1.This sentence feels to me a little overloaded. There's enough going on to emphasize the gale: the rain "sheets" and the thunderstorm "roars" overhead. That's plenty. We can lose "heavy." Sheeting rain won't be anything but.
You don't want the first sentence on your first page to be dense. This one isn't, but you don't want to leave any suggestion this will be a tough read. Welcome your reader at the door. Invite them in. The party's just beginning.
Now, my favorite peeve: "-ing" words (present progressive tense; see
here) need at least cursory reconsideration. If you can simplify/shorten these to their simpler form, it almost always streamlines your sentence. Let's try here. First, we strip the sentence into its essential components, usually subject-verb-object:
"Rain sheets down. A thunderstorm roars."
Recombining into one sentence:
"Rain sheets down as a thunderstorm roars."
Nine syllables compared to the original fifteen.
That eliminates the "-ing". It's debatable if this variation offers any significant improvement. But it demonstrates how writers must constantly disassemble sentences, like Lego blocks. Weigh them. Consider their shape and color. Rebuild those sentences. Discard blocks, substitute new ones. And so on. The right word in the right place.
Because we really want to make this first sentence spark, I jettisoned "overhead." Do we need it? Is there confusion about the thunderstorm if we remove that word? None, I think. I've never seen a thunderstorm anywhere but overhead. So, it's safe to leave that as implicit.
Let's compare what we had and what we've got:
"Heavy rain sheets down from a thunderstorm roaring overhead."
"Rain sheets down as a thunderstorm roars."
Okay, good. Sheeting rain, roaring thunder. We held onto Robert's key elements that appeal to our sense of sound and touch. But this version is a faster read.
I have an idea we can thin out the rest of this paragraph. We don't need seven lines of description to move past this block of basic action. Oh, I should mention here about action blocks and the guideline that you should keep your paragraphs to three lines or less. Four in a pinch. It's not hard to group your action beats into neat little shot/sequence packages. Readers will thank you for the white space and the improved readability.
How about:
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A pickup truck fights through the sheeting rain of a thunderstorm, pulls into the driveway.
The driver jumps out. He circles to the passenger side to let out his mutt SOMENAME. The dog barks, streaks to the house. JAKE hauls a cooler and fishing gear from the truck bed and sprints for the front door.
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That's about 70 words down to 55. We knocked out the repetition of "pulls." We switched "run" to "streaks", "reaches" to "hauls" -- slightly punchier verbs.
2.If we're in the kitchen before our characters enter, can we have that moment serve the story? For example, show us something important in that moment before they enter (or as they enter), some object, something that gives us story information to work with. If the shot of them entering serves no purpose other than to match cut, do we absolutely need it?
Could we cut that whole first paragraph ("The front door opens...") and start the scene with "The dog shakes in the middle of the kitchen." There's our match cut right there! Dog gets drenched outside; dog shakes itself dry inside. Cause and effect. We know this is continuous action. There's no danger we'll assume this scene takes place later, elsewhere.
Here's where we get out protag description. We should call him Jake throughout because we already named him in the opening scene. Or, call him "the man" consistently in that first scene and name him here. I like the second approach. It feels natural to name him here, in the bright light of the kitchen where we can thoroughly inspect him. And I really want to see that dog named, regardless if he's named yet in dialog. The sooner we become endeared to the lovable pooch the better, and naming him early will do that.
"... sunburned from a day fishing that started brighter than it ended." Hooboy. Hoooooo-boy, that lovely observation. Literal and figurative meanings in a tight hug. Fact and feeling. Rest assured, gentle reader. If my right hand creeps toward the keyboard intending to tinker with that sentence, my left will snatch up something large and heavy and Mr Right will soon find himself in the emergency room sealed inside a blood-spattered ziploc bag. Way to go, Robert.
3.We know it's the kitchen table because we know we're in the kitchen. Very minor, as most edits will be in this 10PTT, but one less word is one more small notch forward on the readability accelerator.
We shouldn't fuss about this sentence. It's a one-liner. No pressing reason to trim it. But I see "puts" and already I'm restlessly tapping my SMASH-LAZY-VERBS hammer against my left palm. I hate those sonsabitches. Squatting there between subject and object. Trying to blend in, all innocent. Smirking at me. Daring me to notice. Those conceited eyes challenging me to care enough. To do something about it. So this is how it is, huh? You think I won't? You think I ain't got the big brassy cojones to step up, mofo? You think I won't bring down the hammer, bring it down and down until that snotty smirk turns to red pixels smeared across my screen? Oh it's on, my friend, it's so very on --
4.I wanted these to be discreet moments, and quick. Reach, BOOM, dark. Thus the split into three. Once sentence kind of mushes it all together. I wondered if it works better even shorter, letting the reader join the dots:
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He reaches for the cooler.
A roof-shaking THUNDERCLAP.
Blackout.
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Twenty words down to ten. Booyakasha! All right, yes, that revision is highly stylized -- Walter Hill-ified -- and you wouldn't switch styles suddenly like that. Sadly, it doesn't look as good threaded into a single line:
"He reaches for the cooler. A roof-shaking THUNDERCLAP. Blackout."
Not so much "booyakasha" now. Mostly just "Booo! Boooooooo!"
5.Well lookee here. We reeled in a line and at the same time cut the fat.
"The dog barks." How? We're missing opportunities to personify this mutt, give him some character. Coloring his barks would contribute to this. "The dog barks a warning" -- mutt being protective. "The dog barks fearfully" -- mutt is a 'fraidy cat.
6. "Light shines from the glass of the back door." This is a sentence that absolutely does not need to be there -- unless later in the story something happens that relies on us knowing the back door has a glass panel. It just slows us down. Get Jake out the back door with his flashlight asap.
Haha, YES! The dog has a name now. I could bear it no longer. Say hello to Scooter. The name should be something more water related, this story being all about water. Never mind. Scooter it shall be for the rest of this 10PTT.
"... followed by the dog" is too limp. It might be okay to describe a dog trotting happily behind its master. Not here. Here, Scooter is on guard, hackles raised, jittery, alert and wired. Ready to attack.
6a."He walks back to the back door." vs "He starts back."
Brevity, muthafucka!
7. Need the slug. We've returned to the back porch to witness the first sign of the protagonist's changing world.
I itched to strike out "of the house" in "... to the other side of the house." Also felt like we should see Jake's dumbfounded reaction, e.g.
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Shuffling, wet footprints track across the concrete patio. Jakes stares at them. Stares some more.
Scooter growls into the darkness.
Slowly Jake follows the footprints with his flashlight.
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