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Black Robe
  

Black Robe (Hardcover)

by Brian Moore (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Amazon.ca Canadian Essential

A Belfast native who immigrated to Canada in the 1940s and then retained Canadian citizenship as he continued his travels, Brian Moore was a master of both the domestic drama, like his early Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne, and the political thriller, as in his marvellously economical novels like Lies of Silence. In between, he wrote his most striking book, Black Robe, an account of the 17th-century encounter between the Huron and Iroquois the French called "Les Sauvages" and the French Jesuit missionaries the native people called "Blackrobes." No other book has so well captured both the intense--and disastrous--strangeness of each culture to one another, and their equal strangeness to our own much later understanding. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


The Toronto Star

"The novel is full of suspense, quiet and intense but hypnotic in its gripping accumulaiton of vivid detail... Moore springs surprises, of sexual depravity, emotional blackmail, treachery, deceit and murder..."— --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
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4.2 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars "Heart of Darkness" in North American snow., Feb 20 2002
By Cipriano "www.bookpuddle.blogspot.com" (Planet Claire) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
Discussing Black Robe, the author said, "...I'd never written a book like this before. I didn't want to write an historical novel because I don't particularly like historical novels... I wanted to write this as a tale. I thought of it in terms of authors I admire, like Conrad. I thought of Heart of Darkness, a tale, a journey into an unknown destination, to an unknown ending." He was inspired to write Black Robe through his own experience of the vast Canadian landscape, the severe winter climate, and his own travels up and down the St. Lawrence River. His discovery of American historian Francis Parkman's study entitled "The Jesuits in North America" led Moore on a quest of further research, and soon he began to wonder... what if he had been fool enough to become a Jesuit and land himself in this Canadian wilderness, surrounded by people who seemed highly intelligent and terrifying all at once, and near impossible to convert? Black Robe was born.

It is set in the early seventeenth century. The zealous Jesuit missionary Father Laforgue must make a perilous journey up the Ottawa River to a remote outpost in order to to relieve an ailing priest of his duties there. After receiving permission from the Commandant, who is none other than Samuel Champlain, Laforgue sets off for Ihonatiria with his young apprentice Daniel Davost, and a convoy of canoes piloted by the native Algonkin guides. The trip proves to be even more perilous than was anticipated and Moore's tale becomes an experiment in bringing the character of the committed priest Laforgue to the limits of his beliefs and his ability to endure. And it pains him to watch Daniel's own spiritual disintegration.

This tale is superb in how it shows the clash of these two almost infinitely different cultures... the European Christian (and more specifically "Catholic") proselytizing mentality face to face with the Native belief in harmony with nature. One of the "Savages" sums up their opinion of Laforgue by saying "...listen Blackrobe. I am speaking against you today. You and your god do not suit our people. Your ways are not our ways. If we adopt them we will be neither Norman nor Huron. And soon our enemies will know our weakness and wipe us from the earth." These natives live by relying on the interpretation of their dreams and by the forest speaking to them etc., things which the Jesuits considered useless or foolish, and a result of ignorance. But Moore is brilliant in showing how the natives saw the Jesuit ways as being equally mysterious and ridiculous (especially the whole idea of the Eucharist, how they viewed it as cannibalism. They called baptism the "water sorcery"). So everything about the natives that seemed to be based on a sort of primitive superstition was reciprocated in their perception of Jesuit practises and rituals. In this book we meet the Huron, the Iroquois, and the Algonkin as a handsome, brave, warlike, incredibly cruel people, who were in no way dependent on the white man and, in fact, judged him to be their physical and mental inferior. And we meet the Blackrobes, who willingly flung themselves into the midst of this culture, and unlike Conrad's exploitive colonialists, came not for the purpose of economic and political conquest, but for religious conversion of those whom they called "the Savages."
One textual note: There is an immense amount of profanity in Black Robe, enough to warn the sqeamish about. According to the author's preface, the obscene language used by the natives at that time in history was a form of rough banter and was not intended to give offense.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Historically accurate and capitvating, but emotionally flawe, Jan 7 2002
By A Customer
I've seen the movie adaptation of this story as well as read the book. Both are very good at depicting life during the early to mid-17th century in French-claimed territories of North America. What the book better describes is how the Native Americans (in spite of their Pagan ideologies) are better "Christians" than their European counterparts. The Jesuits are depicted as ruthless colonialists who are set on incorporating their beliefs (most of which contradict true biblical teachings!)onto "their" territories of "New France." As a result, it's very hard for me personally to really feel anything for any of them except indignation and anger (Laforge, the title character performs some really stupid actions within the story!).
Historically though, this story is very true in nature; the European settlers were in fact brutal, selfish, and bigoted.
One interesting note: Brian Moore the author is credited for both the book and the film's screenplay, yet the book is loaded with profanity while the film is nearly void of any such language.
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5.0 out of 5 stars An Historical novel of ideas, Mar 11 2001
By A. Hogan (Brooklyn, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The late lamented Bian Moore often inhabited worlds where graham greene had become master{though Moore was not very far behind.} The world of moral ambiguities,the world that we live in. In Black Robe he takes this to another level, telling the tragic story of the Jesuit missions to Canada and the Huron. It tells the story of a zealous,pious younf Jesuit,his assistant, and the native people who help them. Loosely based on the life of Jean de Brebouf{who pened the famous Chrstmas carol,the huron carol and suffered an unbelievable,torturous death},young Fr.Laforgue,who is woefully prepared for this stumbles into one situation after another.His zeal,though, becomes tempered by compasion,and his character is not one dimensional.Eventuallly, he is abandoned and finds the huron mission he set out for, leaving the then village of quebec all those miles and deaths ago. the viloence is quite graphic[including the death of a child which stayed with me for some time}.the ending,where lafaogue finds the village sick with fever,agreeing to be baptized if the Blackrobes wil cure them.The ending is chilling and superb and all the more so since it actually happened.One of Moore's best,which says a great deal.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars A view of colonialism which is not politically correct...
This novel shows the "natives" of Quebec not merely as the victims of more powerful colonial powers but also weak because in their trading with the French, they... Read more
Published on Mar 3 2002 by Arthur C. Hurwitz

4.0 out of 5 stars Unsettling exploration of "strange" others
The late Brian Moore delivers an historically grounded novel that vividly and disburbingly explores how two distinct cultural worlds can view each other as strange, dangerous,... Read more
Published on Feb 28 2001 by rrr338

5.0 out of 5 stars great, underrated writer
When Brian Moore died on January 11th of this year (1999), we lost one of our best serious novelists. Read more
Published on Oct 11 2000 by Orrin C. Judd

5.0 out of 5 stars Culture Clash
If you want to be known for writing a great novel in the historical fiction genre, you must do three things. First you must be able to tell a good story. Read more
Published on Sep 1 2000 by Paul McGrath

5.0 out of 5 stars "Blood gurgled forth from the child's mouth"
In the introduction to his novel, 'Black Robe', Brian Moore says he got his factual information from a collection of letters that the Jesuit missionaries sent home from early... Read more
Published on May 28 2000

4.0 out of 5 stars Reality Is What It Used To Be
Brian Moore's fine novel, Black Robe, serves as a startling case study of conflicting world and life views between Huron, Iriquois, and Algonkin "Savages" and the... Read more
Published on April 4 2000

4.0 out of 5 stars Disturbing, Enthralling
A deep, disturbing, thoughtful novel of New France, the very early years of what we now call Canada. Read more
Published on Mar 30 2000 by Ben Kilpela

4.0 out of 5 stars An Honest, if Sickening, Depiction of Our History
I was originally assigned the book as a project for school, and decided I would just watch the movie, but I was captivated by the story and just had to read the novel. Read more
Published on Mar 25 2000 by Leah

3.0 out of 5 stars Iroquois cannibalism uncovered
The reason this book is important for me it's that for the first time I met the description of Iroquois cannibalism. Read more
Published on Oct 26 1999 by Zordan Lorenzo

4.0 out of 5 stars Details only Moore can bring out.
For those who enjoy feeling transported to another time, another life, this is a beautiful and painful look at life in Canada when the "Savages" and the Christians met... Read more
Published on Nov 25 1997 by kltornberg@aol.com

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