Where Is Massacre Pond?

I've always loved maps, especially maps of fictional locations. I can't fully express my enthusiasm for this map of Hardy's Wessex or this one of Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha County. In the Mike Bowditch series I combine real Maine places (taking considerable liberties with some of them) with creations of my own. This map is a little project of mine to give readers some sense of the approximate locales where my stories take place. Don't take any of the marked locations too literally. It's just fiction, after all.

Massacre Pond Chosen for the Indie Next List!

Indiebound, which is an organization of independent booksellers, has chosen Massacre Pond as one of the new titles for indies to showcase in the month of August. My novel was recommended by Rita Moran of Apple Valley Books in Winthrop who writes:

Paul Doiron just keeps getting better. Open Massacre Pond, and you can smell the sweetness of the Maine woods, you can feel dry leaves underfoot, and hear the birds singing at dawn. But Massacre Pond offers far more than that: real Maine characters who might have just walked out of a local diner, issues that are as fresh as the latest headlines, and the kind of suspense that will keep your lights on far into the night.

I don't know an author who doesn't prize being on the Indie Next List as one of the highest honors a new book can receive.

The Lewiston Sun-Journal Says I'm "Catching Fire"

It's a phrase I can no longer read without thinking of Katniss Everdeen, but I'll take this great review from V. Paul Reynolds and the Lewiston Sun-Journal:

Doiron's tale has all of the ingredients of a tense thriller that kept my attention to the end. Doiron has something else going with his Mike Bowditch series besides good storytelling. He is a master, not only at his ability to portray the real Maine, but in developing characters that are evocative and fascinating in their human foibles and complex personal relationships.

How he manages so skillfully to take real Maine characters and events and weave them so seamlessly into the tapestry of his story is worthy of admiration. For example, the senseless, wanton mass killing of the moose is not a figment of Doiron's imagination; it happened, and to this day has never been solved. Word is that the Maine Warden Service suspects who committed this felony but has insufficient hard evidence to justify the issuance of summons.

Doiron's protagonist, Warden Mike Bowditch, is an endearing, courageous character with his share of personal problems and self-doubts. Personally, I can't wait to see what adventure awaits Warden Bowditch after Massacre Pond.

So far, with this book, the odds seem ever in my favor.

Maine Sunday Telegram calls Massacre Pond: "Compelling."

The Maine Sunday Telegram is out with its review of Massacre Pond. My books are published internationally, but I always care what the hometown papers think. Reviewer Frank O. Smith likes what he read:

There are nefarious, crazy and perverted characters to suspect as well as zealous, sad and unsuspecting suspects.

Some clues are blatant, others hidden in plain sight. That it ends badly for so many is part of the well-crafted tale.

And as for the larger questions of how Mike Bowditch will reconcile his angst over love, his past and his future – that's the thorniest, most engaging mystery of them all. 

Smith has reviewed several of my previous novels and he's right on about the last part: the real mystery at the heart of each book is how humankind's capacity for violence will change Mike Bowditch.

The Real Moose Massacre Part 2

Roberta ScruggsAs I note in the acknowledgements to Massacre Pond, I wouldn't have been able to write the book without the help of former investigative journalist Roberta Scruggs. The moose massacre in the novel was inspired by a grisly true life event. In 1999 someone slaughtered nine moose and two deer in Soldiertown, Maine, and left the corpses to rot. It was—and remains—the worst wildlife crime in modern Maine history.

Roberta Scruggs was a reporter for the Maine Sunday Telegram at the time, writing about the outdoors. For a variety of reasons she didn't cover the Soldiertown slaughter, but as the years went on and she left the paper, she found herself obsessed with the case. Nobody was paying Roberta to investigate the incident, but that didn't stop her from putting together a thousand-page dossier of interviews, evidence forms, and FOIA-obtained documents from the Maine Warden Service, including crime scene photographs and ballistic reports. She used this information to write a compelling account of Soldiertown and its unhappy aftermath, which she published online on a website she was running at the time.

Thanks to Maureen Milliken of the Kennebec Journal, that 36,000 article is available again. If you have read Massacre Pond and enjoyed it, you should really read Roberta's story. It's a gripping tale:

The Soldiertown moose killings poisoned friendships, changed lives and – even though some people are convinced they know who did it -- remain a mystery that may never be solved. The statute of limitations has expired, so the killers got away with it, but people still wonder why someone shot nine moose and two deer and simply drove away. Leaving the meat untouched was what spooked people most. It told them the killers weren’t hunters or even poachers, but something deeper and darker. And it was small consolation that the victims were moose and deer, not people. Even today when the crime is talked about in the nearby towns of Rockwood and Greenville, the words serial killing and serial killer often slip out.

 

The Soldiertown moose killings poisoned friendships, changed lives and – even though some people are convinced they know who did it -- remain a mystery that may never be solved. The statute of limitations has expired, so the killers got away with it, but people still wonder why someone shot nine moose and two deer and simply drove away.Leaving the meat untouched was what spooked people most. It told them the killers weren’t hunters or even poachers, but something deeper and darker. And it was small consolation that the victims were moose and deer, not people. Even today when the crime is talked about in the nearby towns of Rockwood and Greenville, the words serial killing and serial killer often slip out.

Last year, as I was thinking about my next Mike Bowditch book, I found myself remembering Roberta's Soldiertown piece. We'd known each other for a number of years (I'd been her editor at Down East magazine), and I asked how she would feel if I used the story as the starting point for a mystery novel. She happily agreed. We met at Simone's Hot Dog Stand in Lewiston, and she loaned me her enormous blue binder of research material. It felt like I was being given a treasure trove. All novelists should be so lucky.

Initially, I'd planned on telling a story that tracked the real-life massacre fairly closely, but my imagination had other ideas. I'm glad the novel decided to turn a different direction. I'm happy with how Massacre Pond turned out. But as a journalist, I appreciate the power of nonfiction to hold a mirror up reality. And so, I hope you will read Roberta's account. What happened that horrible week in October 1999 — and in the months and years that followed — should not be forgotten.