Thursday, June 19, 2025

Stalking the Wild Muse: Where Does Inspiration Come From? by Carol Goodman


LUCY BURDETTE: Carol's wonderful book RETURN TO WYLDCLIFF HEIGHTS was on the short list for the Mary Higgins Clark award last year. When I noticed that she had a new book coming, I thought you'd love to hear about it. Welcome Carol!

CAROL GOODMAN: One of the most often asked questions any author gets at panels and book clubs and blog interviews is “Where do you get your ideas?” or, more ominously, “Do you ever worry about running out of ideas?”   It’s an age-old question.  I picture a Q&A after the first production of Oedipus Rex in 429 BCE at the Temple of Dionysus.  “Hey Sophocles!” a sandalled and bearded fan calls out.  “Are you worried about running out of ideas after such a big success?”

Sophocles might have quipped that the dysfunctional antics of the Oedipus clan would keep him busy for a while, or he could have appealed to the Muses.  The ancient Greeks regarded the inspiration of the artist as such a magical and mysterious event that it could only come from a divine source—or sources.  They needed nine to do the work of inspiring dull, lumpen-headed mortals.  But what if you don’t believe in divine inspiration?  Where do you find your ideas? 



The titular writers in my new book Writers and Liars think the answer is a retreat on a Greek island.  Is this the answer?  Do we need to travel afar or go to a writers retreat to find inspiration?  It’s certainly a tempting idea.  If only, we say to ourselves as we wrack our brains for the next book idea, I could go someplace free of the worries and interruptions of everyday life—no pinging phone, no household chores, no stacks of bills to pay or pile of papers to grade.  Shake off the coils of your everyday routine! sing the Sirens. Travel will yield inspiration and a retreat will offer the mental space to explore those ideas. 



And yet, in the end, the Muse can be a fickle travel companion.  She may join you for a bottle of Mythos at the local taverna—or she may have taken the last boat off the island and left you with a bunch of frustrated writers and a homicidal maniac.  Which, of course, is what happens in my book.  Because the other big idea the Greeks (i.e. Plato) had about inspiration was that it was a divine madness (theia mania) that possessed the artist, making a bunch of writers stranded on an island a volatile bunch.

So while inspiration may be found on the road, I have found it most often at home at my desk, on an ordinary weekday morning, after doing the Wordl and the crossword puzzle and making a second cup of coffee and indulging in just about every form of procrastination known to lumpen-headed mortals and feeling like I am scratching out my words on a stone tablet with a blunt rock … and then a word or an image—maybe a whole sentence!—will come to me that wasn’t there before.  And that feels like magic.  Picasso perhaps said it best:  Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working.



By all means, take the trip, go to the retreat if you can, but remember, inspiration is everywhere including (and perhaps especially) in your own backyard.  You just have to show up for it.  

So, tell me … where do you get your ideas? 

Carol Goodman is the New York Times Bestselling author of twenty-six novels, including The Lake of Dead Languages, The Seduction of Water, which won the 2003 Hammett Prize, The Widow’s House, which won the 2018 Mary Higgins Clark Award, and The Night Visitors, which won the 2020 Mary Higgins Clark Award.  For over twenty years, she has taught creative writing at The New School and SUNY New Paltz and offered private classes, book coaching, and editorial services to writers in fiction and memoir.  She lives in the Hudson Valley.


In the latest thrilling suspense novel from Mary Higgins Clark Award–winning author Carol Goodman, a group of mystery authors gathers on a secluded Greek island for a writers retreat, only to discover that their enigmatic host has been murdered and everyone present is a suspect.

They’ll kill for inspiration…

Fifteen years ago, Maia Gold attended a prestigious—and very exclusive—writers retreat hosted by billionaire Argos Alexander on the Greek island of Eris. It’s where she wrote her first book, the one that should have launched a brilliant career. But something dark happened on that island, a betrayal that has hung over Maia ever since.

Now, Maia finds a familiar envelope in the mail. It’s an invitation to return to Eris, and according to social media, she’s not the only one from that first retreat who’s been invited back. This could be the second chance Maia needs to jump-start her dreams. A chance for reconciliation… or revenge.

Almost all of the writers from fifteen years before have returned to Eris, bringing unresolved resentments with them. Soon, the guests learn that their illustrious host is absent, though he has left instructions for them to participate in a contest: whoever can write the most suspenseful mystery while on the island will win a fortune and literary acclaim. But this is no harmless game—when the guests gather in the morning to share their first chapters, they find Argos Alexander, dead. 

Tensions simmer as the guests try to determine who’s capable of murder, not just on the page, but in real life. On an island full of mystery writers, anyone could be the killer—and anyone could be the next victim. Trapped together until the next boat arrives from the mainland, they must sort out old grievances and figure out how to trust one another... or die one by one.



35 comments:

  1. Congratulations, Carol, on your newest book . . . and what a captivating plot! I'm definitely looking forward to meeting Maia and the other writers on this retreat . . . .
    I guess perhaps ideas come to those who work the hardest for them????

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    1. Thank you, Joan! Work and a little bit of luck, I think!

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  2. CAROL: congratulations. You are a new to me author and I’m going to look for your book.

    My ideas come from everywhere. I would see people having a conversation in sign language and a kernel of an idea suddenly comes to me. I would read a line from a novel that made me think of a possible idea for a novel. I would be watching a movie when an idea pops up. People watching is a hobby and I make up stories about them.

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  3. CAROL: Congratulations on WRITERS AND LIARS! Great title(!) and an intriguing premise for Maia to return to Eris.

    I am glad that you and other crime writers do not run out of ideas for your next stories.
    I am not a fiction writer. But I spent many years in climate change research with the Canadian federal gov't. I had free rein to come up with proposal ideas to submit for external funding. It was both fun and frustrating.

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    1. What worthy work, Grace! And the perfect use of inspiration. May the Muses be with you! Thank you for what you do!

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  4. Carol, congratulations on your upcoming book release. Love the title.

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  5. That's a great premise, Carol, and I look forward to reading the new book.

    I've had a hyperactive imagination my whole life, and when people ask if I ever run out of ideas for the next book, I always say no. On the other hand, right now I am in pantser Hell about 2/3 of the way through my current book. Every day I rely on some small idea rising up about what the heck needs to happen next because I have no idea. My partner reminds me that I say this every time. Which is true! And this is my 40th book. I know I'll get through it.

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    1. Pantser hell does not sound fun but we know you'll figure it out!!

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    2. I'm right there with you, my friend, except I'm only about 1/3 of the way through.

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    3. You're an inspiration to me, Edith! I well know that middle-of-the-night pantser hell, but isn't it the best when that idea does rise up out of the ether! Thank you, Edith!

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  6. Edison said "genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration. Carrie Neistat said"everyone has ideas. Ideas are highly, highly overvalued. Execution is all that matters." Yet... there is a mind body state of mind in such focus that time is lost and the work is everything. It seems to me that the idea of Divine Inspiration could also be our unconscious taking over as such. I know -- right now - that I had to dig in a bit before I could start talking to you. I also know (believe) that most people that I have met who do not think they are creative have a very strong inner critic that quashes their spontaneity. In my opinion humans all have 'aha!' moments. The outcome from insight is based on cultural values. As in who had the aha moment and who was willing to listen.

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    1. Carol,forgive me, I am a recovering egotist. I totally neglected to say great plot and I just reserved a copy. Thank you for visiting.

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    2. What a thoughtful comment, Coralee! Yes, I agree that the divine spark may well be the unconscious. It feels that you have to go into a kind of trance state to reach it sometimes, like the Oracle of Delphi (although she may have had some psychedelic smoke to help her out :). Thanks for commenting, Coralee!

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  7. Carol, congratulations. A Greek Island writers retreat is a great premise for a mystery.
    You are right about readers wanting to know where writers' ideas for certain books come from. We talk about that here all the time.

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    1. Thanks, Judy! I love talking all things writing! How lucky you are to have a group of great writers to muse it over :)

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  8. I’m not an author, but whenever I am trying to figure something out, ideas come to me in the shower. 🚿 💡
    Writers and Liars is going on my goodreads right now.

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    1. Thanks, Brenda! Me too, the shower and at the sink washing dishes. Thank goodness for water! Thanks for putting me on your Goodreads list!

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  9. Congratulations on the new book, Carol!

    I love the Picasso quote: "Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working." I sit at my computer every day and work. If the inspiration doesn't find me today, I hope it does tomorrow, but either way, I'm putting words on the page.

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    1. The Muse knows where to find you! Sometimes I think I should send a forward address when I go on the road. Thanks, Annette, keep writing!

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  10. Congratulations on your new release! I write short stories about the places I've visited, most recently the prehistoric caves in SW France, but for day to day pounding the keyboard, there's nothing like my kitchen table, with two dogs snoozing nearby.

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    1. Wow, I've always wanted to see those caves! How exciting! And yes, no better companion to the muse than a good dog (or cat)! Thanks, Margaret!

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  11. Congratulations, Carol! The book sounds great and your post was really fun. If I can't figure something out, I've found that sleeping sometimes helps, or walking in nature and letting my mind go.

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    1. I take a walk every morning and a nap most afternoons :). Thanks, Gillian!

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  12. Carol, your work is new to me, but I look forward to reading this new book. It sounds intriguing and I've place a hold on it at my library. I am so very grateful for you and every writer who recognizes inspiration in its many forms and uses it to create such marvelous books. I can't wait to read this one. Congratulations and may many more inspirations follow you wherever you roam! -- Victoria

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    1. Thank you so much! It's always wonderful to find a new reader. Thank you, Jungle Reds for that!

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  13. What a great intro to WRITERS AND LIARS, Carol! And I'm going to print out the Picasso quote. The days that seem dull and dragging, when you sit down and feel like 'what is the actual point of trying today?' but you start writing anyway. Those are the days when I often surprise myself at what happens on the page.

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    1. I have a book mark with that quote! Yes, sometimes you have to slog through the muck to find the inspiration! Thank you!

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  14. I'm a huge fan of Carol's books... so much fun to see you here on Jungle Red!!
    For me the answer to where ideas come from is from personal experience. I can't write 300+ pages about something that doesn't speak to me in some personal way. Themes like getting older, or dealing with accumulated STUFF, or sibling rivalry... that's the kindling.

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    1. Right back at you, Hallie, I'm a huge fan of your books, and it's clear in every one that you bring the personal emotional goods to the page. Thank you so much for having me on Jungle Reds!

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  15. What is it about Greek islands? They inspire so many juicy plots! Congratulations on Writers and Liars, Carol. Great title.

    Coralee mentions Divine Inspiration, which I never understood (still don't, really) or realized was a real thing until I started writing. It's a phenomenon that no one has ever explained properly--to me, anyway. When characters take on lives as real as my own. And being in "the zone" when prose pours out of me: some of my very best writing comes from those times.

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  16. Thank you, Karen! Yes, that feeling of being in the zone makes it all worth while. I find it can take a while of just pushing on and feeling uninspired before I get there but then it really does feel divine. It makes me understand why the Greeks invented the Muses.

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  17. I see what you did there with the name of the island, Carol! I'm so glad to have you here today and for anyone who has missed out on the joy of reading Carol Goodman, now's your chance! She's one of the writers I recommend to friends MOST frequently, and if you like my books, know that many of hers are also set in scenic and spooky upstate NY.

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  18. Beware of Greek Islands. And writers. I can't wait to read this one, Carol! I'm not a writer but I do have flashes of brilliance sometimes for "projects." They generally come out of the blue, so perhaps they are the result of divine inspiration.

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