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The First Five Pages: A Writer's Guide To Staying Out of the Rejection Pile Paperback – January 1, 2000

4.4 out of 5 stars 654 ratings

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IF YOU'RE TIRED OF REJECTION, THIS IS THE BOOK FOR YOU.
Whether you are a novice writer or a veteran who has already had your work published, rejection is often a frustrating reality. Literary agents and editors receive and reject hundreds of manuscripts each month. While it's the job of these publishing professionals to be discriminating, it's the job of the writer to produce a manuscript that immediately stands out among the vast competition. And those outstanding qualities, says New York literary agent Noah Lukeman, have to be apparent from the first five pages.
The First Five Pages reveals the necessary elements of good writing, whether it be fiction, nonfiction, journalism, or poetry, and points out errors to be avoided, such as
* A weak opening hook
* Overuse of adjectives and adverbs
* Flat or forced metaphors or similes
* Melodramatic, commonplace or confusing dialogue
* Undeveloped characterizations and lifeless settings
* Uneven pacing and lack of progression
With exercises at the end of each chapter, this invaluable reference will allow novelists, journalists, poets and screenwriters alike to improve their technique as they learn to eliminate even the most subtle mistakes that are cause for rejection.
The First Five Pages will help writers at every stage take their art to a higher -- and more successful -- level.
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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

The difference between The First Five Pages and most books on writing is that the others are written by teachers and writers. This one comes from a literary agent--one whose clients include Pulitzer Prize nominees, New York Times bestselling authors, Pushcart Prize recipients, and American Book Award winners. Noah Lukeman is not trying to impart the finer points of writing well. He wants to teach you "how to identify and avoid bad writing," so that your manuscript doesn't come boomeranging back to you in that self-addressed, stamped envelope. Surprise: Agents and editors don't read manuscripts for fun; they are looking for reasons to reject them. Lukeman has arranged his book "in the order of what I look for when trying to dismiss a manuscript," starting with presentation and concluding with pacing and progression. Each chapter addresses a pitfall of poor writing--overabundance of adjectives and adverbs, tedious or unrealistic dialogue, and lack of subtlety to name just a few--by identifying the problem, presenting solutions, giving examples (one wishes these weren't quite so obvious), and offering writing exercises. It's a little bizarre to think about approaching your work as would an agent, but if you are serious about getting published, you may as well get used to it. Plus, Lukeman has plenty of solid advice worth listening to. Particularly fine are his exercises for removing and spicing up modifiers and his remedies for all kinds of faulty dialogue. --Jane Steinberg

From Library Journal

Novice and amateur writers alike will benefit from literary agent Lukeman's lucid advice in this handy, inexpensive little book. Lukeman draws on his years of editorial experience to present an inside look at manuscript submission. He provides suggestions, examples, and practice exercises designed to lift ordinary prose to a higher level. Covering writing fundamentals, including viewpoint, tone, pacing, character development, grammar, and more, Lukeman sprinkles examples of common writing problems and simple solutions throughout the text. Carrying the craft of writing beyond Strunk and White's classic Elements of Style, this book should find a wide audience; public libraries sponsoring writers' groups and workshops will want multiple copies. Academic libraries will want several copies to share with writing labs. Highly recommended.
-Denise S. Sticha, Seton Hill Coll., Greensburg, PA
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 068485743X
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Simon & Schuster
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ January 1, 2000
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ Original ed.
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 208 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9780684857435
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0684857435
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.5 x 0.52 x 8.44 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 out of 5 stars 654 ratings

About the author

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Noah Lukeman
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Noah Lukeman is author of A Dash of Style: The Art and Mastery of Punctuation (WW Norton and Oxford University Press), to be published in April, 2006. He is also author of the bestsellers The First Five Pages: A Writer's Guide to Staying out of the Rejection Pile (Simon & Schuster, 1999), and The Plot Thickens: 8 Ways to Bring Fiction to Life (St. Martins Press, 2002), a BookSense 76 Selection, a Publishers Weekly Daily pick, and a selection of the Writers Digest Book Club. He has also worked as a collaborator, and is co-author, with Lieutenant General Michael "Rifle" DeLong, USMC, Ret., of Inside CentCom (Regnery, 2004), a Main Selection of the Military Book Club. His Op-Ed pieces (with General DeLong) have been published in The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times. He has also contributed to Poets & Writers, Writers Digest, The Writer, AWP Chronicle and The Writers Market, and has been anthologized in The Practical Writer (Viking, 2004). Foreign editions of his books have been published in the UK and in Portugese, Japanese, Korean, Chinese and Indonesian.

Noah Lukeman is President of Lukeman Literary Management Ltd, a New York based literary agency, which he founded in 1996. His clients include winners of the Pulitzer Prize, American Book Award, Pushcart Prize and O. Henry Award, finalists for the National Book Award, Edgar Award, Pacific Rim Prize, multiple New York Times bestsellers, national journalists, major celebrities, and faculty of universities ranging from Harvard to Stanford. He has worked as a Manager in the New York office of Artists Management Group, and has worked for another New York literary agency. Prior to becoming an agent he worked on the editorial side of several major publishers, including William Morrow and Farrar, Straus, Giroux, and as editor of a literary magazine.

He has been a guest speaker on the subjects of writing and publishing at numerous forums, including the Wallace Stegner writing program at Stanford University and the Writers Digest Conference at BookExpo America. He currently teaches a course online at Writers University. He earned his B.A. with High Honors in English and Creative Writing from Brandeis University, cum laude.

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
654 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this writing guide instructive and valuable for authors at all stages, revealing the secrets to create superb writing. Moreover, the book is clearly written and customers consider it well worth the price. However, the pacing receives mixed reviews.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

152 customers mention "Writing resource"144 positive8 negative

Customers find this book to be a valuable resource for authors at all stages of writing, providing priceless advice and practical suggestions.

"This book has plenty of great writing advice. Read all of it, you will find something to improve your writing...." Read more

"...and how to fix it, gives examples, and then provides exercises to use on your own manuscript...." Read more

"...This author knows how to help fellow writers learn the craft. Get this book." Read more

"...Our English teachers are milking us. Great writers need this book. Average writers need this book...." Read more

113 customers mention "Writing quality"89 positive24 negative

Customers appreciate the writing quality of the book, finding it readable and practical, with one customer noting its focus on the art of language.

"...If you are a writer, this book has plenty of advice about style, tone, mood, dialog, characterization, hooks, and yes, there's still more!..." Read more

"This book tells it like it is fellow creative writers. Where has this author been all my life? I highlight each page and annotate like crazy...." Read more

"Excellent advice with clear examples and a fun read , while imparting valuable information that guides and inspires in equal measure." Read more

"This book focuses mainly on the art of language. It helps me tremendously as I do not have a good ear to English which is my second language...." Read more

56 customers mention "Value for time"56 positive0 negative

Customers find the book worth an hour to read, with the first half being particularly excellent.

"...Buy this book and read this book and learn from this book. It is worth your time, it will inspire you, it will teach you, and it will make you laugh." Read more

"...Don't get me wrong, the book is valuable, just poorly written. Here is the reason I am saying this:..." Read more

"...complaint, which is a big complaint, I think this text is worth the time and expense." Read more

"Excellent advice with clear examples and a fun read , while imparting valuable information that guides and inspires in equal measure." Read more

10 customers mention "Value for money"10 positive0 negative

Customers find the book well worth its price.

"...Bottom line: It's cheap, it's a quick read, and it just might help." Read more

"...Worth its price four times over." Read more

"...Very readable, loaded with practical suggestions and well worth the price." Read more

"...I highly recommend this book and gurantee it to be money well spent for the knowledge gained." Read more

9 customers mention "Effectiveness"9 positive0 negative

Customers find the book effective, with one describing it as a powerful tool that improved their professionalism.

"...Each time, the professionalism of my book improved...." Read more

"...And it's a powerfully effective little tool. But you'll need this /and/ some other resources to help you sell your novel." Read more

"I found this book to be a great primer about what makes an entire book readable- not just the first five pages...." Read more

"...It's written by Noah Lukeman, who is not only a top-tier agent, but a notable author in his own right...." Read more

19 customers mention "Pacing"9 positive10 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book.

"...If you are a writer, this book has plenty of advice about style, tone, mood, dialog, characterization, hooks, and yes, there's still more!..." Read more

"...Other problems are spelling errors, sloppiness, faded text, and dirty paper; they all indicate carelessness that is generally reflected throughout..." Read more

"...Yes, toward the back there is a chapter on memorable opening lines, where we get to read "Call me Ishamael." for the millionth time...." Read more

"...He gives the worst examples I have ever seen, and rarely shows good ones...." Read more

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The only book on writing that I read in one go. Great advice and I recommend this book to all aspiring author
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2024
    This book has plenty of great writing advice. Read all of it, you will find something to improve your writing.

    And you will get some great laughs. The examples of what not to do range from making me smile to wanting to gut-bustingly laugh out loud. I perform at open mics, and I read the examples for Melodramatic (which I read to the tune of Love is a Many Spendored Thing) (Oh, Henry! Oh, Margaret! My love, my sweetness! And the birds sang a song just for them.) and for Style (The boy ran. Into the woods. It was dark. Scary. Cold. He fell. He got up. Pain. In his arm. The pursuer. Catching up. He ran. AAAAAAAAAAAAH!!!). Okay, this is just a little sample of them, and I added the scream myself at the open mic. The audience liked it.

    If you are a writer, this book has plenty of advice about style, tone, mood, dialog, characterization, hooks, and yes, there's still more!

    If you are only a reader, it will give you great laughs based in reality (the author had to read a lot of submitted manuscripts, so he has seen lots of real life bad writing). With the example of Style, the author said don't laugh, he has read much worse examples of writers trying badly to add suspense to their prose (by chopping it up into teeny weeny pieces?) that kept up for 300 pages. You will read the examples, and think between guffaws, "Hey, I can write better that that!" And you will sit down and start writing a book. And try to make it a good one, with advice from this book. Maybe you won't write a great book, but you will appreciate writing more by learning more about storytelling.

    Buy this book and read this book and learn from this book. It is worth your time, it will inspire you, it will teach you, and it will make you laugh.
    One person found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2002
    Readers and editors are over burdened with books, book deals, writers, publicity, and other aspects of their daily routine. They are expected to read manuscripts at home, so it is no wonder that to get through a large slush pile editors use the precedent: find reasons to reject manuscripts in order to go on to the next one.

    This book does not teach 'how to write,' but how to avoid the mistakes that send your manuscript to the recycle bin. That is the craft of writing.

    To be successful, you have to capture your audience in the first five pages. Noah Lukeman, a prestigious editor turned agent knows the secrets of successful writing. In reality, you must capture your reader in the first five words, sentences, or paragraphs with a strong hook and the good writing.

    Lukeman arranged the chapters in The First Five Pages to show each process in rejecting manuscripts. Follow the steps, and if you are lucky, you might get a contract. Do not follow the steps, and the only reason your manuscript will reach the one person who can make a difference is through a fluke.

    Each chapter concludes with write and rewrite examples and practices. The Lukeman way is included at the back of the book. The only way to become a better writer is to write. The following is only a brief synopsis of a few chapters.

    Presentation: The number one reason aspiring writers get rejections is that the work is inappropriate for the market. Simply put: do not send a bodice-ripper, swashbuckling tale to someone representing coffee table books. Other problems are spelling errors, sloppiness, faded text, and dirty paper; they all indicate carelessness that is generally reflected throughout the book. Research your market, and prepare your manuscript according to the instructions given by the agent, editor, or publisher. If they want Ariel font, give it to them.

    Adjectives and Adverbs: The next step to rejection is the overuse or misuse of modifiers. These words tell rather than show your noun. "If a day is described as 'hot, dry, bright and dusty,'" these words are tedious and the image becomes significantly unimportant. Overuse is very easy to spot by a cursory glance.

    Sound: If your manuscript has reached this level, it is being read. Pacing, rhythm, meter, or beat is about the way your prose reveals the story. "Prose can be technically correct, but rhythmically unpleasant." Read your work aloud; if it does not sound right to you, pay attention.

    Comparison: Analogy, simile, and metaphor can be overdone. I read about 1/3 of a book recommended to me as an excellent thriller. The plot, characters, dialogue, details, and descriptions were good. I could not read the book because everything is not like something else, and every paragraph or three included a simile.

    Style: If the writing feels forced or exaggerated, or the writer began to showcase his words rather than the story, the probability of rejection is high. Another nit for me is redundancy; this is a matter of using the same or similar word in close proximity. It is also a reason for rejection.

    I recommend two books to my clients or fledgling writers. This is one of them. THe other is Self-Editing for Fiction Writers: How to Edit Yourself into Print, by Renni Browne.

    Victoria Tarrani
    352 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2005
    The concept behind Noah Lukeman's "The First Five Pages: A Writer's Guide to Staying Out of the Rejection Pile" is that editors can reject most manuscripts within minutes (or even seconds) based on a few simple criteria. He uses these criteria as a guide to show you how you can spot the flaws in your own work and then go on to solve them.

    The great thing is that this isn't just a guide to fixing surface flaws and using gimmicks to try to "sneak" your work past editors, which is what it sort of sounded like when I first heard of the book. Instead it uses those simple criteria as a way of organizing major, real issues. It delves into the idea that there's a very good reason why editors can dismiss most manuscripts out of hand--these criteria are used to note real problems that plague manuscripts and make them not worth the editor's time. Because of this, by going through the criteria and showing you how to apply these criteria in judging and repairing your own work, Lukeman is telling you how to make your manuscript better.

    Lukeman approaches things in the order that he, as an editor, tends to look at and dismiss them by, suggesting that you do the exercises from the end of each section and chapter on your manuscript before proceeding to the next part. This means that with each successive pass through your manuscript, it should (in theory) last just a little longer through an editor's evaluation.

    In each part Lukeman goes into a typical problem that will cause a manuscript to get quickly rejected by editors. He explains why it's a problem and how to fix it, gives examples, and then provides exercises to use on your own manuscript.

    I can't agree with all of his suggestions, and this book makes for somewhat dry reading, but it's a great checklist to apply to your manuscript.
    7 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on December 21, 2024
    This book tells it like it is fellow creative writers. Where has this author been all my life? I highlight each page and annotate like crazy. This author knows how to help fellow writers learn the craft. Get this book.

Top reviews from other countries

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  • B A
    5.0 out of 5 stars Worth reading.
    Reviewed in India on February 26, 2017
    Not bad at all.
  • Jesús Ángel de las Heras Jiménez
    5.0 out of 5 stars La explicación del rechazo.
    Reviewed in Spain on September 12, 2012
    Busqué este libro ante la recomendación de un compañero de editorial, Amazón, porque decía que contenía muchas claves por las que rechazan manuscritos muchas editoriales. En realidad el autor, agente literario y editor él mismo, nos dice las causas por las que él rechaza manuscritos, y el subtítulo que le ha puesto a su libro no puede ser más sugerente: Guía de escritores para estar fuera de la pila de rechazados.
    El libro está articulado en veinte capítulos, diecinueve temáticos y un epílogo en el que nos da un consejo de oro en el último párrafo: Pregúntate qué harías si supieras que nunca te van a publicar. ¿Aún así escribirías? Si escribes de verdad por el arte que hay en ello, la respuesta será sí. Y entonces, cada palabra es una victoria.
    El libro se concentra en tres aspectos fundamentales de la escritura: 1 Evitar errores comunes en los manuscritos, 2 Atraer la atención de los agentes y editores, y 3 Llevar la escritura a un nivel superior. Pero en un nivel mayor de concreción, los 19 capítulos temáticos se dividen en tres grandes grupos:

    1. Problemas preliminares: presentación del manuscrito, adjetivos y adverbios, sonido, comparación y estilo.

    2. Diálogo: entre líneas, lugares comunes, informativo, melodramático, difícil de seguir.

    3. La imagen general: mostrar frente a decir, punto de vista y narración, personajes, ganchos, sutileza, tono, foco, escenarios, paso y progreso.
    Debo confesar que, aunque el tema del libro es fundamentalmente informar a los escritores de qué es lo que hay que evitar para que los agentes literarios y editoriales no desechen sus libros tras haberse leído apenas las primeras cinco páginas, se insiste una y otra vez en que lo que está bien escrito atrae la atención del posible publicador, y una pobre gramática, aunque sea por descuido, o un estilo cojo, tienen muchas más posibilidades de que sean rechazados. Pero que el manuscrito sea impecable desde esos puntos de vista no garantiza nada, si hay otros aspectos que no están trabajados, como el del paso de la narración, o el progreso, que son los más difíciles de detectar cuando estamos inmersos en nuestra obra.

    Es una lástima que el libro esté sólo en inglés. Cuando lo compré no estaba ni siquiera en
    formato mobi (veo al escribir esto que ya lo está), así que lo encargué a Amazón, pero me lo enviaron a los pocos días en papel. Me ha tomado un tiempo en leerlo, pero no porque su estilo sea difícil de interpretar, sino porque contiene muchas ideas en apenas 197 páginas de formato inferior al A5. Es un libro de esos pocos que justifican aprender inglés para poder leerlo.
    Report
  • Fitipaldi
    5.0 out of 5 stars Oltre "The Elements of Style" - Indispensabile
    Reviewed in Italy on December 3, 2013
    Cosa può superare il classico "The elements of style" di Strunk e White?
    Per la mia personale esperienza, solo e soltanto questo titolo.
    Asciutto, pratico, con esempi fittizi e tratti da capolavori della letteratura (anglosassone), e schede di esercizi alla fine di ogni capitolo.
    Il testo è organizzato in tre parti - "Preliminary problems", "Dialogue" e "The bigger picture" - con temi affrontati in modo da migliorare le abilità tecniche e narrative dell'aspirante autore - o dell'ipotetico editore che debba trovare gli elementi necessari a "cassare" le proposte ricevute.
    Lo colloco nel mio personale Olimpo di testi fondamentali per la scrittura con la serie "Write Great Fiction" e "Screenplay" di Syd Field.
    (testo in inglese)
  • JOSÉ ALEXANDRE BASTOS PEREIRA
    5.0 out of 5 stars Quer escrever? Comece por aqui
    Reviewed in Brazil on May 10, 2021
    Recomendo como um bom guia para quem quer aprender como escrever e como avaliar o seu próprio. Usei as dicas e fiz os exerce acho que melhorou meus resultados
  • mwbowers
    5.0 out of 5 stars Very fast service. Good condition.
    Reviewed in Japan on July 12, 2009
    Very fast service. Good condition.