Sunday, December 29, 2024

Canadian Historical Brides ~ Quebec



                                                                    Belle Canadienne at  Amazon

                                                     


This charming cover is a romantic 19th century vision of what was, according to my research, a far harsher reality.  Women were scarce in all frontier colonies, but those who did dare the journey were as strong and probably just as ready to put the past behind them as the men for whom they are destined.


Jeanne Joly is among them. Brought up in a comfortable bourgeois home in the port city of Brouage, Jeanne runs away with a handsome sailor to La Rochelle. Her outraged father predicts she will rue the day she allowed her heart to rule her head. Now, a teen-age romance will decide her future.

Jeanne believes that "love conquers all" and so it does--for a few years. The little family is poor, but her husband adores her and her new in-laws are welcoming. However, sea-faring in the 1630's is a fraught calling and the day comes when neither her husband nor any of his shipmates return home. Within a few years, Jeanne's little boy too, becomes a victim of the ocean when he ventures too close to the waves.

A chance encounter with a charismatic lady shows her a way to escape both her "ruined" past and her current poverty. Soon, Jeanne is on her way to the undiscovered, wild country along the St. Lawrence River.  

Here's an excerpt from the newest entry in the Canadian Historical Brides Series, Belle Canadienne. It is available as e-book in all formats and in print.

 All my historical novels may be found: 

 Kobo

Smashwords

Amazon



********************************************************************************************************** 

Ocean and sky! Ocean and sky!

Jeanne had never before sailed out of sight of land.  To see nothing but the ship surrounded by so much deep, deep water and feel herself riding over such massive swells--like hills that endlessly traveled beneath the ship--was a new and frightening experience.  Agathe had sailed to the Canary Islands with her brother and all the way down the coast of Spain, too, but even she appeared full of wonder at the endlessness of the Atlantic. 

In Jeanne's earlier coastal voyages, the welcome shout "Land Ho" had come quickly, but now a month had passed and they were only half--or, perhaps a third – of the way to their next sight of land.  Only time alone would tell. A single heavy two-day storm through which they had passed had made both women seasick and afraid for the first time in all their sailing lives... 

Below the main deck were those who were emigrating.  A few had wives with them.  Some of these folks were tradesmen--cobblers, coopers, and smiths--who had been engaged to work only for an indenture's term in New France.  There were soldiers and some carpenters too.  Two of those were indentured, but there was also the ship's carpenter and his apprentice. 

As well, peasant farmers were among the passengers, men who were promised land after they served a three-year term of indenture to the gentlemen seigneurs among whom the new land had been divided.  Their job would be immense for they would be clearing virgin forest, breaking sod, and facing the savages.  After their term of indenture was over, just as such peasants did in France, they would continue to pay rent to the mostly absent seigneurs who held title to the land on which they labored.  It was a hard bargain, this Jeanne understood, but she also knew that farmland was almost impossible to obtain in France if you were a younger son.  These brave paysan were willing to take the chance...

****************************************************************************************

Also in the Canadian Historical Brides series:

Fly Away Snow Goose

a residential school story set in Northwest Territories

Amazon

Kobo

Barnes & Noble



Teens caught by the Mounties and sent to an Indian Residential School in 1950's. Based on actual survivor stories, this is a tale of terror, endurance, escape, survival, and love, as 4 children journey home through the Canadian wilderness.


~~Juliet Waldron







2 comments:

  1. Intriguing story. I like the title and the cover, too. Thanks for sharing.

    ReplyDelete

I have opened up comments once again. The comments are moderated so if you are a spammer you are wasting your time and mine. I will not approve you.

Popular Posts

Books We Love Insider Blog

Blog Archive