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Boiled Over by Barbara Ross
Boiled Over by Barbara  Ross










Boiled Over by Barbara Ross

Constructing the town history was about teasing out the facts I would use, and I worried constantly about getting it wrong. I still had to figure out how to work it into the novel. Two other sources I loved and relied on were The Hidden History of Maine by Harry Gratwick, (The History Press, 2010) and The Boothbay Harbor Region, 1906-1960 by Harold B. I add, “If this novel has piqued your interest in Maine or in history, or if you enjoy beautifully written non-fiction, I cannot recommend this book enough.” I loved this book and as I say in the acknowledgements of Boiled Over, Lobster Coast forms the foundation of the rather eccentric and truncated version of mid-coast Maine history that appears in Boiled Over. One of my favorite texts was Colin Woodard’s brilliantly written The Lobster Coast: Rebels, Rusticators and the Struggle for a Forgotten Frontier (Penguin, 2004). As I read, I was grateful, actually, that I hadn’t grown up in Maine and learned its history in elementary school, because I could approach the task with boundless curiosity and the thrill of learning something new.

Boiled Over by Barbara Ross

But my knowledge wasn’t Maine-centric or particularly coherent. Of course I knew a little from my general knowledge of American history and from visiting historic spots in Maine. I started reading Maine histories even before I started writing. That didn’t happen in the first book, because Clammed Up “wasn’t about that.” But Boiled Over, the book coming out on May 6, centers on a Founder’s Day celebration in Busman’s Harbor, so the moment of truth had come. In the back of my mind, I knew someday I would have to write the history of Busman’s Harbor and explain the name. Some of my early readers didn’t think that the name was charming enough for a town in a cozy novel, but I grew attached to it, and neither my agent nor editor raised any objection, so Busman’s Harbor it stayed. Sayers 1937 book, the fourth and last to include Harriet Vane, and what mystery writer wouldn’t want that association? Also, Busman’s Honeymoon is the title of Dorothy L. I knew at some level, without really examining it, that Busman’s Harbor was a play on the expression, “busman’s holiday,” which I thought was a good fit, because I knew my core characters would be the people in the town who worked their tails off to ensure that tourists had excellent vacations. Back in the fall of 2011 when I first wrote the proposal for the Maine Clambake Mystery series, I named the fictional town where my stories took place “Busman’s Harbor.” At the time, I was committed to not over-thinking the proposal, to sticking with the ideas that danced out of my fingertips as they tip-tapped across the keyboard.












Boiled Over by Barbara  Ross