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Voyageurs
 
 

Voyageurs [Paperback]

Margaret Elphinstone
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Product Description

Books in Canada

A friend, who lives in Ottawa, recently remarked that the early history of Canada came alive for him, not in the local museums, however fine they are, but one summer evening when he was paddling a canoe among the islands on the Ottawa River.
Margaret Elphinstone’s new novel, Voyageurs, is a brilliant evocation of colonial times when adventurers canoed through the Canadian wilderness questing for furs. The narrator, Mark Greenhow, is a young British man in search of something more valuable: his missionary sister, Rachel, who married a voyageur, and soon after, mysteriously disappeared.
The frame of the story isn’t an original device: a fictional editor, with the same initials as the author, finds a nineteenth century manuscript in the attic of her house during renovations. After reading the compelling story written by the ancestor and namesake of the previous owner, she has it published. What makes the story unusual is that it is told by a young man who belonged to the local community of Quakers “who speak the truth and cheat nobody.” His writing is precise, sometimes close to precious, and very vivid.
The Quakers are pacifists and when Greenhow arrives in the colony in 1812, his principles are tested, for he arrives at a time of war. John Graves Simcoe, who became the first lieutenant Governor of Canada in 1791, had encouraged Quakers to settle in what was to become Ontario. Greenhow turns up at the Yonge Street Quaker community where he learns more about what happened to his sister Rachel, who was disowned after she married an outsider.
Greenhow is a quiet but observant narrator who often makes reference to biblical verses. He’s also well versed in the literature of his time. Back in England, Greenhow was a guide around the Lake District where he grew up. He speaks of William Wordsworth, Robert Southey, and Sir Walter Scott, the most revered tale spinner of the times. This impresses his brother-in-law, Alan Mackenzie, a Scot and a poetaster, who becomes his friend. He leads Greenhow to Michigan and the island where Rachel was given up for dead two years earlier.
The novel’s plot is as carefully crafted as one of the canoes that Mark paddles through the rapids. Voyageurs is a page-turner, but of a slower and more thoughtful variety, than the average historical yarn. There are many dramatic scenes and lively dialogue to enjoy on the way to the happy ending.
Elphinstone cannily contrasts Greenhow’s twenty- something Quaker ways with the tough men he encounters. His goodwill quickly wins him friends among the French voyageurs who sing as they paddle and portage, and tease Greenhow without mercy.
When a beautiful Ojibwa girl gives him a pair of beaded moccasins, Greenhow is embarrassed, and wonders if his pared-down religion allows him to slip into such colourful footwear. His attraction to the young Ojibwa tests his spirit and self-discipline. As Greenhow travels deeper into the wilds of Michigan and encounters Native warriors, he becomes a “hybrid creature”, his inner and outer selves transformed by his New World experiences. This is the reason he writes down his experiences for posterity.
One of the strengths of this novel, is the authentic touch of details given to describe the colonial period. For example, Greehow records what he ate at the mansion of a wealthy Montreal trader employed by the Northwest Company:

“I returned reluctantly to the busy streets, but it turned out that William Mackenzie lived in a pleasant modern house with a walled garden, about ten minutes’ walk from the city, at the western end of Jean-Baptiste Street. In his elegant dining-room that evening, I did justice to the first home-cooked dinner I’d had for seven weeks: river trout followed by beef dumplings followed by plum duff.”

Now that is good fare, whatever plum duff could be!
When Greenhow finally returns to England, he doesn’t return alone, as he married a Quaker from the Yonge Street community, a youngish woman with a pockmarked face, but flaming red hair he can’t forget, and a compatible disposition.
Margaret Elphinstone has published several other novels, an anthology of garden verse, and a book on organic gardening. Her talent for digging out historical facts and her imaginative power make Voyageurs an enjoyable and memorable read, especially for those who want to learn more about Canadian history.
Anne Cimon (Books in Canada)
--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

From Publishers Weekly

Presented as a manuscript discovered by the author in the attic of her country house in the North of England, this meticulously crafted, self-reflexive historical novel tells the story of Mark Greenhow, whose Quaker family once owned the house. In 1811, Mark's younger sister, Rachel, while doing missionary work in Canada, met and married Adam Mackenzie, a Scot associated with the fur trade in North America. Because the marriage was outside the order, Rachael was disowned; subsequently, she lost her baby and mysteriously disappeared into the wilds of what is today northern Michigan. Determined to discover his sister's fate, Mark departs for Canada, where he spends nearly two years sorely testing his Quaker faith through episodes that reveal to him the wider world beyond his placid English countryside. In the meantime, the War of 1812 rages and Mark tries to avoid the kinds of "vain" entanglements that would contradict his beliefs. The inclusion of Mark's own footnotes, lengthy discourses and commentary on his adventures and their aftermath lessens the story's suspense. The novel's interest lies in Mark's struggle to reconcile his faith with the verities and practicalities of the "real world" and in Elphinstone's mastery of early 19th-century argot.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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3 Reviews
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4.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars Not Bad, April 1 2011
This review is from: Voyageurs (Paperback)
I did enjoy the book and found it interesting, however, was disappointed in the lack of information regarding the Voyageurs and how they lived. The book did have some insight as to their stamina, but I was looking for more. It gave more information on the Quakers and how they lived in the new world, so I think the book title is a little mis-leading.
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5.0 out of 5 stars awesome read, Feb 9 2010
By 
Angela Barkman "likesbooks" (Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Voyageurs (Paperback)
The sign of a good read is one that leaves you wishing for more, and at 466 pages that's saying alot. As you are reading page after page, you know it's a great book, but the real telling is when it's over and you close the cover, sit back and think "that... was a GREAT book". Enough said, go get a copy
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5.0 out of 5 stars A brother's Love or Quakers aren't wimps, Feb 11 2004
By 
Scott N. Mcleod (Deep in the Heart of Zorra Township, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Voyageurs (Paperback)
In a magazine some actor whose name I can't remember or spell raved about this book. It deals with Mark Greenhow and a letter that arrives from Canada to his home in England. It is about his missionary sister Rachel whom has married out of the Quaker order, has lost a baby, and has wandered off by herself on a small island on Lake Huron. Red eyed and shaken Mark's parent's want to know what happened and who is this man who wrote the letter, who now says that he tried to search for Rachel but had to return to his post at the North West Company.The discriptions and research in this book are bang on, right down to the fact that it is improper to tell stories around the camp fire in summer about Nanubushu - the great Indian spirit or Manitou.My favourite parts are when Mark is on the boat coming over to Canada the year is 1810 and he is wet and cold huddled under his blanket when he throws it off to holler over the side of the boat at his sister Rachel as to why and yet again she drags him into her bad news. Mark gets to learn how to paddle in a Voyageurs canoe and get used to the traders and trappers. There are footnotes at the bottom of some of the pages explaining certain things that went on and at times you have to remind yourself that this story is fiction. Canada is gearing up for war with the States and as Quakers it is hard to pass up arms when eveyone around you isn't. As they (Quakers) have vowed never to bear arms against any man this proves difficult to explain to the average gun carrying Joe.Mark is a believable character and one I'll miss till I read the book again.Yes, Mark meets the man - Rachel's husband but at times Mark is having such an adventure that you forget why he came to Canada in the first place. As to the rest well order it from Amazon and find out you won't be disappointed.
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