By Dandi Daley Mackall
My first book came out 36 years ago. (I was, of course, 3 years old,
for you math majors.) Since then, I’ve had nearly 500 books published by practically
every major U.S. publisher, and I’ve written in every genre, except science
fiction. Yet all of my books have one thing in common—they contain frozen
moments.
So, what’s a frozen moment? And how can you exploit yours to take you
deeper into your book? Here’s how my narrator explains the concept in Larger-Than-Life Lara:
All of this happened in just a
couple of seconds, I guess, but it felt like it was a frozen piece of time.
Mrs. Smith told us about “frozen moments.” Sometimes whole countries and even
the whole world has stuff happen that people will remember for the rest of
their lives. Like Mrs. Smith said she knows people who were alive when
President John F. Kennedy got shot and killed dead. And every single one of
them can tell you where they were and what they were wearing and who else was
in the room with them when that president got shot and killed. Plus also, you
can ask Mrs. Smith herself where she was on that day of 9/11…and her eyes will
go blank because they’re seeing it happen all over again. That’s what Mrs.
Smith says. And I believe her because I can tell you exactly where I was when
that school shooting happened. . . .
But the stuff about frozen
moments is important because if you land into one, then you got you some good
material for your story. Because you can call it up in your head again and have
everything you need right there. It doesn’t go away on you, like other memories.
It’s frozen. And this can be a good thing or a bad thing.
I guarantee that you have frozen moments—a teacher said, “You’re a good
reader.” A kid said, “You can’t play/sit/hang with us.” Scientists have done brain
studies highlighting memory. An intense emotion can “brand” the brain so that
even when you can’t remember what you had for breakfast, if you had breakfast, or what breakfast is, you’ll remember that
frozen moment.
Use those! Something that intense has to be exploited for your story.
Only once (in my almost-autobiographical novel, The Secrets of Tree Taylor) have I used such a moment as-is. Yet my
best scenes come from “stolen” frozen moments--a slap and a white pick-up in Silence of Murder; 2
boyfriend-breakup-moments in My Boyfriends’ Dogs, the novel and the movie; a scene from Eva Underground that might make you hurl
as Eva and I did; countless exhilarating moments with my horses in the five
series of horse novels, and on and on.
Take an hour and list as many specific moment-memories as you can.
Start with your first memory and keep going. Then let your characters share
your frozen moments. Your unforgettable moments will make vivid scenes your
readers will never forget.
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Dandi won her first
writing contest as a 10-year-old tomboy. Her 50 words on “Why I Want to Be
Batboy for the Kansas City A’s” won first place, but
the team wouldn’t let a girl be batboy. It was her first taste of rejection. Since then, Dandi Daley Mackall has
become an award-winning author of about 500 books for all ages, with sales of 4
million copies in 22 countries. She is winner of the Helen Keating Ott Award
for Contributions to Children’s Literature and the Distinguished Alum Award
from University of Missouri. In 2016, she was inducted to the OCIRA
(International Reading Association’s) Hall of Fame. The Silence of Murder is
winner of the Edgar Award and ALA-YALSA Best Fiction for Young Adults. Legend of Ohio and Rudy Rides the Rails: A Depression Era Story won Notable Book awards
- Notable Social Studies Trade Book for Young People National Council of Social
Studies & Children's Book Council; winner of the Angel Award, Winner of the
"Award of Excellence" from Chicago Book Show) and A Girl Named Dan (her own “batboy”
story, and a lesson on Title IX), 2 Mom’s Choice Awards & Amelia Bloom
Award. The novel, Eva Underground, nominated ALA Best Book, starred Kirkus review,
awarded a Top Teen Read by New York Public Library, finalist for Ohioana Award,
was based on the author’s experiences behind the Iron Curtain. Other books have
been awarded Romantic Times’ Top Pick., KY Bluegrass Award List, the William
Allan White Award list, KS and KY Children’s Choice lists, and the Delaware
Diamond Top 5 list, Gold Medallion Award. My Boyfriends’ Dogs (now a Hallmark movie, “most watched” 2014), gained her national
attention. Her Knopf/Random House novel, The
Secrets of Tree Taylor. Dandi is a national speaker, keynoting at
conferences and Young Author events, and has made dozens of appearances on TV,
including ABC, NBC, and CBS. New
Releases: October 2016--Larger-than-Life
Lara, Fall 2016—One Small Donkey,
March 2017 –With Love, Wherever You Are,Tyndale House, A novel based on the true story of Dandi’s parents, Army Dr. and
Army nurse in WW2, and over 600 of their wartime lettersAlso in 2017: Rockaway Blues, Skyhorse, a rollicking,
rhyming rock-‘n’-roll picture book. Visit Dandi at www.dandibooks.com,
and on Facebook, Twitter, Goodreads, etc.
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