the right time. 
It's never necessary to lay out the entire reason for your books existence in one fell swoop- and most 
especially within the first 3 pages of your book.
   Even if you manage to hook your reader despite the dump, do you really want them telling their 
friends: "I liked it once it finally got going, but it was hard to get through at times.". Scary words, 
in my opinion, and not exactly a shining endorsement. Liked and hard should never be used in the 
same sentence to describe a product, even if they are separated by a comma.
   If you're not getting the sales you should be getting despite the data telling you people are looking, 
you should really try and find out why. If you've "taken a dump" on your first page, you just might 
want to clean it up. :)