Savage Lands
Publication details: UK Vintage 2011Description: 376pISBN:- 9780099546641
- F/CLA
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Kandy Fiction | F/CLA |
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
It is 1704 and, in the swamps of Louisiana, France is clinging on to its new colony with less than two hundred men. Into this hostile land comes Elisabeth Savaret, one of twenty-three women sent from Paris to marry men they have never met. With little expectation of happiness, Elisabeth is stunned to find herself falling passionately in love with her husband, infrantryman Jean-Claude Babelon.
But Babelon is a dangerous man to love. Witness to Elisabeth's devotion is another of his acolytes, Auguste, a young boy despatched to act as a go-between with the 'redskins'. When both Elisabeth and Auguste find their love challenged by Babelon's duplicity, the consequences are devastating.
Longlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction 2010.
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Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
Clark follows up her acclaimed The Nature of Monsters with another historical novel set in the same era (the 18th century) but in the New World. This tale of French Louisiana revolves around the arrival of the first casket girls, virtuous poor girls of good families guaranteed good husbands in the colony and carrying their belongings in small chests called caskets. Among them is Elisabeth Savaret, who falls in love with her soldier husband, August. Meanwhile, the French officials responsible for the survival of the little colony realize they must cultivate the native tribes in the area. Their success is achieved with varying levels of integrity, providing much of the plot and considerable exploration of the novel's title. Verdict The author treats the founding of French Louisiana with her signature dark realism and beautiful handling of character, plot, and pacing. Readers of Clark's earlier novels will enjoy this; it should also appeal to those interested in women's, French, New Orleans, or colonial-period history and in Native Americans. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 9/15/09.]-Mary Kay Bird-Guilliams, Wichita P.L., KS (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
Clark (The Great Stink) bases her third novel on the true story of the first French settlers in America and the women who are sent to be their wives. Her dual protagonists the novel begins as two narratives which then converge are the independent Elisabeth Savaret and the curious youth, Auguste. Elisabeth sets herself apart from her gossipy sister brides-to-be, finding solace in her books, but when she meets her rugged husband, she softens into a devoted wife and hopeful mother. Auguste is assigned the task of learning the ways and language of "the savages" since alliance with the native population is key to France's position in the New World. Throughout the novel Elisabeth and Auguste experience all the tropes common to life in the colonies. Clark has many graces as a writer, but while she brims with enthusiasm over her novel's world and delights in describing every facet of it, her penchant for overwriting makes what could be a fast-moving romp into a slog. She is an assiduous researcher, but too eager to show it. Still, Clark's passion for her story overcomes and will please lovers of historical fiction. (Feb.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedBooklist Review
Clark's third engrossing, painstakingly researched historical novel is set in the early 1700s in Louisiana, a colony populated by French settlers and named for Louis XIV. A group of 23 young girls is sent from France to be married there, among them Elisabeth Savaret, who is well educated and skeptical about finding happiness in the New World. Surprisingly, she falls almost obsessively in love with her husband, Jean-Claude, and their childless union becomes the core of the novel. Clark describes this backwater colony in meticulous detail the mud, the stench, the mosquitoes, the freezing winters and stifling summers, but it is above all a political quagmire, a quicksand of duplicity and shifting alliances, because the French are engaged in fierce competition with the English for this inhabitable land. Clark's third protagonist, whose life intersects with Elizabeth's and Jean-Claude's, is Auguste, a young Frenchman assigned to live with various Native tribes whose alliances will strengthen France's position against the English. Clark's vast store of historical and geographical detail enriches the portraits of her three vibrant characters, whose destinies are inextricably, and memorably, bound.--Donovan, Deborah Copyright 2010 BooklistKirkus Book Review
Poetic, powerfully visualized yet oppressive account of French settlement in Louisiana during the early 18th century. Clark (The Nature of Monsters, 2007, etc.) exchanges swampy London for fetid North America in her intense, closely detailed, female-driven narrative exploring the dogged struggles for coexistence and survival by European and Native-American communities. Her protagonist is Elisabeth Savaret, one of the "casket girls" contracted by the French government to sail to the New World as brides for the colonists. Elisabeth is not one of the "chickens" (her dismissive name for the other women); an independent, fierce and intellectual loner, she has the good fortune both to love and desire the man she marries, Jean-Claude Babelon. But the couple's happiness founders on his ruthless ambition and her failure to carry a pregnancy to term. Jean-Claude's drive for riches, which involves slavery, gun-running and betrayal, results eventually in his murder. Auguste Guichard, who loves both Babelons, is the third major character. Deeply involved in his friends' fates, he serves as the living antithesis of Jean-Claude's proto-capitalism: Auguste learns the Native-American languages, appreciates their cultures and grows indigenous plants. Later, with Elisabeth and Auguste married to other settlers, their paths cross again, and guilt is declared and shared. After much suffering, there is still hope. Although finely textured, this oblique, murkily downbeat tale often loses its thrust in the details. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.