top of page
Desert Live Concert_edited.jpg

the inspiration

Just click on any of the boxes below to learn more about what inspired Liz and how she developed the themes in her novels

Are we rewarded and punished for what we do?


Good vs Bad Karma

If ‘karma’ really does exist, I wish it were a little more obvious. It would be great to think good deeds will be rewarded and bad deeds punished. Too often criminals get off scot-free and truly good people never get a break. But maybe karma is just not obvious to us. Maybe, at a deeper level (or in another life if you believe in this possibility) what we do will be repaid in ways we are not even aware of.


In all three of my novels, karma is clearly at work. In The Way Things Fall, it takes fifteen years to catch up with Rachel, the protagonist, and punish her for a cowardly decision she made when she was young. In my second novel, In Love With The Night, karma forces many characters to fight with their conscience and take surprising paths to put things right.


And in my most recent novel, A Long Walk With Fate, karma plays out against the backdrop of Ma’at and Isfet, the Ancient Egyptian concepts of justice and chaos, causing one guilty character, Gabi, to be both the architect of her own punishment and the catalyst for new relationships and cathartic experiences for the people she has wronged.




Is our destiny predetermined?


Fate

The whole idea of fate has inspired novels, poems, songs, symphonies, and many a legend over the years, and you often hear people in ordinary, everyday life say: "It must be fate." I, for one, believe there's got to be something out there, some grand scheme of destiny, and this idea is at the heart of all three of my novels.


Here are two of my favourite quotes on the subject:


“There’s nowhere you can be that isn’t where you’re meant to be.”

John Lennon


“You often meet your fate on the road you take to avoid it.”

Goldie Hawn


Diverging road

And here are comments my own characters passed on to me:


“Destiny can be diverted, but it can never be cheated.” (Osman, an elderly Egyptian mystic in The Way Things Fall)


“You can’t keep knocking on the door of destiny, asking what it has in mind… stay quiet … everything will eventually become clear.” (The mother of Dominic, one of the central characters in In Love with the Night).

Fate

“No one is ever lost. They are just on their way somewhere else.” (Lukas, a nine year old boy in A Long Walk With Fate)


© 2025 LTorlée

bottom of page