The Poacher's Son Goes on Tour

Paul Doiron reading from The Poacher's Son.So I kicked off my local author tour for The Poacher's Son on Friday evening in my old stomping grounds of Portland. Longfellow Books, on Monument Square, was gracious enough to host my first reading, and I was greeted by a lot of familiar faces. Years ago, Longfellow was part of the Bookland chain of stores, so it gave me a rush of nostalgia to be standing there as an author.

When I was  kid, my mother used to drop me at the South Portland Bookland while she did her grocery shopping. I spent hours sitting in corners (the clerks were obliging), reading comic books and science fiction and fantasy novels. I still own the battered paperback copy of The Silmarillion that I purchased there.

On Saturday morning I signed copies of The Poacher's Son at another former Bookland store, Nonesuch Books in South Portland. I saw many kids entering the shop, dragging their parents behind them. But they weren't there for books; they were all asking for Silly Bandz. Not being the father of a small child, I had no idea what Silly Bandz were so I asked one of the clerks, and she told me that they were brightly colored, animal-shaped rubber bands that kids wear around their wrists. Nonesuch was sold out of these novelties, so the clerks were directing the parents to the hardware store around the corner. It made me sad that the kids didn't even consider lingering to browse some books.

The crowd at Longfellow Books.

On a brighter note, I was talking with a coworker this afternoon, and he told me that the teenaged son of his girlfriend had flown through my novel in record time. The sex and violence must have sustained him. And who knows? Maybe The Poacher's Son will inspire this boy to write his own book some day. I mean, pessimists have been predicting the death of the novel since Don Quixote first tilted at windmills.

If you're going to spend your life writing made-up stories, it helps to have a childlike faith. Silly Bandz will break and fade from memory, but I have to believe that novels — on paper, on screens, maybe on holograms — will endure. Then again, I've always had an active imagination.

 

The Globe and Mail Raves

The Poacher's Son has crossed the border. In today's Globe and Mail (Canada's newspaper of record and its largest circulation national paper), Margaret Cannon writes:

This is one of the best debut novels I’ve ever read. Doiron, a licensed wilderness guide and editor-in-chief of Down East: The Magazine of Maine, has put unforgettable characters into a gorgeous setting and does it all with a lovely, liquid prose style that I found irresistible....

The plotline where the investigator has to save a relative is an oldie, but Doiron’s style and setting give it new life....Doiron is definitely a writer to watch.

Even though working with words is what I do, I'm having trouble expressing the gratitude I feel for reviews like this one.  

"One of the Best Debuts of the Year"

Oline Cogdill, who writes for the Orlando Sun Sentinel and whose book reviews are syndicated in more than 250 newspapers, reads hundreds of new mysteries a year. Here's her take on The Poacher's Son:

Paul Doiron makes an outstanding gripping debut in The Poacher's Son. Doiron's rich exploration of characters shows people at their best and worst...Doiron, editor-in-chief of Down East magazine, showcases his native Maine's beauty and how the pristine woods are giving way to developers. Doiron skillfully melds an outdoor adventure with a personal story of families. The Poacher's Son moves at a brisk pace with unpredictable but realistic twists that reach a crescendo at the shocking finale. The Poacher's Son is proving to be one of the best debuts of the year.

This review has already appeared in the Victoria Advocate, the Sacramento Bee, the Kansas City Star, the News Tribune (Tacoma), and the Sun News (Myrtle Beach). God bless syndication.  

Book Launch

After months of anticipation, I celebrated the official launch of The Poacher's Son with a fantastic party at the home of New York Times bestselling author Tess Gerritsen and her husband Jake overlooking Penobscot Bay. The house was packed, and my local independent bookseller, The Owl & Turtle Bookshop, sold more than 100 copies of the novel.

Next comes a busy schedule of readings and signings that start in Portland, Maine, on Friday and take me to the American Library Association conference in Washington, D.C. in late June—and perhaps even farther afield as more events get added to the calendar. 

All the more reason to take a moment and appreciate the fulfillment of my life's dream. I couldn't have asked for a better party or a better group of friends to help me celebrate.