Pam
Pam asked Chris Bohjalian:

Mr. Bohjalian! I was so excited to see the subject matter of your newest novel as I am a great-granddaughter of Margaret Scott, who was hanged for a witch in Salem, Mass., in 1692. How did you come to choose this subject matter? I will be anxious to see how you portrayed your protagonist and I look forward to immersing myself in another of your wonderful works!

Chris Bohjalian Thanks, Pam -- and please call me Chris. You have an important ancestor. I am so sorry for what she and her family endured.

Let's see: the inspiration for Hour of the Witch.

Puritans lived with anxiety and dread: Satan was as real as your neighbor and they fretted constantly over whether they were saved or damned.

Now, when we think of New England’s history of hanging people for witchcraft, we beeline straight to Salem in 1692. But in 1656, the governor of Massachusetts had his own sister-in-law hanged as a witch. And the first real witch hunt was Hartford in 1662 – three full decades before Salem.

One thing many of the women executed as witches had in common was that they were smart, opinionated, and viewed as outsiders: sometimes, they saw through the patriarchal hypocrisy that marked a lot of New England Puritanism.

I was looking for a way into a novel of suspense set in the seventeenth century, but one that I hoped would chart new ground. I came across a reference in the records of Boston’s Court of Assistants from 1672: a woman named Nanny Naylor successfully sued her husband for divorce on the grounds of cruelty. And I was off and running.

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