We recently finished the book, Behind the Beautiful Forevers, by Katherine Boo, a memoir of life
in a slum of Mumbai, India. It wasn’t
one of my favorite books, and when another woman at Book Club asked me why I
said, “I feel that if it wasn’t for the prologue people wouldn’t read the
book. The prologue is what would keep
people interested because by the time we finally find out what happened the
night the prologue took place we are already care enough about the characters
to find out what happens to all of them.”
The lady smiled and said, “Good thing the prologue is there
then.”
That shut me up. I
realized then that the prologue was the most important part of this book. If it weren’t there I would not have finished
the book. This fact made me start
thinking about how important beginnings are.
I’ve talked with many people who put books down and never pick them up
again. One of the main reasons is
because the first several chapters didn’t capture their attention. The author may have put his attention getters
later in the book, but for some people that’s too late and the book goes to
Goodwill collecting dust.
The slum of Annawadi |
From the description of people passing by the burnt body of
The One Leg I knew Behind the Beautiful
Forevers was not going to be a lets-skip-through-daisies book. I knew this book was going to be about life as
it really was for the people living in the slums of Mumbai. This book was raw. Boo would not hold anything back as she
described flies sitting in the eyes of babies, the stench of the public
toilets, and hunger that resulted in boys becoming thieves to feed themselves.
Boo’s move to start her book in the middle of the story was
wise. She captured the reader’s
attention and told readers that the book they had just picked up wasn’t going
to cut corners in telling the honest truth of living in Annawadi. If you are looking for beautifully written memoir,
I would stop by your local library and pick up Behind the Beautiful Forevers.
It’s a book you won’t soon forget.
For some extra fun on beginnings, Studio C has a great skit
on the impact beginning of books can have on the reader.