Books are made up of scenes. “Scenes,
like little stories,” says author Quinn Dalton, “have a beginning, middle and
end.”
Each scene in a book, whether
it is a picture book, middle grade, YA, or an adult novel, should be “…units of
significant action that provide new information and advance a story.” They
should “contain the following elements:
Setting: ..when and where the action is taking place and the main players
involved.
News and/or action: New developments…something about our characters and
their situation that we didn’t know before…
Conflict: The desires of the main character are being thwarted
Setup: The closing of
the scene leaves us a little smarter but still wanting more.”*
So, unlike the ending of a novel, the ending
of a scene does not equal a resolution. It leaves the reader hungry. Here’s an
example of a scene from Larry Dane Brimner’s award winning book, Black and White: The Confrontation between
Reverend Fred L. Shuttlesworth and Eugene “Bull” Connor. Notice how
Brimner’s scene follows the points outlined by Dalton. I’ve color-coded the
lines to match Dalton’s definition. See if you agree:
…On
Thursday, December 20 [1956], when the Supreme Court’s order to desegregate its
buses was delivered to Montgomery, Fred sent a telegram to Birmingham’s commissioners.
He gave them an ultimatum: comply with the new law and desegregate Birmingham’s
busy by December 26 or Negroes would “rise” up if they didn’t.
Christmas night, deacon Charlie
Robinson and his wife called upon the Shuttlesworths. While the women and
children visited in one part f the house, Fred took the deacon into a front
bedroom to discuss the protest action that was planned for the next day if
Birmingham’s buses remained segregated. At
about 9:40 p.m.—“Whoom!”—sixteen sticks of dynamite detonated outside the
Shuttlesworth home, bringing down the front portion of the roof, shattering
windows, and leaving much of the parsonage a smoking pile of splinters and
rubble with only the Christmas-tree lights still burning. Fred had the Klan’s answer to his ultimatum.
Picture books follow the same
rules. Here’s a scene from Sarah Marwil Lamstein’s Big Night for Salamanders:
“Rain tat-tatting on his hood, Evan runs from his school
bus up the puddly driveway. He glances at the forested hill beyond his house
and wonders, Will tonight be Big Night?”
In this scene, the setting is
Evan’s house. The news is it’s raining—maybe raining just enough.
The conflict is the unstated
question: What if it’s NOT raining enough?
Enough for what? Enough for the
setup: Big Night? What is Big
Night? The reader doesn’t yet know, but
turns the page to learn more.
As you revise your work,
check the scenes you’ve written and determine if you have included the four
rules Dalton recommends. Following them will make your scenes stronger.
4 comments:
I like the way you color-coded the points! It helps!
I think it would be beneficial -- especially for new writers -- to highlight their own manuscripts in this way.
Very informative, M!
Thanks, Diane and Jet. It is more difficult to highlight the points in a picture book because of the necessary briefness of the genre and some words must serve two purposes. In this example, the idea of the rain contributes to the setting but also to the conflict.
Excellent points, Mur!
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