The inspiration for Shelter Island cannot be attributed to a
single muse. Firstly, as a children’s fantasy writer, I have always been drawn
to middle grade fiction. Middle grade fiction is wide open in terms of subject,
especially in the fantasy genre. Think of George MacDonald’s The Princess and the Goblin, Kate
DiCamillo’s The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane, The Hobbit, Narnia, the
works of Madeleine L’Engle, Kathi Appelt, R. J. Anderson, Kenneth Oppel, Edith
Nesbit and Lemony Snicket. It just keeps on going. So, other author’s work
partly form the foundation of my inspiration.
Secondly, after working on my manuscript one of my editors commented,
You know you are bucking the trend here… I thought, I hope so. Shelter Island is a story for those
readers, like the book’s protagonists Cary, Clarisse, and Gregory, who may need
to look somewhere other than their own troubled hearts to find the courage they
need to face extraordinary circumstances and enemies older, stronger and more
cunning. It was certainly true of my life and I wish I had come across more stories
of that ilk when I was much younger. A lot of children’s books beat the same
feeble drum. Their message? Just dig deep enough, try hard enough, and take
charge. Everything will work out. Just reach into your heart and you
will find everything you need. That advice seems a naive sort of cure all –
like Jake’s ol’ Snake Oil. What if his ‘heart’ should fail? What if he reaches
into his heart and finds nothing but the ashes of regret and loneliness? Exploring
the possibilities that arise out of such questions was a strong inspiration for
Shelter Island.
And as odd as it may sound, the characters themselves are
inspiring. Once formed, characters can alter the course of a story. I used to
dismiss comments from authors who said they let their characters write their
books. It seemed to me like ‘humble boasting’. But after my fourth novel, I can
say a lot of that is true. Exciting, unanticipated scenes and situations arise
from character’s interactions. A story’s characters think, speak and act in
ways peculiar to their motives, flaws and traits. Allowing them to ‘live’ can
oft times create an added scene, an unexpected journey down an untrodden path,
or surprise with a dramatic twist.
As far as the inspiration for Shelter Island’s bare-bones story, a long time ago, while admiring
how birds could alight, snatch a seed and launch from a swinging bird feeder, I
imagined myself getting dizzy, and as I collapsed, reaching out for the rim of
the bird feeder, to end up dangling from the seed tray, shrunk to the size of a
shelled peanut. The idea evolved into a boy whom birds kidnap and whisk away to
a world inhabited by secret civilization of intelligent birds. Not long after
he arrives prominent birds in this strange civilization exploit the young man’s
pride and dupe him into making a catastrophic decision that pushes an ancient
conflict to the brink of war. The one boy, it turns out, had a brother and sister.
The story, minus the bird-feeder scene, grew into three novels.
About the Author
John Paul Tucker holds degrees in Theatre
and Theology and has many years experience as an Ontario Certified English
Language Teacher, in addition to teaching mime, puppetry and Drama to teens and
children. His unique journey has furnished him with an eclectic head of ideas.
He is currently celebrating his 50th
article on www.thewriterslessonbook.com,
an educational website he created for writers, featuring writing tips and
techniques harvested from the books we love to read. He has published poems in
the Toronto Sun, Little Trinity Print Magazine and Imago Arts
e-magazine. His poem City Sidewalks won first prize in a Toronto
wide poetry contest. Two of his short stories, The Crooked Tree and The
Debt Collector have each won a prize awarded by The Word Guild and The
Prescott Journal respectively. You will find one of his fantasy
stories recently published in the popular Hot Apple Cider anthology Christmas
with Hot Apple Cider. JP has been busy polishing up The Rooster and the
Raven King & The Rise of the Crimson King, Books II & III of
The Song of Fridorfold trilogy, pursuing Cary, Clarisse and Gregory on
their fantastic adventures.
John Paul is excited to be putting the
final touches to his fourth novel, a YA fantasy inspired by the remarkable
storyteller, George MacDonald. Gather the latest news about JP’s upcoming
novels, enjoy a book trailer, dive into some free stories and poems, contribute
some art work, take a peek at some photos, or for no other reason drop by to
say hello at his official author website www.johnpaultucker.com.
John’s latest book is the middle grade
fantasy adventure, Shelter
Island.
Website Address: https://www.johnpaultucker.com
Facebook Address: https://www.facebook.com/johnpaultucker.author/
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