The Real Moose Massacre Part 1

I recently spoke with Maureen Milliken, news editor of the Kennebec Journal, about the real-life inspirations for Massacre Pond, specifically about the scene that opens the book. It's an incident I mention in the Author's Note: the so-called "Soldiertown Moose Massacre."

In 1999 someone slaughtered nine moose in the unpeopled townships northwest of Moosehead Lake. No one was ever convicted of these killings — the worst wildlife crime in Maine history — although there is now significant evidence pointing to two individuals. (That will be the subject of Part 2 of this post.) The case has preoccupied me since the day I first read about it in the paper. But taking an interest in an event and deciding to use it as fodder for a work of fiction are different things.

Milliken asked me how and why I decided to weave aspects of what happened in Soldiertown into the Mike Bowditch saga: 

Doiron, whose previous mysteries had some decidedly non-Warden Service crimes, said the moose massacre “gave me the chance to examine some of the special forensic challenges that are unique to wardens’ jobs.”

As fascinating as Soldiertown is to Mainers, Doiron’s editors — from away, naturally — wanted “something bigger.”

He also had an idea formed around Roxanne Quimby’s proposal for a national park in the North Woods. Put the two together? Presto, a gripping mystery about a moose massacre and a woman trying to carve a park out of a flinty Maine culture that is not interested.

Next to “where do you get your ideas?” the question fiction writers hear the most is “who is that character supposed to be?”

Doiron is quick to point out, in fact frequently points out, that Betty Morse in “Massacre Pond” bears little resemblance to Quimby.

Writers, good ones at least, may get sparked by people and events, but the biggest inspiration comes from feelings and themes. Their books aren’t about something, they’re ABOUT something.

So Doiron took Soldiertown’s details and, as he says, made them “the inciting incident in a series of escalating episodes that ultimately lead to murder.”

What the book is really about is what happens when someone inspires such a level of hatred among people that someone wants her, or the people in her life, dead.

In fact, the Soldiertown incident is worthy of a nonfiction book of its own. It almost became one. An investigative journalist named Roberta Scruggs was my source for most the details concerning the moose massacre in the novel. Her search for answers to the Soldiertown mystery is an interesting story in its own right — and one I will pick up in my next post.

The AP Says Massacre Pond Is "Superbly Well-Written"

Edgar-winner Bruce DeSilva has reviewed Massacre Pond for the Associated Press, and he has high praise for the book:

Doiron fashions a tense and clever mystery peopled by characters you could well meet by wandering into the wrong Down East bar. As usual, he peppers his superbly well-written yarn with evocative descriptions of the state he and Bowditch call home, including this passage about nightfall in the forest:

"A stillness surrounds you that makes every stray sound — even an acorn dropping, every chipmunk peep — seem overly loud. The birds go quiet. Sometimes you'll hear a distant crashing that makes your heart stop; a buck has caught your scent and gone leaping off into the brush before you can spot the white flag of his tail."

When you have a new book out, you hope for the best and prepare for the worst. So far Massacre Pond is exceeding my hopes.

A Q&A with the Houston Chronicle

There's an interview up today with me on the Houston Chronicle's Bookish blog. This is just a small part of an extensive Q&A I did with Mike Yawn, a professor at Sam Houston State University, and I'm hoping a longer version appears down the line. Here, he asks me a question I get frequently at readings:

MY: What about the future.  Are you shopping these books to film producers?

PD: I do have a film agent who is fairly active.  We’ve had producers approach me about “The Poacher’s Son,” but nobody who I have had a lot of confidence in.  And that’s one thing about my experience with the movie business: I want a movie that’s not going to embarrass me.

MY: Have you talked to Stephen King about that?

PD: (Laughs) Well, I am sure he’d like to go back in time and rethink some things.  One of the challenges, I think, is that the business just isn’t interested in making low-key suspense films.  They’re doing comic-book heroes, toy franchises, and those sorts of things.  I’m hoping, however, that as the books pile up, someone will look at them and say, “You know what this reminds me of?  ‘Justified,’ or one of those cable series that are so well done.  There’s a lot of smart drama that’s occurring on television, and I can see this on AMC or FX.  I’d love to see that.

I can always hope that someone in Hollywood stumbles on the series one of these days. Obviously, I am biased, but I can see it working well.

I'll be appearing in Houston with my friend and fellow chronicler of game wardens, C.J. Box, on August 6 at Murder by the Book.

Library Journal Calls Massacre Pond "Riveting"

Library Journal is out with its round up of new crime novels and it's review of Massacre Pond is short but sweet:

Readers following outdoor procedurals will snap up Maine game warden Mike Bowditch’s fourth riveting case (after Bad Little Falls), which involves an animal activist whose ideals threaten her family’s safety and open the door to unexpected violence.

The book is in stores and available for download tomorrow.

Welcome to the Jungle

I have the big microphone today at Jungle Red Writers and am using it to talk about Massacre Pond and the real-life controversy around the proposed Maine Woods National Park. If I may quote from myself:

Who hates national parks? No one, right? According to the National Park Service, 278,939,216 people visited the United States’s crown jewels in 2011. My own state of Maine is home to one of the most popular in the East—Acadia National Park—which generally receives more than 2 million recreational visits a year. So it might surprise you to learn that one of the most controversial issues in Maine right now is whether to create a new national park in the state’s celebrated North Woods as a potential sanctuary for caribou, wolves, and lynx.

 

That’s why I decided to focus my new novel, Massacre Pond— the fourth in my Mike Bowditch series — around the creation of a fictional Moosehorn National Park. My protagonist is no Anna Pigeon; he’s a young Maine game warden who starts the book unsold on either the virtues of the park concept (he likes to hunt and fish, after all) or the virtues of the wealthy woman promoting the radical idea. But when a seemingly senseless moose massacre occurs on her property he finds himself dragged into the debate—which escalates very quickly to human murder, as well.

These days we’ve become used to books and television shows being “ripped from the headlines,” but from the days of Uncle Tom’s Cabin and Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, fiction has also been a useful tool to start a public debate. And that’s what I aim to do. “Sensational” and “serious” aren’t always antonyms.
You should go over there to read the rest. Bookmark while you're there. The "Reds" are some of the most informative and entertaining authors on the web, and it's always a privilege and a kick for me to post for them.