Elphinstone takes the reader back in time and intertwines this story with enduring themes of love, war and family ties . . .
"Elphinstone brings the landscapes and peoples of 1800s Canada back to thrilling life in her pacy, colourful and intelligent epic: the finest trip along these rivers since Brian Moore's great Black Robe." Independent
In the early 1800s, Rachel Greenhow, a young Quaker, goes missing in the Canadian wilderness. Unable to accept the disappearance, her brother Mark leaves his farm in England, determined to bring his sister home.
What follows is a gripping account of Mark's odyssey. With adventure and discovery propelling the plot forward, Elphinstone takes the reader back in time and intertwines the story with enduring themes of love, war and family ties.
"A great story, an old-fashined adventure tale." Big Issue
"A wonderfully gripping and emotionally involving narrative." The Tablet
Canongate
Cover painting is Canoe Manned by Voyagers Passing a Waterfall, Frances Anne Hopkins, 1869 (National Archives of Canada)
Design by James Hutcheson
The book brings the period to life with an astonishing amount of detail, which builds up a complete picture of those pioneering times, in a wonderfully gripping and emotionally involving narrative.