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Keep Readers Reading with Stronger Chapter Openings

Let’s talk about something that is important to get right: chapter hooks.

Yawn! That’s a boring opening. All I did was tell you what the chapter is about.

How about this one?

If your opening doesn’t grab someone, the rest of your craft never gets a chance to matter.

You need better hooks.

Honestly, social media hooks are the death of me. I can’t capture attention in three seconds flat. Luckily a book gives you a little more breathing room than a TikTok caption. But you have to earn that attention, chapter after chapter.

Okay that is much better!

What Actually Makes a Hook Work

A strong hook:

  • Asks a thought-provoking question
  • Drops a powerful quote
  • Shares an interesting statistic
  • Delivers a startling fact or bold statement
  • Tells an exciting anecdote
  • Paints a relatable scenario that speaks to your reader’s pain points

Notice that first one says thought-provoking question, not just any question.

When I taught eighth grade, my students loved opening essays with gems like “Have you ever heard of Michael Jordan?” or “Do you like to play Minecraft?”

Yeah … those aren’t hooks. A yes-or-no question causes readers to just shrug and put the book down.

And if you’ve ever opened a chapter with a great quote, then followed it up with content that doesn’t speak to the quote: The quote alone won’t save you. You can’t just drop a quote in and call it good.

One quick clarification too, since I see this mix-up often. A quote sitting at the top of your chapter, separated from your content, is called an epigraph and is not your hook. So if you use epigraphs, don’t think you don’t need hooks.

What this looks like in practice

You can combine hook types, like a thought-provoking questions and quote.

Brad Montague said, “Dreamers are many, but doers are few.” What separates the dreamers from the doers? How can you actively become a doer? You have been told all your life: create a goal, act on it, then create another goal, and act on it, etc. This constant path of creating and then acting will mold you into the person you want to become, bringing lasting happiness.

Or use just one:

Quote:
Steven Spielberg said, “Technology can be our best friend, and technology can also be the biggest party pooper of our lives. It interrupts our own story, interrupts our ability to have a thought or a daydream, to imagine something wonderful because we’re too busy bridging the walk from the cafeteria back to the office on the cell phone.”[1] As Steven noted, cell phones can negatively affect adults who have not had the time to mature and develop their story, so imagine how much this affects the life of a young teenager.

—Notice how I didn’t just drop in the quote. My sentence afterward is about the quote and keeps the momentum going.

Question:

  • “While cell phones are becoming a given in teenagers’ lives, are they doing more harm than good?”
  • “What would you do if you could play God for a day? That’s exactly what the leaders of the tiny island nation of Guam tried to answer.”[2]

[1] “Spielberg in the Twilight Zone,” Wired, June 1, 2002, https://www.wired.com/2002/06/spielberg/.

[2] “Essay Hooks Ideas,” University of Wisconsin-Madison Psychology 225, accessed October 22, 2025, https://online225.psych.wisc.edu/wp-content/uploads/225-Master/225-UnitPages/Unit-03/PSY-225_Gernsbacher_Hooks.pdf.

Since people are wired to love stories, anecdotes always win unless they’re too long and readers lose patience waiting for you to get to the point.

A bold statement can work too, especially when it pushes against something your reader already believes. Telling someone that everything they’ve learned about productivity is wrong does more to hook them than gently introducing your topic ever could.

Two Real Examples of Weak Hooks (And How to Fix Them)

Example 1

“Do you know how to achieve your goals? If you don’t, I will walk you through the five most important steps to achieving your goals.”

Technically, this opens with a question, so someone followed the rule, right? Except it’s a yes-or-no question, and goal-setting content is everywhere. Nothing makes the reader want to keep reading.

A stronger version might lead with a startling fact: ninety-two percent of people never achieve their New Year’s resolutions, and it’s rarely about laziness.

Or it might lead with a sharper question, like asking whether the real problem isn’t motivation but strategy.

Example 2

“Communication is important in relationships. Without good communication, misunderstandings happen and conflicts arise. In this chapter, we’ll discuss how to communicate better with your partner so you can have a healthier relationship.”

This reads like a high school thesis statement, technically correct, completely forgettable.

Compare that to opening with a scene: a woman yelling “You’re not listening!” while her partner sits there genuinely confused, certain he was listening.

Readers can picture that moment, and it does more in three sentences than the original paragraph does in five.

[1] “Essay Hooks Ideas,” University of Wisconsin-Madison Psychology 225, accessed October 22, 2025, https://online225.psych.wisc.edu/wp-content/uploads/225-Master/225-UnitPages/Unit-03/PSY-225_Gernsbacher_Hooks.pdf.

Conclusion

Pause at the end of your first paragraph, or your first few, in every chapter and ask whether you’ve actually hooked your reader. If you’re not sure, that’s usually your answer.

Add in a good hook.

Also note the type of hook you’re using. If every single chapter opens with a question, your reader will start to feel the pattern, and patterns are the opposite of surprising. Mix it up.

Now go hook in those readers.

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I’d love to hear from you. Comment below using any of these prompts to guide you:

  • What questions do you have?
  • What’s your favorite type of chapter hook: a question, a story, a surprising fact, a quote, or something else?
  • Have you ever stopped reading a book because the opening felt slow or uninteresting?
  • Which chapter in your current manuscript has the strongest opening, and why do you think it works?

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About Me

With a passion for words, collecting quotes, and reading books, I love all things writing related. I will admit to having a love-hate relationship with writing as I am constantly critical, but I feel a grand sense of accomplishment spending hours editing my own writing.

Lest you think I don’t have much of a life, I should add I also enjoy dancing, singing, acting, eating out, and spending quality time with my husband and adorable kids.

I’m pretty cool. And you may want to be my friend. But in order for that to happen, you will need to know more about me than this tiny box allows.

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About the Author: Katie Chambers

Katie Chambers, owner and head editor of Beacon Point, loves helping authors learn to write better and editors learn to better manage their business. As a former English teacher, teaching is a big passion of hers. Follow her on LinkedIn or Instagram.

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