Check out the article below!
By Lindsay Pykosz
I&M Staff Writer
This island has a way of getting under people’s skin and
inspiring different people in different ways. For some, that pull is still felt
from thousands of miles away, even after they have moved from the island.
When Eliot Baker left Nantucket and his job as a staff
writer for The Inquirer and Mirror in
2010 to return to Finland with his family, where his wife is from, that love he
felt since he first visited in 2003 only grew stronger. So much so that it became
the setting for his first published book, “The Last Ancient,” a suspenseful
historical mystery and love story all rolled into one that takes place
on-island between Thanksgiving and Christmas. It was released digitally on Dec.
2, with the print version coming later.
“An off-island reporter with a dark past is thrust into the
story-and the fight-of his life as he follows a breadcrumb trail of ancient
coins left at animal mutilation and murder sites around the island,” Baker
wrote in an e-mail. “The path leads to a diabolical conspiracy and a
mythological creature hunting on the island. A creature he becomes obsessed
with in ways beyond his understanding. A creature he is told he must kill to
save himself and all he holds dear.”
The island setting is what Baker, from the West Coast,
described as “unique” for the story, with the hero, Simon Stephenson, fighting
against forces that are threatening to pull him away from Nantucket, his home.
But the connection is also personal for Baker's family. His
son, Erik, 4, was born on the island and his daughter, Saga, 5, learned how to
walk here and still remembers the island's beaches.
“I was in-between classes at the local English school,
looking out the teacher’s lounge windows into the first snows of Finland’s loooooong,
dark winter, when I suddenly had this memory of one of my first assignments for
The Inquirer and Mirror, tagging
along with a hunter at sunrise on the second day of the season and hanging out
at the deer weigh-in station and learning about tick diseases.
“I
thought of all my days running and biking through the windswept conservation
land trails, bumming around the beaches, meeting amazing people; and into that
island reverie popped the mental image of a young man discovering a wounded
mythological creature in conservation land. I opened up my laptop and wrote,
‘Gunshots crow across Nantucket.’ It was like fireworks went off. This whole
magical world with this beautiful/sinister narrative opened up in my mind.”
Baker
found himself in his family cottage in remote Finland, submerged in peace and
quiet and surrounded by an atmosphere that allowed him to mold and shape his
craft. His first two drafts were completed between Oct. 2011 and July 2012 and
pitched it at the Pacific Northwest Writer’s Association Conference in Seattle,
Wash. While he said he got a lot of interest, one woman, J. Ellen Smith of
Champagne Books, was particularly excited. After two more drafts, he sent it to
her and the rest was history.
Baker
has always loved to write and had distant dreams of becoming a novelist. From
the time he was seven, he told himself that he would one day be an author. That
inspiration may have come from his mother, Sharon Baker, who published three
sci-fi novels with Avon Books before she died of cancer in 1991.
“I
wrote a lumbering beast (180,000 words!) of a novel when I was 22, fresh out of
college,” he wrote. “It somehow got some representation but never went
anywhere. I shelved my novelist aspirations and went back to school to be a
doctor, attending the Health Careers Program at Harvard Extension School, and
working in two different labs as a research assistant at Harvard Medical
School.”
Later,
Baker decided to return to writing and got his Master’s in Science Journalism
from Boston University. He worked at Harvard Health Letters before starting at
the I&M in 2008. He credits his experiences here with how to be a good
novelist.
“In
addition to learning how to trim the fat and nail the heart of a story with a
good lead, I learned how to research a story and how critical it is to get your
facts straight,” he said. “The same holds for fiction.”
While
he has done some freelance work for an English language paper in Finland, he
said he has directed his writing towards fiction. He also runs an
editing/translating/writing business at eliotbaker.net, teaches communications,
leadership and project management at Satakunta University of Applied Sciences,
teaches at the local grammar and high school’s English language track programs.
While
“The Last Ancient” was intended to be written as a stand alone, Baker said he
would love to turn it into a series. He added that he has a historical fiction
prequel already mapped out, but much more research at the Nantucket Historical
Association will be required to finish it-perhaps to be started during a trip
to the island next summer.
“I
have the first draft of my next novel nearly finished, and a half-dozen other
projects plotted out, most of which have a fantastical approach to them,
although not all,” he said.
Eliot
Baker’s “The Last Ancient” is currently only available online, and can be
purchased at www.burstbooks.ca
Great article Eliot! Congratulations on your debut novel.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much Ceci!
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