The Mercury News

DALLAS WOODBURN ‘What would happen if we died and got to live the best week of our lives?’

- BY LYNN CAREY

Fremont author Dallas Woodburn got an early start — she was 10 when the Los Angeles Times ran a review of her first book. Now 32, the prize-winning writer hosts a book lovers’ podcast called “Overflowin­g Bookshelve­s,” works with young writers at the Write On! Books organizati­on she founded and is a Writer’s Grotto Fellow. Her newest book, the bitterswee­t YA novel “The Best Week That Never Happened,” is set on the Big Island of Hawaii, where childhood best friends, Tegan and Kai, are suddenly reunited and things turn romantic — but Tegan has strange memory gaps and doesn’t know how she got there.

Q

Wait, you wrote your first book at age 10??

A

It was a project through my elementary school in Ventura. We had a grant to do something creative, and my idea was to put together all my poems and stories and make a book that would make money for my school. I just copied off all the pages, put them together and sold it for $5. I wasn’t afraid of rejection, so I sent it off to different newspapers and got the review in the L.A. Times book section.

Q

What made you want to be a writer?

A

I always loved reading — Dr. Seuss, Shel Silverstei­n. My dad, Woody Woodburn, was a sports columnist for the L.A. Times. Seeing my dad at the newspaper office a lot and at home writing his column was my biggest influence.

Q

What inspired “The Best Week That Never Happened?”

A

I started writing it after one of my best friends was killed in a car accident. There was a line in my head — what would happen if we died and got to live the best week of our lives? I loved that idea. I got so excited to see what would happen next.

Q

Whom would you cast in a movie version?

A

I envision Kai as the Hawaiian actor Keahu Kahuanui, and Tegan by the actress Haley Pullos, who happens to be a Palo Alto native.

Q

What are you working on now?

A

Another young adult novel — very slowly. It has a love story element and plays with the idea of alternate realities. The main characters are in a wrong reality, trying to get to a better one.

Q

Do you have a favorite indie bookstore here in the Bay Area?

A

There are so many good ones! I love Rakestraw in Danville — I lived (in that town) with my grandparen­ts when I had the John Steinbeck Fellowship at San Jose State. I love Mrs. Dalloway’s in Berkeley. Also, Kepler’s in Menlo Park and Hicklebee’s in San Jose. Bookstores are my happy place. I can never leave without buying one or two books.

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