Saturday, September 30, 2023

The One Song That Changed Her Life



HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: A THEME! We love themes! Especially when we don't plan them--which can be the very best ones.

Yesterday the fab Lori Rader-Day talked about the soundtracks and playlists for her books.


And today, the equally fab Wendy Walker reveals how music changed her life, too–somehow, magically, as sometimes happens when writers are wise and lucky, how ONE SONG offered her the idea for her incredibly successful audio original AN AMERICAN GIRL–a story so compelling and propulsive that it’s now in print, too!

But I bet you’ll be singing as you read this. And question for you at the end!



A Writer Walks Into a Bar

By Wendy Walker

In the summer of 2019, I was in a bar somewhere in the heart of Pennsylvania. It was a small town which, from what I could tell, had fallen on some difficult financial times. I was there with a friend whose family owned a summer cottage nearby. A group of young men were in a corner of the bar playing darts. Some teenage girls were in the opposite corner, eyeing them, ignoring them, giggling at them – as teenage girls do. A cover band of middle aged dudes with long gray ponytails and ripped jeans played on a small stage in an adjacent room. Seated at the tables in front of the band were about a dozen women of the same age having a mom’s night out.


The bartender was a beautiful, very pregnant, brunette with big brown eyes and bright red lipstick and an attitude that was somehow both intimidating and endearing. She also made a killer Cosmo that had me on the dance floor the moment I heard the first few notes of American Girl by the late Tom Petty.


So there I was, drinking and dancing, images of women at all stages of life surrounding me and a song from my high school days filling my head with memories. And not just memories, but a visceral feeling of what it was like to be a girl on the edge of adult life, nothing but dreams in front of me. 

Those were some rough years. I suppose that’s true for a lot of people, because, let’s face it, coming of age isn’t easy. But I had just given up my dream of being a competitive figure skater after spending three years at a facility in Colorado. That dream had been in my bones since before I could even remember, and I was lost without it. Still, life felt possible, and in so many ways. Independence, love, adventure – it was all right there, but still out of reach.


I closed my eyes and let the feeling sweep through me. It was powerful. I thought about the pain of letting go of dreams; the hunger for new ones; the girls in the corner not thinking about the pregnant bartender or the women at the tables who had once been where they were; the bartender too busy to think about anything but getting through the shift and off her feet; and how it was nothing more than time that separated all of these women.


As a writer, I’m always on the lookout for inspiration. I’ve learned to grab hold of everything that catches my eye or makes me feel something extraordinary. Because if it makes me notice or feel, then it’s very likely it will have the same impact on others. It just has to be captured and spun into fiction.


What moved me that night dancing to American Girl was the reconnection with a feeling I had many years ago, and the perspective that my life had given me to understand it. I went home with a character in my head, and from there her story, and that of women of all ages in a small town.



American Girl
(the novel) follows Charlie Hudson and her coworkers at a local sandwich shop after the murder of their ruthless boss. It is a murder mystery about who killed Clay Cooper, and a thriller as Charlie finds herself in the eye of the investigation and in grave danger, but at its heart and soul are the lives of the women living through love and loss, bonded forever by the extraordinary and heartbreaking trajectory of life that they all share.


I had no idea when I walked into that bar that I would leave with a plot for a novel that would become one of my favorite pieces of work. This experience is now in the fabric of my own extraordinary journey.



HANK: So how about you, reds and readers? Has a song ever changed your life?

(And here's a link to the song!)


AMERICAN GIRL

A pulse-pounding novel about a small-town business owner found dead and the teenage girl caught in the crosshairs, American Girl is the latest thriller from international bestselling author Wendy Walker. 

Charlie Hudson, an autistic seventeen-year-old, is determined to leave Sawyer, PA as soon as she graduates high school—in the meantime, she works as many hours as she can at a sandwich shop called The Triple S to save money for college. But when shop owner Clay Cooper—a man who is both respected and feared by many in this economically depressed community—is found dead, each member of his staff becomes a suspect in the perplexing case. Charlie must work to protect herself and her friends, and uncover the danger that may still be at large in their tightknit town.

Bestselling author Wendy Walker returns with another riveting thriller, told through the eyes of an unforgettable protagonist.





Wendy Walker is the international bestselling author of psychological suspense. Her books have been published in over 23 foreign languages and have been optioned for film and television. Her latest novels include Don’t Look for Me, What Remains and American Girl. Wendy is a magna cum laude graduate of Brown University and Georgetown Law School. Prior to writing, she worked as a lawyer, investment banker, and trained for competitive figure skating. She lives in Fairfield County, Connecticut, where she raised three sons.




40 comments:

  1. Congratulations, Wendy, on your newest book . . . it sounds intriguing; I'm looking forward to reading it.
    Sadly, I cannot say that any one song changed my life . . . .

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  2. The book sounds fascinating. I can't think of any songs that changed my life, but the songs of my youth can definitely snap me back to that time when I hear them now. Congratulations and best wishes on your new release!

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  3. Stairway to Heaven by Led Zepplin is a song that affected me but I wouldn't say it changed my life. I still cry every time I hear it and in doing my end of life planning, I've requested that song by played at my graveside service. Congrats on your newest book, Wendy!! I'm looking forward to reading it.

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    1. Awwww that is such a hard thing to think about it, isn’t it? But that’s perfect song. I always wonder about Sting’s Fields of Gold. I honestly can cry just thinking about it.

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  4. WENDY: Congratulations on your new book, and for sharing the story of the song that inspired Charlie's origins. I also can't think of a specific song that changed my life. But when I hear certain hit songs of the 70s or 80s, I do have a happy reaction.

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    1. Oh, I love that, too! When you hear something and say: oh, yes! I forgot about that song!

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  5. Hello, Wendy. That sounds like a good book!. . . I don't think any song changed my life, Hank, but when I was a freshman in college, I was desperate to fall in love with someone who'd fall in love with ME, and--I guess just to depress myself further--I used to listen over and over to Jefferson Airplane's Grace Slick singing "Don't You Want Somebody to Love?" I still think it's a great song, but that's it.

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    1. Oh! That song! I remember one night driving with the windows all down and singing along as loud as I could. Whenever I hear that song I still want to do that. How can I not!

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    2. Oh, yes, that is a perfect sing-along song! I’m about Linda Ronstadt’s When WillI Be Loved?

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  6. How wonderful that you realized you were in one of those moments, Wendy. Did you take notes on your idea as soon as you got home, or did the feeling just stay with you?

    The songs of Joni Mitchell have had a deep impact on my life and might have changed me in subtle ways.

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  7. Congratulations, Wendy! That is so cool, that that one song morphed into a book! I can't think of any song that changed my life, but so many have certainly affected it.

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  8. Wow, Wendy, you described that scene in the bar so perfectly, I can’t wait to see how it translated into the book. Maybe I have already read this in another post, but there’s also makes me whether you’ve used your training for figure skating in another thriller?

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    1. Lucy I thought she described the scene so well. I liked that it wasn't just recounting what she saw or how she felt but related how each age group perceives their place in time and how we react to life given our life experiences as we age. Well done Wendy!

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  9. I always listened to the radio while doing homework in junior high and high school. Those songs always take me right back there. And if I happen upon a station now playing an old Casey Kasem top forty…boy oh boy, those were the days.

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  10. Music plays a big part in my life which is no surprise to everyone here. As little kids, we did our weekly chores to The Statler Brothers greatest hits album. As I got older, every Sunday morning I would listen to Casey Kasem counting down the Top 40 hits in the country on American Top 40. I had a big notebook that I would write each week's countdown on a piece of paper, charting the song, artist and what position the song had been in the week before.

    I think the first song that really made an impact on me would be Survivor's "Eye of the Tiger". Not necessarily changed my life per se, but in 1982 it was the biggest song and it led to a lifelong love of the band. They were also my first rock concert!

    But the song that I would say changed my life came in 1984. And it was both the song and the video for said track that combined to change my musical trajectory to the path I continue ever onward to this day.

    The song in question? Twisted Sister's "We're Not Gonna Take It". I was in my first year as a teenager and the rebellious nature of the song lyrics plus the visual spectacle of the video and the bandmembers themselves lent themselves well to a time when I delusionally thought I was a "rebel".

    The funny thing was my mother refused to buy me the album because of the cover art. I had asked for it for Christmas. When she saw the cover art, it was a big "nope!" from her. So I asked my aunt. And I got it! And I still have that cassette today, I've even written about it.

    And thanks to my friend Roger who owns Purchase Street Records and once worked for Twisted Sister's road crew, I have gone from not being allowed to have the album to meeting both Dee Snider (who actually told me "I think I kind of love you" because of an album I brought with me to have signed) and guitarist Jay Jay French at my friend's store.

    There were songs that came afterward that fueled alterations to my life, both in general and musically speaking (Iron Maiden's "Alexander The Great" and Metal Church's "Badlands" because of a fantastic lyrical chorus and the entire 'Operation:mindcrime" album from Queensryche come to mind) but I would never have gotten to where I am now as a music fan and a CD and concert reviewer if it hadn't been for "We're Not Gonna Take It".

    I don't want any kind of service when I die (unless it is the Klingon death ritual) but if I was to do something like that, that is definitely a song I would want on my funeral playlist.

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    1. JAY: I volunteer to do the Klingon death ritual for you...but not too soon!

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    2. Grace, thank you! That's one, just a few more to go! :D

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    3. Jay I remember Casey Kasem countdown of the Top 40. I loved his voice. I had to look up the album cover of Twisted Sister which shows bones twisted into a symbol or something and by today's standard it seems pretty tame. But, we are definitely in a different generation! I grew up on music from the 50's thru early 70's. Then when my daughter became a teen she became a fan of many of the groups you mentioned.

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    4. Actually, the bones twisted into the TS of the band's initials is not the original cover art to Stay Hungry. Here's a link to the album art I was talking about: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stay_Hungry_%28album%29#/media/File:Twister_Sister_-_Stay_Hungry.jpg

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  11. Wendy, congratulations on American Girl! As far as one song changing my life, I don't think so, but there have been many songs to get me through a rough patch.

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  12. I love this post so much! I guess I would say “Defying Gravity”— I remember singing that to myself every day, as I transitioned into the writing life! It’s such an amazing song.

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  13. And just so you all know, I am in Denver today, teaching a sold-out day long seminar for the Sisters in Crime here! So I will pop in and out, but know I am reading all of your comments —yay Wendy!

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  14. Congratulations, Wendy. The book sounds great and your description of the scene in the bar took me right there.

    Like Jay, I remember listening to Casey Kasem's Top 40 on the radio. Our first record (I'm a twin, in many ways a "we" and not an "I"--not complaining about that!) was Don McLean's American Pie. We were huge John Denver and Gordon Lightfoot fans, but I wouldn't say any particular song changed my life. In my older years I enjoy a lot of music at church, as we have a fabulous choir. I've been trying to think about which hymns I would want at a memorial service, but there are too many options! A hymn that always brings tears is one we sing on the Sunday closest to July 4; This is My Song, set to Sibelius's Finlandia, It's a prayer for peace in the whole world, and a recognition that we all love our countries.

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    1. Yes, that is completely gorgeous!

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    2. Gillian, I remember This is My Song (Finlandia) and it always made me cry too when we sang it in church. Beautiful song! The words, and I think it's written in a minor key? which leads to melancholy. Charlene Miller-Wilson

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  15. Oh, rats, of course that is me, Hank, above!

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  16. One more time:
    And just so you all know, I am in Denver today, teaching a sold-out day long seminar for the Sisters in Crime here! So I will pop in and out, but know I am reading all of your comments —yay Wendy!

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  17. Whatever inspires you to write is a good thing. However, though I've heard Tom Petty's name often (he played a lot of gigs here), I was unfamiliar with his music. So I clicked on the link you provided, and found the music--well, cacophony to my ears. Then I tried "Mary Jane's Last Dance." Good beat, good melody, ICKY video. Okay, whatever floats your boat. Tom Petty would not inspire me, but you do you.

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    1. Try The Waiting by Tom Petty, It's incredible. If you prefer, Linda Ronstadt has a LInda-version which was my anthem for awhile!

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  18. What a compelling story! Looking forward to reading it.

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  19. The song Bridge Over Troubled Water has been significant to me throughout my life. The song reminds me that strength, perseverance and courage are needed to move past difficult times to something better. Being there for oneself and for others. It was one of the songs at my wedding and I still get emotional when I hear it.

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    1. So agree! That song is perfection in every way!

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  20. Wendy, welcome to JRW and congratulations on your new novel!

    Amazing how a girls' night out inspired a plot for your AMERICAN GIRL novel. Look forward to reading your novel.

    Diana

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  21. What a fantastic post, Wendy. I love how eloquently you wrote about your experience in that bar and how it inspired your work. Very excited to read American Girl! I'm married to a musician so music definitely inspires...especially when the ideas won't crystalize!

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  22. No life changing songs but many songs that bring back different times of my life. And, this may make you laugh but when I took bowling in college P.E. one semester, I would play The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy) in my mind. It was a perfect rhythm for the bowling alley!

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    1. That is adorable, Pat D! And such a terrific--and still relevant!-- song.

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  23. What a wonderful story origin account that is, and how much of your emotion entered into that moment. I have had a few like that, not always with music, but with memories good and not so good.

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