Let’s welcome Andrew, another
new-comer to the Scribbler.
He has kindly accepted our invitation to be the featured guest this week.
His books are flying off
the shelves and garnishing great reviews.
He’s sharing the SBTS with
us today.
Read on my friends.
Andrew MacLean is the author of two Backyard History books (with a
third coming in November 2024), the writer of the Backyard History newspaper
column that appears weekly in 19 newspapers), the host of the Backyard History
Podcast, and the scriptwriter of the Backyard History TV Show hosted by
BellFibe.
His true
historical writings combine meticulous research with vivid storytelling,
captivating anecdotes, and the human touch Atlantic Canadians are known for.
Title: Backyard History: Forgotten Stories From Atlantic Canada’s Past (Volumes
One and Two)
Synopsis:
Backyard
History unearths the often hilarious, mostly mysterious, always surprising untold
stories of Canada’s East Coast, as only a Maritimer can spin them.
These two
extraordinary collections gather the very best from Andrew MacLean’s popular
newspaper column and podcast now enhanced with fresh insights and discoveries.
The Story behind the Story:
Back in
early 2020 I was travelling everywhere from Nunavut to Miami tracking global
climate change with airplanes equipped with lasers. Three days before moving to
Boston, the border shut down because of a global pandemic, and I along with 87
co-workers were mass-fired over a Zoom call.
I moved
back home to New Brunswick where I spent my pandemic taking long hikes through
rural areas. I started wondering about obscure tales from the past …
specifically, a tall tale of a sea monster nicknamed “Old Ned” from little Lake
Utopia, NB.
I do have
a background in History—a degree I hadn’t found especially useful until that
point—so I dug into old newspaper reports and contemporary eyewitness sightings
of Old Ned from the 1800s. Then I wrote it up as a story, inspired by the way
my grandfather told me stories in Tide Head, NB when I was a kid.
I put
what I thought of as a rather silly sea monster story up on social media to
entertain my friends during pandemic lockdowns, and the damn thing went viral!
It got
shared by some big meme accounts, a huge national podcast asked me for an
interview, and then the newspaper I once delivered on my bicycle as a little
boy called and asked if they could pay me to write stuff like that every week.
Now that
column appears in 19 newspapers every week, I have 2 books (plus a third one
coming out in November!) and my own podcast, all under the Backyard History
name.
And I owe it all to, of all things, a sea monster!
WEBSITE: Please go HERE.
Andrew: I’m
really not very precious about where I write. I’ve written stories in the car
(as a passenger, not while driving!) and on ferries. In fact, I am writing my
answers to this questionnaire as I sit in the Saint John City Market with
American cruise ship passengers milling about. (I just had quite the little
argument with one fellow who is absolutely convinced he is in St. John’s,
Newfoundland and doesn’t believe me when I tell him we are actually in Saint
John, New Brunswick!)
Normally
though, my environment would be at home and would be clean: things put away,
floors swept, dishes done, etc. … to all the better make a huge mess with my
writing!
When I’m
really going I’ll have photocopies of old newspaper clippings, scrawled
remarks, post-it notes, etc. all over my desk, on nearby tables, the floor … to
an onlooker it’s got all the hallmarks of a natural disaster rolling through,
but to me, I know where everything is!
I’d be
caffeinated to the hilt with music —typically Arcade Fire—almost always playing
in the background.
EXCERPT:
You’ve heard of “Nessie” from Loch Ness, “Ogopogo” in Okanagan Lake but have you heard of New Brunswick’s own lake monster, “Old Ned”?
Read the full version of the aforementioned article that launched Backyard History “Old Ned, The Lake Utopia Monster” Go HERE.
Watch for it!!! |
Thank
you for being our guest this week, Andrew. We look forward to book #3 and hope
you’ll return one day to tell us about it.
We
wish you continued success with your writing.
And a Special Thank You to our visitors and readers.
Feel
free to leave a comment.
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