Reviews

Invisible is a great thriller. I can’t say too much more about the plot because the twists and turns are the whole point of reading a book that wrong foots the reader at every turn . . . Christine Poulson kept me reading by giving out just enough information to intrigue and puzzle so that I had to read just one more chapter. That’s why, in the end, I just dropped everything else and read the last half of Invisible in one sitting.’

- I PREFER READING BLOG

Crossing-blogging with Moira: Shadows on the Rock

I flew into Québec on the 15th October, and by coincidence that is the same month that Willa Cather’s novel. Shadows on the Rock, opens. ‘One afternoon late in October 1697, Euclide Auclair, the philosopher apothecary of Quebec, stood on the top of Cap Diamant gazing down the broad, empty river far beneath him. Empty, because an hour ago the flash of retreating sails had disappeared behind the green island that splits the St. Lawrence below Quebec, and the last of the summer ships from France had started on her long journey home. . . Now for eight months the French colony on this rock in the North would be entirely cut off from Europe, from the rest of the world.’

It was the idea of this isolation that caught my imagination when I first read Shadows on the Rock (published in 1931). I wonder if Moira will love it as much as I do. It is a quiet novel, about love and loss and exile and longing. It has at its heart the loving relationship between the gentle Euclide and his twelve-year old daughter, Cécile, who runs the household since the wife and mother died two years earlier. We see in flashback how they came to be in Québec.

Historical fiction isn’t a favourite genre of mine, but the details here seem so immediate, so real. This is a society that cherishes conservative values of tradition and continuity and the right way of doing things. The dying mother explain to the daughter how, for instance, she brought enough fine linen from France to last the winter. The sheets must be changed fortnightly, but they will not be washed until the spring, when Jeanette the laundress will come to take over the house for several days. ‘Beg her to iron the sheets carefully. They . . . will last your lifetime if they are well treated.’ She also hands on the French ways of cooking – food is important in the novel and is described in fascinating detail. Cécile nurtures the pot of parsley that is part of her mother’s legacy to her.

The novel spans a year and there isn’t really a plot, though the time encompasses an important event in the lives of father and daughter: the death of their patron, the Count de Frontenac, governor of Québec. He was a real historical character, as is the austere old Bishop, and they are described so vividly that they leap off the page:

‘The Count had the bearing of a fencer when he takes up the foil; from his shoulder to his heels there was intention and direction. His carriage was his unconscious idea of himself, – it was an armour he put on when he took off his night-cap in the morning, and he wore it all day, at early Mass, at his desk, on the march, at the Council, at his dinner-table. Even his enemies relied on his strength.’

Modern day Québec doesn’t look retain much of what was there in 1700. The buildings were of wood and were often destroyed by fire and rebuilt. But still it is a wonderful city and the marvellous site overlooking the St. Lawrence is the same. I wasn’t disappointed. I enjoyed visiting the chapel and the museum of the Ursuline sisters who feature in the book and I took a boat trip on the river. Strolling around the streets in the evening after dinner, it seemed a magical place.

Having shared this much loved book with Moira, I am longing to know what she made of it. And now I do know! Here are her thoughts over at http://Clothesinbooks.com

 

8 Comments

  1. Lyn
    November 9, 2017

    I love Willa Cather & this is one of the novels I still haven’t read. You’ve made it sound so enticing, I think it will be next off the tbr mountain.

    Reply
  2. moira @ClothesInBooks
    November 9, 2017

    What a great choice this was, Chrissie – though not if you were looking for controversy! I agree with you completely about the book: it is wonderful, and I am very glad I read it. I have read a few of Cather’s books, but had never even heard of this one – she was such a great writer, a book as marvellous as this one isn’t even one of her noted works…

    Reply
    • Christine Poulson
      November 9, 2017

      It has been lovely to share it with you and enjoy your response. I agree that it is surprising that it isn’t better known. She is a wonderful writer – the people, the places, the details of everyday life, are all so vivid and immediate.

      Reply
  3. Margot Kinberg
    November 9, 2017

    I think I like historical novels (as a rule) better than you do, Christine. And this one sounds terrific. I do like it when the author can evoke such a strong sense of place and time that you really feel you’re there. And sometimes, it’s those everyday bits of life that really make the story. Glad you enjoyed this.

    Reply
    • Christine Poulson
      November 9, 2017

      Thanks, Margot. It is one of those historical novels where you never think to question a single detail. It moves seamlessly between invented characters and real historical figure. A small masterpiece in my view.

      Reply
  4. tracybham
    November 10, 2017

    I do like historical fiction, but this book may be further back than I have read before. I will put this on a list of classics to look for at the annual book sale.

    Reply
    • Christine Poulson
      November 11, 2017

      It doesn’t feel as if you are reading something set a long time ago. It all seems so fresh and immediate, the characters, so real. Do look out for it.

      Reply

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