Rating: Not rated
Tags: Fiction
Summary
From Annie Proulx—the Pulitzer Prize and
National Book Award-winning author of
The Shipping News and
Brokeback Mountain—comes an ecological masterwork,
five years in the writing: an epic, dazzling, violent,
magnificently dramatic novel about the taking down of the
world's forests.
In the late seventeenth century two penniless young
Frenchmen, René Sel and Charles Duquet, arrive in New
France. Bound to a feudal lord, a "
seigneur," for three years in exchange for land, they
become wood-cutters—barkskins. René suffers
extraordinary hardship, oppressed by the forest he is charged
with clearing. He is forced to marry a Mi'kmaw woman and their
descendants live trapped between two inimical cultures. But
Duquet, crafty and ruthless, runs away from the seigneur,
becomes a fur trader, then sets up a timber business. Proulx
tells the stories of the descendants of Sel and Duquet over
three hundred years—their travels across...