Art Imitates Death
David Taylor David Taylor

Art Imitates Death

Not to sound morbid, but I love to see how writers handle the deaths of their lead characters. Here are some of my favourites…

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Here Be Monsters
David Taylor David Taylor

Here Be Monsters

I won’t presume to say anything definitive about a subject as vast as the role of nature within Western literature. But it has been on my mind because of my work with the epic Old English poem Beowulf.

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John Gardner’s Grendel
David Taylor David Taylor

John Gardner’s Grendel

In the 1000+ years we’ve known the story of Beowulf, poor Grendel has gotten all the bad press.

The monster has been universally reviled as the polar opposite of Beowulf’s human virtues. It took the American novelist John Gardner, in his wickedly funny novel Grendel (1971), to ask a few questions:

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Iron Age Reality Check
David Taylor David Taylor

Iron Age Reality Check

Let’s say you wake up one morning and you're completely disoriented. You worry you've time traveled to sixth-century Scandinavia. It happens to all of us at times, surely.

Here are some clues…

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“WHAT YOU GOT WORTH LIVING FOR?”
David Taylor David Taylor

“WHAT YOU GOT WORTH LIVING FOR?”

That’s the question Miracle Max shouts in the ear of Westley in The Princess Bride. Our mostly-dead hero dredges up two words from the romantic depths of his soul: “True love.”

Which only shows how the ideal heroic character has changed.

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Beowulf’s Queen of Sorrows
David Taylor David Taylor

Beowulf’s Queen of Sorrows

Back when I was doing research for Bones and Keeps, my historical fantasy about Beowulf, I was casting about in the epic Old English poem that tells his story, looking for events that would make good plot points for my novel.

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Does the Hero Ride Alone?
David Taylor David Taylor

Does the Hero Ride Alone?

It’s the iconic image — the hero riding off into the sunset, alone again after saving the day.

But no one truly rides alone.

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The Weirdness of Weird
David Taylor David Taylor

The Weirdness of Weird

Weird — ‘wyrd’ in the original Old English — is a weirdly complicated concept. Just ask the great hero Beowulf...

Roughly speaking, weird means fate or personal destiny.

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Beowulf, Thoughtful Man of Action
David Taylor David Taylor

Beowulf, Thoughtful Man of Action

I will be honest up front — I’ve never seen the 2007 movie Beowulf directed by Robert Zemeckis. I couldn’t bring myself to sit through its distortions of the epic poem about the hero.

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When Would You Have Liked to Live?
David Taylor David Taylor

When Would You Have Liked to Live?

Speaking as a woman, I feel I struck the lottery, being born into a liberal democracy where my human rights are protected both by law and by custom.

But I’ve sometimes thought, if I had to be born somewhere and sometime else, where and when would it be?

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Why Are There Monsters?
David Taylor David Taylor

Why Are There Monsters?

Spoiler alert — I have no answer to that question. No one does. Sometimes we can’t even agree on who the monsters are. But setting aside the existential question, the reality is that they can come crashing into our lives at any time.

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Old Stories for New Audiences
David Taylor David Taylor

Old Stories for New Audiences

Writers of historical fiction must remain true to the historical record while telling an old story that will engage a modern audience.

It’s tricky...

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Hunting for Heorot
David Taylor David Taylor

Hunting for Heorot

On an adventure with my colleague Dr. Margaret Procter to track Beowulf, the hunt for Heorot was our starting point. Heorot, the hall of the Danish king Hrothgar, is where Beowulf killed the monster Grendel.

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How to Ferment a Shark
David Taylor David Taylor

How to Ferment a Shark

In my novel Bones & Keeps, Beowulf stations warriors on the volcanic island now called Jan Mayen.

Food crops won’t grow and the fish taste of sulphur, so what do you do?

Why, ferment a shark, of course.

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How Do You Kill Off Your Characters?
David Taylor David Taylor

How Do You Kill Off Your Characters?

I had to kill off a major character in my first novel because he was the son of a historical figure who’s known to have died without heirs. I actually ended up killing him twice (it’s complicated) but I hated doing it. And yes, it put me in a real funk.

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Writing the Inconvenient Body
David Taylor David Taylor

Writing the Inconvenient Body

Even when I was a teen devouring stories of fabulous adventures, it used to drive me nuts when the characters never ate or rested, or did any normal human things as they traversed the haunted forest or the vast reaches of space.

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