Tag Archive for: Barbara Kyle

Superstitions: The Nutty Ties that Bind Writers and Actors

by Barbara Kyle

 


Shakespeare was an actor. So was Dickens.

 

In a way every writer is, because when
we create stories we play all the roles inside our heads. It’s part of the joy
of writing.

 

Before becoming an author I enjoyed a twenty-year
acting career (here I’m with Bruce Gray when we starred in the TV series High Hopes) and I’ve found many commonalities between the two arts. 

 

 

One of the most interesting commonalities is superstitions. 

 

Actors are obsessively superstitious
about many things, and one in particular: the name of a certain play by
Shakespeare, the one in which a certain Highland lady can’t get blood off her
hands. 

 

Actors won’t say the name of this play
inside a theater. Instead, they call it “The Scottish Play.” Why? Because
it carries a curse.

 

– At
its first performance in 1606 the actor who was going to portray Lady Macbeth
(a boy in those days) died suddenly and Shakespeare was forced to replace him.

 

– In
1957 actor Harold Norman, playing the lead role, died after his stage battle with
swords became a little too realistic.

 

– During
a performance starring the famous Sir Laurence Olivier a stage weight crashed
down from above, missing him by inches.

 

And what if an unsuspecting soul makes
the error of uttering the name of this play inside a theater? Is there a spell
to remove the curse?

 

Yes, there is. You leave the theater,
spin around three times, spit over your left shoulder, and either recite a line
from Shakespeare or spout a profanity. Got it?

 

Writers have superstitions too and they’re
just as weird. Here are three that many writers hold:

 

– No
chapter can be 13 pages long because that number brings bad luck. Any chapter
that ends on page 13 must be revised to make it 12 or 14. (By the way, there’s
a name for the fear of the number 13: triskaidekaphobia. Try saying that three
times fast!)

 

– Many
writers can’t write unless they’re wearing a particular “lucky” piece of
clothing, like a certain sweater or a pair of slippers or a hat.

 

– Some
writers won’t give characters the same initials as friends — otherwise, the
person might suddenly have bad luck.

 

 

Some famous writers had their own pet
superstitions:

 

– Alexander
Dumas, author of The Three Musketeers, had to write all of his fiction
on blue paper, his poetry on yellow paper, and his articles on pink paper. No
exceptions.

 

– Charles
Dickens had to place the ornaments on his desk in a specific order before
beginning to write.

 

– Truman
Capote refused to begin or end a piece of writing on a Friday.

 

– J.K.
Rowling’s superstition is to hold off titling a piece until it is complete. She
said on Twitter: “I only type the title page of a novel once the book is
finished.”

 

If you’re thinking actors and writers are
a bit nuts, you’re not far wrong. After all, we spend our days with imaginary people.
As John Gardner said, “One must be a little crazy to write a good novel.” 

 

But it’s a happy madness. One meets such
interesting (imaginary) people!

 

So now I’ll cross my fingers, touch
wood, toss grains of salt over my left shoulder, and get back to work on my
new book.

 

Wish me luck.

 

Barbara Kyle

 

Barbara Kyle is the author of the bestselling Thornleigh
Saga
series of historical novels (“Riveting Tudor drama” – USA
Today) and of acclaimed thrillers. Over half a million copies of her books have
been sold. Her latest is The Man from Spirit Creek, a novel of suspense.
Barbara has taught hundreds of writers in her online classes and many have
become award-winning authors. Page-Turner, her popular how-to book for
writers, is available in print, e-book, and audiobook. Visit Barbara at www.BarbaraKyle.com 

   

 

The Man from Spirit Creek

 
When Liv Gardner arrives in the rural town of Spirit Creek, Alberta, she
has nothing but her old car and a temporary job as paralegal with the
local attorney. But Liv’s down-market persona is a ruse. She is actually
in-house counsel of Falcon Oil, a small oil and gas company she co-owns
with her fiancé, CEO Mickey Havelock – and they are facing financial
ruin.

Farmer Tom Wainwright, convinced that lethal “sour” gas
killed his wife, is sabotaging Falcon’s rigs. But Wainwright is clever
at hiding his tracks and the police have no evidence to charge him. With
the sabotage forcing Falcon toward bankruptcy, Liv has come undercover
to befriend Wainwright – and entrap him.

But Liv never dreamed
she’d become torn between saving the company she and Mickey built and
her feelings for the very man whose sabotage is ruining them.

On a
rain-swept night, Spirit Creek is stunned when one of their own is
murdered. The evidence does more than point to Tom Wainwright . . . it
shatters Liv’s world.

 

The Man from Spirit Creek is available in paperback, ebook, and audiobook. 

 

__________________________________________________________________________

Henry VIII, My Husband, and the Pissing Drunkard

Travel is a writer’s perk. I’ve often journeyed far from home to research the world of my books.

For my historical novels, I tramped England in the footsteps of
soldiers and queens. For my thriller The Experiment in which my heroine lives
aboard her sailboat, I explored a funky New York City marina where a skipper
took me sailing on Long Island Sound. For The Man from Spirit Creek I interviewed
a ranching couple in northern Alberta who invited me to stay for dinner where I
ate the best strawberry-rhubarb pie I’ve ever tasted.

In researching one book, though, I discovered an eye-opening
resource close to home. My husband.

  

The Queen’s Lady is set in England during the reign of Henry VIII.
Now, Henry and my husband share no similarity regarding tyrannical rule and
beheaded wives – I married a thoughtful, peaceable man. He is, however, endowed
with the standard issue male anatomy, and this helped my research.

Here’s how.

In my first draft of the novel, I’d written a
scene of a Midsummer Eve celebration in which boisterous revelers dance around
bonfires, lovers steal kisses, and a drunk old man pisses as he staggers
through the crowd.

Wait a minute, I thought. Can a man do that –
urinate while walking?

I took the problem to my husband. “Can a man do that?” I asked.

“I’ll go see,” he said, and walked out the door.

Thankfully, we lived then on sixty rural acres at the end of a dead-end
road. Not a soul around.

Five minutes later he came back in. “Yup,” he reported.

You can see why I value this resource, right?

These days, with the pandemic keeping us all close to home, I’m lucky because
I can turn to my husband again as a resource. I’m at work on a mystery novel in
which the main character is an animal rights activist, and Stephen has worked
with animal rights organizations for years. That’s him in the picture above, with an
otter friend. His stories about the fine people who protect animals inspired
this new book.  

I’ve enjoyed my travels, but right now close to home feels just fine.

Barbara Kyle is the author of the bestselling Thornleigh
Saga
series of historical novels (“Riveting Tudor drama” – USA Today)
and of acclaimed thrillers. Over half a million copies of her books have been
sold. Her latest is The Man from Spirit Creek, a novel of suspense. Barbara
has taught hundreds of writers in her online classes and many have become
award-winning authors. Page-Turner, her popular how-to book for writers,
is available in print, e-book, and audiobook. Visit Barbara at www.BarbaraKyle.com  

 

 The Man from Spirit Creek 

When Liv Gardner arrives in the rural town of Spirit Creek,
Alberta, she has nothing but her old car and a temporary job as paralegal with
the local attorney. But Liv’s down-market persona is a ruse. She’s actually
in-house counsel of Falcon Oil, a small oil and gas company she co-owns with
her fiancé, CEO Mickey Havelock – and they are facing financial ruin.

Farmer Tom Wainwright, convinced that lethal “sour” gas killed his wife, is
sabotaging Falcon’s rigs. But Wainwright is clever at hiding his tracks and the
police have no evidence to charge him. With the sabotage forcing Falcon toward
bankruptcy, Liv has come undercover to befriend Wainwright – and entrap him.

But Liv never dreamed she’d become torn between saving the company she and
Mickey built and her feelings for the very man whose sabotage is ruining them. On a rain-swept night, Spirit Creek is stunned when one of their own is murdered.
The evidence does more than point to Tom Wainwright . . . it shatters Liv’s
world.

“A stunning thriller. A must-read with sabotage, murder, intrigue and romance.” – Goodreads review

 

Page-Turner: Your Path to Writing a Novel that Publishers Want and Readers Buy

“Kyle is one of the few authors who can break down both the art and the craft of writing in a way that is entertaining and easy to understand.” — #1 New York Times bestselling author Kelley Armstrong

 

Welcome to the Gang

Welcome to the Gang

by Saralyn Richard

Once in a while, a new mystery author puts on her stilettos and joins the crew. The Stiletto Gang is happy to welcome Barbara Kyle, and we know you will enjoy hearing from her on the third Wednesday of each month.

Today, I’m sharing an interview with Barbara. After you’ve read about her many talents and adventures, I know your appetite will be whetted for her first blogpost tomorrow.

Saralyn: Barbara, you’ve had several enriching
and fulfilling careers on the path to becoming an author. Can you tell us a
little about your days as a film, TV, and stage actor, and how that career
influences your life as a writer?

Barbara:  I loved being an actor. On
stage I did a lot of classical theater: Shakespeare and Shaw and Moliere. On TV
I starred in the daytime drama High Hopes, and in the series The
Campbells
I had a lovely continuing role as a feisty pioneer innkeeper who
never quite won the heart of the dishy Doctor Campbell. In film, a favorite
role was in a made-for-TV movie about the hostage crisis in Iran when Jimmy
Carter was president. I played the president’s wife, Roselynn Carter. That was
an honor. Later, when I turned to writing fiction, it felt like a natural
extension of acting. I mean, I’d been playing characters written by someone
else for years, so I thought: why not create characters myself, in fact create whole
stories? 


Saralyn:  Your Thornleigh Saga
series is set in Tudor England. What is it about that time and place that
captured your imagination?

Barbara:  The trigger was Sir Thomas
More. He was Henry VIII’s chancellor and friend, but he famously went to the
scaffold to die rather than submit to Henry’s tyranny. That story always fascinated
me. Sir Thomas More had a couple of wards – that’s an historical fact – so I
decided to create another, fictional ward for him and make her the heroine of a
novel. So that’s how Honor Larke came to “star” in my first historical novel, The
Queen’s Lady
. Honor becomes a lady-in-waiting to Henry VIII’s first wife,
Catherine of Aragon, and then comes into conflict with Sir Thomas, the man
she’d once revered. By the way, the situation of wardship in that historical
period is fascinating; I wrote about it in this article:
Wanted: Rich Orphans: The Tudor Court of Wards.

Saralyn:  When you wrote THE QUEEN’S
LADY, did you know that it would be the start of a series? Did you have an
outline in mind for all seven books?

Barbara:  Not at all – it was quite
a zig-zag path to the series. Penguin published The Queen’s Lady and its
sequel, The King’s Daughter, but after that my editor there moved on, so
I turned to writing thrillers. Then, a few years later, I got a note from that
editor saying she was now editorial director at Kensington Books and wanted to
re-publish those first two books plus sign me to write more. Eventually, the
series grew to seven books that follow three generations of Honor’s family, the
Thornleighs (Honor married seafaring merchant Richard Thornleigh), through
three turbulent Tudor reigns.

Saralyn:  What was it like to switch
from historical novels to thrillers?

Barbara:  The funny thing is, all
my books are thrillers, even the Thornleigh Saga books. Life and death
stakes, implacable antagonists, lethal deadlines – these dynamics drive all my
stories, from the historicals to The Experiment to, most recently, my
novel of suspense, The Man from Spirit Creek. It seems I can’t help it!

Saralyn:  I’ve participated in some
of your author mentoring classes online, and I’ve appreciated how knowledgeable
and organized you are. What particular joys do you find in helping other
authors to achieve success?
 

Barbara:  One of the true joys of my
life is cheering the success of writers I’ve mentored. Many of them have become
award-winning authors. Writers usually tap easily into their innate talent, but
talent and instinct only take you so far. When instinct gets stuck, it’s time
to open the toolbox of techniques, and I love showing writers the tools that
can help them get moving again. Anyone who’s interested will find lots of tips
in my videos on
my YouTube channel Write Your Page-Turner, and my book Page-Turner. I firmly believe that perfecting
craft is an enriching, life-long journey for all writers.

 

 

Barbara
Kyle

is the author of the bestselling Thornleigh Saga series of historical
novels (“Riveting Tudor drama” – USA Today) and of acclaimed thrillers.
Over half a million copies of her books have been sold. Her latest is The
Man from Spirit Creek
, a novel of suspense. Barbara has taught hundreds of
writers in her online classes and many have become award-winning authors. Page-Turner,
her popular how-to book for writers, is available in print, e-book, and
audiobook. Visit Barbara at
www.BarbaraKyle.com 

Award-winning author, Saralyn
Richard
was born with a pen in her hand and ink in her veins. A former
educator, she loves connecting with readers. Her humor- and romance-tinged
mysteries and children’s book pull back the curtain on people in settings as
diverse as elite country manor houses and disadvantaged urban high schools.


Visit Saralyn at 
http://saralynrichard.com, on her Amazon page at https://www.amazon.com/Saralyn-Richar…, or on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/Palmcirclepress