Clare T. Walker

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The Keys of Death playlist!

October 19, 2021 by Clare T. Walker

When I was writing The Keys of Death, here’s something that really helped me: a playlist.

Why? Because music is emotionally evocative, and when combined with lyrics that told the story of a character’s heart or fit the mood I was trying to convey, the writing went more smoothly and I was able to maintain the emotional through-line of the book. My Keys of Death playlist included:

  • the classic Andy Williams rendition of “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” (to get me into the yuletide spirit, since the events of the book occur at Christmastime, and it was summer when I did much of the initial draft)
  • instrumental Irish music (reels and jigs) by Altan, plus “Sunday Bloody Sunday” and “October” by U2 (to make me feel like a rebellious northern Irish youth caught between happy-go-lucky “Irishness” and the anger of The Troubles)
  • the hymns “You Raise Me Up” and “Be Still My Soul” (to express the spiritual yearning and anguish of the main characters)

Four songs in particular, though, I returned to over and over again, because each one matched up perfectly with one of the characters.

BTW, when I published the book in 2016, I put all the members of my mailing list into a virtual hat, stirred them around (virtually), and drew two lucky winners to receive those four songs from the Keys of Death playlist.

When I went to the music site to collect the four songs for the lucky winner, I found this:

 

Never! Never! NEVER!!!!!! I hate this with the burning intensity of a million white-hot suns. Okay, that's an exaggeration. But only for effect. Notice how I said, "Only for effect," and not "Only for affect." Look it up.

Never! Never! NEVER!!!!!! I hate this with the burning intensity of a million white-hot suns. Okay, that was an exaggeration, but only for effect. Note that I said “effect” and not “affect.” Look it up.

 

Excuse me a moment while I rant about one of my pet peeves: I gave the songs to the lucky winner. I did not “gift” the songs, because gift is a noun, not a verb. This verbing of nouns, and vice versa, drives me batty. For example: I did not “author” The Keys of Death. I wrote it, and I am its author. If you say a person is “gifted,” are you trying to say that the person possesses rare personal qualities or talents, or that he has just been consigned to a life of indentured servitude?

Another example: you may invite me to things, or you may send me an invitation, but please, please, puh-lease don’t send me an “invite.” Or worse, “gift” me an “invite.” Why do people do this? Why do people say, “This assertion I’m trying to make is evidenced by the following facts.” Evidenced? Since when is evidence a verb? Do you mean that your assertion is “proven by the following facts?” How about this one: “Clare Walker guested The Late Late Late Show.” You mean “Clare Walker served as guest host for The Late Late Late Show?” Or “Clare Walker substituted for the regular host of The Late Late Late Show?” Argh!

If you are okay with this crazed  use abuse of the English language, please visit Grammar Girl and get your head right. Sheesh.

Where was I?

Oh, yes. My four favorite songs on the playlist are:

"I'm Alive" Peter Furler album: On Fire

“I’m Alive”
Peter Furler
album: On Fire

"Caught Up" Usher album: Confessions

“Caught Up”
Usher
album: Confessions

"Good To Be Alive" Jason Gray album: A Way to See in the Dark

“Good To Be Alive”
Jason Gray
album: A Way to See in the Dark

"What Faith Can Do" Kutless album: It Is Well

“What Faith Can Do”
Kutless
album: It Is Well

Can guess which song applies to which character in The Keys of Death?

Filed Under: Creativity, The Keys of Death Tagged With: Caught Up, Good To Be Alive, grammar, I'm Alive, Jason Gray, Kutless, nouns, Peter Furler, proper English usage, The Keys of Death, Usher, verbs, What Faith Can Do

review of Productivity for Creative People by Mark McGuinness

September 13, 2021 by Clare T. Walker

 

Productivity for Creative People: How to Get Creative Work Done in an “Always On” World by Mark McGuinness
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I am an independent author of fiction and non-fiction, and I found this book extremely helpful in learning how to find balance. The author, Mark McGuinness, is a successful creative professional (he’s a published poet) who also coaches artists to help them reach their creative dreams and achieve their business goals

Chapter 3 (“Reduce Overload”) was the most practical and actionable section for me. In this chapter, Mark encourages you to organize all your various tasks into four types:

  1. On-going work (repeating stuff and stuff you do every day. Admin-type stuff usually ends up in this category),
  2. Special events (one-time things that need a lot of preparation ahead of time),
  3. Backlogs (stuff you’re behind on), and
  4. Asset creation (the creative work — stuff that stays done).

I would venture to guess that many creatives are overloaded with 1 and 2 stuff, frustrated that the amount of 3 stuff keeps increasing, and even more frustrated that hardly any 4 stuff is getting done. That’s definitely where I was when I read the book, and Mark’s advice on this helped me a lot!

Bonus: the rest of the book is excellent, too! Thanks, Mark! Well done!

Filed Under: Creativity, Reviews Tagged With: creativity, productivity, writing

1500 words of gold

April 8, 2016 by Clare T. Walker

Remember the pilot episode of ER? The one where Dr. Peter Benton–only a second-year surgery resident, hotshot, brash, against all the regs, but correct in his assessment–takes a guy with an aneurysm to surgery and keeps him alive until a board certified surgeon can get there? Saves his life. The surgeon congratulates him. He goes to the locker room and…

…epic fist pump.

pilot

That is me right now. Am 4800 words into the new novel (another veterinary medical thriller). Just read over the last 1500 words–they are fist pump worthy!

Tomorrow I may write crap, but today it’s gold!

“I am on FIRE!!”

Screen Shot 2016-04-08 at 8.22.30 PM

Filed Under: Creativity Tagged With: Dr. Peter Benton, epic fist-pump, ER, I am on fire!, Sherlock

how Alan Rickman helped me finish my book

January 21, 2016 by Clare T. Walker

alan rickman photo for pancreatic cancer article

Alan Rickman Feb. 21, 1946 — Jan. 14, 2016

Most of us have by now heard the news that British actor Alan Rickman passed away on January 14, 2016 — a week ago today. He appeared in some wonderful plays & movies, portrayed many unforgettable and iconic roles, and will be greatly missed by fans of all ages. My favorite Alan Rickman movies/roles: Die Hard (1988), Truly Madly Deeply (1990), Sense & Sensibility (1995), Galaxy Quest (1999), Bottleshock (2008), and, of course, his portrayal of Prof. Severus Snape in the Harry Potter movies (2001-2011). And who could forget his appearance in Victoria Wood’s BBC Christmas Special: “Plots & Proposals” (2000)?

His movie persona also helped me personally in a major writing project that I just finished. Back in 2008 I began writing a novel. The working title was the veterinary medical thriller. Later, the working title became Play Dead. It is now set to be published as The Keys of Death.

While I was working on it, I remembered some advice I heard somewhere about creating memorable characters: “Would a great actor want to play this role?”

Most of the time I do not have a specific person in mind when I build a character, but when writing The Keys of Death I based one character specifically on Alan Rickman. When I wrote this character’s dialogue and described his mannerisms, I vividly pictured Rickman in my mind acting the role and heard that one-of-a-kind voice in my head. As a fiction author, it really helped me to bring this character to life in my mind and hopefully on the page.

The character’s name is Dr. David Brightman. He makes his first appearance in Chapter 2 of The Keys of Death, which you can download and read by clicking this link:

Chapter 2 “The Most Wonderful Time of the Year”

There’s another connection to Alan Rickman in The Keys of Death: a scene near the end of the book was “inspired” by Anthony Minghella’s film adaptation of the Samuel Beckett stage production Play. The three characters in it were portrayed by Alan Rickman, Juliet Stevenson, and Kristin Scott Thomas. It’s a really odd piece, but here’s a link to it: Play (2001). When (if) you watch it, you will realize why I put the word inspired in quotes, above, since the scene in my book is a vision of Hell. (Really!)

The Keys of Death will be available for purchase this weekend on Amazon, then hopefully at other online venues once I make the file conversions.

I hope you enjoy the sample chapter! Now get out there and geek out about Alan Rickman with the collection of links below:

 

Snape-severus-snape-15700150-640-480

J.K. Rowling reveals ‘Harry Potter’ secret she told Alan Rickman by Kelly West, 1-20-16

http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2016/01/20/jk-rowling-reveals-harry-potter-secret-told-alan-rickman/

This article is interesting, because I suspect Alan Rickman and possibly the other filmmakers knew something about Snape’s back story and true character as early as The Prisoner of Azkaban. Near the end of that movie, many of the characters are gathered around the base of the Whomping Willow and Lupin turns into a werewolf. The werewolf turns menacingly toward the three children and Snape. Snape shoves the children behind him and spreads out his arms to protect them. It’s a quick moment, subtly portrayed, but I’ve always loved it because it betrays that Snape’s “swooping about the castle like an overgrown bat” is his persona, but his true self is good and protective.

 

sense & sensibility

Alan Rickman Died of Pancreatic Cancer: Report by Charlotte Libov, 1-15-16

http://www.newsmax.com/Health/Health-News/Alan-Rickman-actor-death/2016/01/15/id/709667/

alan-rickman-alan-rickman-26006923-640-640

Truly, Madly, Deeply: Remembering Alan Rickman in Six Movie Scenes

http://www.slashfilm.com/remembering-alan-rickman/

photo for the_trailer_for_Alan_Rickman_s_last_full_performance_is_here

The trailer for Alan Rickman’s last full performance is here by Huw Fullerton, 1-21-16

http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2016-01-21/the-trailer-for-alan-rickmans-last-full-performance-is-here

Alan Rickman on importance of listening when acting (2010)

Alan Rickman Wikipedia article

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Rickman

Alan-Rickman-zv-alan-rickman-6916332-1280-1024

Alan Rickman IMDB entry

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000614/

Alan-Rickman-zv-alan-rickman-6915904-1280-1024

Alan Rickman Biography entry

http://www.biography.com/people/alan-rickman-20687617

Alan Rickman

Alan Rickman, Harry Potter and Die Hard actor, dies aged 69 by 1-14-16

http://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-35313604

Filed Under: Creativity, The Keys of Death Tagged With: Alan Rickman, The Keys of Death

reading aloud at the No Shush Salon

June 25, 2015 by Clare T. Walker

 

IMG_2558 resized smaller

Tonight (June 25, 2015) I read a chapter from Startling Figures, volume 1 at the No Shush Salon, the monthly open mic night at the Clarendon Hills Public Library.

For the past year and a half, the Clarendon Hills Public Library has been hosting an open mic night called the No Shush Salon on the last Thursday of the month. There it gives the microphone and the attention of the audience to anyone who wants to read from a published work or a work in progress — song, poem, short story, essay, novel — you get the idea. The speaker gets about 10 minutes and the chance to learn how others experience his or her work. (“Clarendon Hills No Shush Salon to showcase author,” June 11, 2015 by Sara Clarkson for the Chicago Tribune.)

The featured author tonight was local Chicago writer Brendan Detzner, author of the short story collection Scarce Resources whose other short fiction has appeared in the story anthologies Exigencies, Book of Dead Things, and One Buck Horror, volume 5, as well as various magazines.

I bartered with Brendan — a copy of Startling Figures for a copy of Book of Dead Things. Hopefully it won’t be too scary for me.

Brendan is also the founder of Bad Grammar Theater, a monthly open mic for authors of “Horror, Fantasy, Pulp Fiction, Science Fiction, and the Unexpected.”

Clarendon Hills librarian Jeanine Vaughn runs the No Shush Salon. She read from her novel-in-progress and was also handing out free notebooks: nice hardcover ones, the kind with a snappy elastic ribbon to keep it closed. No author in his or her right mind would say “no” to that!

IMG_2790 resized smaller

So I got to hang out with some amazing writers, got two “freebies,” and before I left I checked out The Hobbit, part 3: The Battle of Five Armies.

Here’s a challenge: say “No Shush Salon” five times fast. I can barely say it one time slow! 🙂 Thanks, Jeanine, for putting together this chance for local authors to share their work!

Links & Info

No Shush Salon facebook page

No Shush Salon blog

Bad Grammar Theater meets every 3rd Friday at Powell’s Books (University Village location: 1218 S. Halsted, Chicago, on the campus of the University of Illinois Chicago) from 6 pm to 9 pm. Upcoming dates: July 17th, August 21st, September 18th.

Brian Detzner’s website

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Authors, Creativity, Events

in honor of NBC Nightly News anchorman Brian Williams, it’s Delusions of Grandeur Week!

February 10, 2015 by Clare T. Walker

Unknown

In honor of NBC Nightly News anchorman Brian Williams, it’s Delusions of Grandeur Week at Clare T. Walker.com!! Do you have an amazing or heroic deed you wish you’d done? Do you wish your life was more exciting than it is? Do you have a rather bland tale that you can embellish beyond all believability in order to draw attention to yourself? You’ll get your chance — read on!

Brian Williams’ credibility crisis reminds me of a fictional genre oft-neglected these days: the tall tale.

“A tall tale is a story with unbelievable elements, related as if it were true and factual…Tall tales are often told in a way that makes the narrator seem to have been a part of the story.”

(Wikipedia)

Famous tall tales from American literature and folklore include Paul Bunyan and Babe the Blue Ox, Pecos Bill, Johnny Appleseed, John Henry, and Casey Jones.

1306313-paulbunyanbabe

In Ireland and Scotland we have Finn MacCool, who, among other great feats, built the Giant’s Causeway. And who can forget Robert Service’s hero from the Great White North, Sam McGee?

TheCremationOfSamMcGee565c

Also known as “whoppers” and “fish stories,” the genre may also include urban legends, and more broadly myths, legends, and some hagiography. The Western seems to mix well with the tall tale: In Owen Wister’s 1902 classic Western The Virginian, the title character defuses tensions and forestalls a simmering mutiny among the cattlehands by telling a tall tale having to do with frogs’ legs. Annie Proulx’s 1999 collection of short stories (Close Range) features a tall tale called “The Blood-Bay.”

Tall tales are lots of fun to read, and even more fun to write, especially when you’re lampooning a public figure who’s made a doofus of himself on the national stage.

Just last week, I was shoveling my driveway after the record-setting snowfall here in the Midwest. It snowed for 28 days straight, and I had to shovel sideways from my porch for about one hundred yards before I could finally shovel up. It took me 7 days to reach the surface, and when I finally emerged, I realized I had miscalculated my shoveling angle and must have been heading east on a pretty steep diagonal, because I found myself standing right outside the windows of the Sky Deck of Willis Tower downtown. Oops! But it turned out to be a happy mistake, because the entire Sky Deck was engulfed in flame! I used my handy diamond glass cutter (which I just happened to have with me) to cut a neat, circular hole in the window. I then had everyone on the Sky Deck luge down the snow chute I had constructed. Within a few moments, everyone had reached the safety of my front porch. Fortunately, I had just made a monster batch of chili in my 4 dozen crockpots, so I was able to feed everyone while they waited for their loved ones to come get them.

Now here’s your chance: share your own tall tale in the comment box below. Let’s see how much fun we can have! 🙂

Did you enjoy this article? Fill in the box and I’ll send you updates automatically!



Filed Under: Creativity, Literature

a writer-in-residence

January 27, 2015 by Clare T. Walker

I’m the Writer-in-Residence at Holy Trinity Catholic Church.

What’s that, you say? What’s a “writer-in-residence?

writer-in-residence board-cropped

(The definition above was adapted from the entry at dictionary.com)

Does it mean I live at the parish, like a little church mouse? 🙂 No, I just write a weekly book review for the Sunday bulletin and a monthly article or review for the religious education newsletter. The articles and reviews are archived below:

Architects of the Culture of Death (a review of the book by Benjamin Wiker and Donald De Marco)

The Great Divorce (a review of a C.S. Lewis classic)

Learn Philosophy in Seconds! (a review of The One-Minute Philosopher by Montague Brown)

Prefer Nothing to the Love of Christ (a review of The Rule of St. Benedict, translated by Timothy Fry)

Answers to Burning Questions About the Catholic Faith (a review of Did Adam and Eve Have Belly Buttons by Matthew Pinto and Did Jesus Have a Last Name? by Matthew Pinto and Jason Evert)

Catholics In Space! (a review of Voyage to Alpha Centauri by Michael O’Brien). I also reviewed this book for the National Catholic Register, and that review is here: “Humanity At Stake in Space.”

Our Treasure in Heaven (a review of Interior Freedom by Fr. Jacques Phillipe)

Outings and Adventures for Catholic Families

The Most Important Appointment of the Day (a review of Appointment With God by Fr. Michael Scanlon, T.O.R.)

From Radical Hatred to Radical Love (a review of the autobiography of former white supremacist Joseph Pearce).

How to Get Along With (Almost) Anybody: Read This Book (a review of The Temperament God Gave You by Art and Laraine Bennett)

Explaining and Defending the Catholic Faith

Everything’s Comin’ Up Catholic, Part 1: Catholic Media Resources for the Whole Family (Catholic radio, television, and books)

Everything’s Comin’ Up Catholic: Part 2: Catholic Media Resources for the Whole Family (Catholic resources on the Internet)

Everything’s Comin’ Up Catholic: Part 3: Catholic Media Resources for the Whole Family (video, audio, and smartphone apps)

Summer’s on the Way: What to Read on the Plane or on the Beach (reviews of Father Elijah by Michael O’Brien, The Secret Cardinal by Tom Grace, The Four Signs of a Dynamic Catholic by Matthew Kelly, and Rediscover Catholicism by Matthew Kelly)

How did I get to be Writer-in-Residence?

I asked.

The longer answer: I’ve been writing the monthly article for the religious education newsletter since 2005, so a couple years ago I approached the new pastor, showed him a portfolio of those articles plus a few other things I’d written, a photo of my whiteboard…

writer-in-residence board-full-resized smallest

…and ideas of what else I could do at the parish. He really liked the idea of writing a book review for the Sunday bulletin, so I’ve been doing that since the summer of 2013. Other ideas include a parish book club, writing classes, readings by visiting Catholic authors, classes and presentations on Catholic literature, and collaborating with the art teacher at the parish school to hold an art fair, and building and maintaining a parish library.

It’s really fun! I write 500 words, usually on a new or classic spiritual book or other book Catholics would enjoy reading. Printed, it’s a half page column in the Sunday bulletin. Sometimes I change it up by writing about other things, like media resources and local places of interest.

Mouse Writing by spiraln http://spiraln.deviantart.com/art/Mouse-Writing-8532726

Mouse Writing by spiraln
http://spiraln.deviantart.com/art/Mouse-Writing-8532726

Filed Under: Creativity

keep your hands moving! a timed free writing exercise

November 14, 2014 by Clare T. Walker

Free writing is a time-honored writing exercise useful for writers and artists of all kinds: fiction, non-fiction, poetry, visual artists, designers, dancers, directors, actors…It’s a good way to jumpstart creativity and loosen up if you’re feeling creatively constipated. The names I’ve heard in connection with this technique are English professor Peter Elbow and authors Julia Cameron and Natalie Goldberg, but in my research I discovered writer/editor Dorothea Brande and learned that Jack Kerouac and William Butler Yeats are well-known for using free writing techniques.

Author and online writing instructor Holly Lisle published a good essay on free writing (excellent “how-to”) that includes a list of topics you can use as springboards:

Holly Lisle's topics for timed free writing (www.hollylisle.com)

Holly Lisle’s topics for timed free writing www.hollylisle.com

I decided to do the exercise from the point-of-view of one of my fictional characters. I chose Dr. Doug Ellison, the main character in “Tooth and Nail” (part of a soon-to-be released story collection called Startling Figures.)

Here’s what I came up with:

timed freewriting – topic — the past

POV: Dr. Doug Ellison (my fictional character)

(myself/historical figure/other real person/my fictional character/other fictional character)

10 minutes

When I think about the past, I mostly get confused, because I don’t have a great memory for things. My brother Dave remembers our childhood a lot better than I do. And as for my own kids’ childhoods — they’re a blur. The other day Lyndsey got out some old photos because she wanted to put them into albums, and there were pictures where we were like, “Which kid is that?” Blonde, blue-eyed. They all look the same as babies. The clothing helps determine boy versus girl, but other than that they all look the same. It was really funny trying to figure it out. Eventually we figured it out based on the carpet, because we worked out that we had the old carpet — the real-estate beige — with Pete and Keith, and then changed it to the dark blue sometime before Gussie was born. I think. Might have been before Roxanne. How are you supposed to keep the past clear in your mind when you spend so much of your life doing the same thing over and over again? It’s really hard here in California because the weather doesn’t change enough to mark the seasons clearly. When I was growing up in Indiana we had four distinct seasons, and you could remember things by remembering that there was snow outside when that happened, or the leaves hadn’t been raked yet and I have a clear picture in my mind of what our front yard looked like when such and such a thing happened.

Recent past is something I wouldn’t mind forgetting. That thing with Jack Emery’s dog Tex was terrible. I swear I had a mild case of post-traumatic stress disorder after that. I scared Lyndsey half to death a couple times at night, sitting bolt upright in bed with a shout.

Like all free writing, it’s pretty raw (i.e. bad) but free writing’s purpose is not to deftly craft brilliant prose. The point is to free up the mind, unstopper it, unblock it, stretch it out, limber it up. I’ve been busy lately (binge reading every genre of popular fiction for a class I’m teaching) and I’ve been out of the writing habit, so writing the above piece reminded me of sitting cross-legged on the floor for an hour and then getting up and trying to walk normally. (Youngsters, go ahead and laugh: when you’re 48 years old you’ll understand!)

Still, in 10 minutes I came up with 305 words. Not too bad: 250 words is one typed, double-spaced page.

For more info on this topic

  • the piece by Holly Lisle (linked above but here it is again: “Timed Writing Workshop — Freeing Up the Subconscious Mind”)
  • Natalie Goldberg’s classic book on writing: Writing Down the Bones
  • Julia Cameron’s book on creativity: The Artist’s Way
  • the Wikipedia entry on free writing has some other links and references you could follow (on Jack Kerouac, Peter Elbow, William Butler Yeats, etc).

Filed Under: Creativity

sketchnote: World War Z

September 5, 2014 by Clare T. Walker

World War Z sketchnote scanned cropped and resized even smaller

Saw World War Z for the first time last week, on DVD. Watched it again last night and made the above sketchnote, some of it inspired by commentary on the movie by Fr. Robert Barron. Made with Foray colored-ink ballpoint pens and Paper Mate Flair markers.

Filed Under: Creativity Tagged With: Father Barron, Father Robert Barron, Fr. Barron, Fr. Robert Barron, movies, sketchnote, sketchnotes, World War Z, zombies

IMG_2143_6

The Keys of Death – a veterinary medical thriller

Startling Figures: 3 stories of the paranormal

Tooth and Nail: a novelette

Look At Me: a novelette

The Fellowship: The Literary Lives of the Inklings

Dungeons & Dragons Player’s Handbook, 5th edition

Homeland: The Legend of Drizzt – Book 1 by R.A. Salvatore

Exile: The Legend of Drizzt – Book 2 by R.A. Salvatore

Watership Down by Richard Adams

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