In high school, I had to read Lord of the Flies, The Chrysalids, On the Beach, To Kill a Mocking Bird, and a whack of Shakespeare.
Yuck. Way to kill the love of reading. All sorts of preaching and moral crap in the first four. (Which, as you will see by the end of this post, doesn’t suit me well.)
Torture, it was, having to read those dreary books, at a time when I was craving excitement. Already, I had a slight rep for recklessness. (It was the admittedly questionable incident of burying the French class attendance sheet in the woods on Grouse Mountain, but I digress…)
And then we got to pick a ‘classic’ to read. Groan. Some savvy librarian took pity on me, and put a book in my hand.
Ivanhoe.
Magic
A writer was born that day.
This is what books could be like! Swashbuckling adventure with swords and horses, and imminent danger to yourself and virtue, from which – sometimes – you could not escape (poor Rebecca.)
I was hooked, man. And this book was written how long ago? 1820?
Occasionally, people will ask if a teacher had a special influence on me as a writer. I say, sadly, no to that.
But a librarian did. To this day, I won’t forget her, and that book, and what it caused me to do.
1. Write the swashbuckling medieval time travel Land’s End series, starting with the Top 100 bestseller Rowena Through the Wall.
2. Steal a book. Yes, this humble reader, unable to part with that beloved Ivanhoe, claimed to lose the book, and paid the fine. Damn the guilt. The book was mine.
3. Write The Goddaughter series, which has nothing to do with swashbuckling medieval adventure, and everything to do with theft. Which, of course, I had personally experienced due to a book called Ivanhoe.
The lust for something you just have to have. The willingness to take all sorts of risks way out of
proportion, to possess that one thing.
A book like my own Rowena and the Viking Warlord made me a thief at the age of sixteen. And the experience of being a thief enticed me to write The Goddaughter’s Revenge, over thirty years later.
My entire writing career (200 publications, 9 awards) is because of Sir Walter Scott and one sympathetic librarian.
Thanks to you both, wherever you are.
Just wondering...did a single book get you started on a life of crime...er...writing? Tell us below in the comments.
Melodie Campbell writes funny books. You can buy them at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other retailers. She lurks at www.melodiecampbell.com.